- West Baray
The West Baray ( _km. បារាយណ៍ខាងលិច) is a baray, or reservoir, at
Angkor ,Cambodia , oriented east-west and located just west of the walled cityAngkor Thom . Rectangular in shape and measuring approximately 8 by 2.1 kilometers, the West Baray is the largest baray at Angkor. Its waters are contained by tall earthen dikes. In the center of the baray is theWest Mebon , a Hindu temple built on an artificial island.Construction of the baray probably began in the 11th Century during the reign of King
Suryavarman I and was finished later under KingUdayadityavarman II .The Angkorian engineers who created the West Baray appear to have in places incorporated earlier construction. The east dike, for instance, appears to be largely a section of a dike that enclosed the capital city of King
Yasovarman , which had thePhnom Bakheng temple at its center. In other places, the baray obliterated or submerged earlier human-made sites. The south dike, for instance, partially buried a brick pyramid temple,Ak Yum . And the western floor of the baray appears to have once been inhabited--archeological work has found wall bases, steps, and pottery shards there. An inscription stele discovered in the area, dating from 713 A.D., offers further evidence of earlier settlement, defining rice fields that were offered to a queen Jayadevi.Early French experts believed the West Baray to have functioned as a vast holding tank for water that fed irrigation canals in dry times, allowing multiple crops of rice each year. Many later studies, however, theorize that the baray had mainly symbolic functions, serving as a vast earthly depiction of the Hindu Sea of Creation, with the West Mebon temple at its center.
In modern times, an irrigation lock was built in the baray's southern dike, raising the water level and allowing provision of water to fields to the south. Today the baray retains water in its western end year-round. In the rainy season, water advances to the eastern dike.
With clear, still waters, the baray today is a popular place for swimming and boat rides by local residents. It has occasionally served as a landing site for seaplanes.
References
* Rooney, Dawn. "Angkor". Fourth Edition. Airphoto International Ltd.
2002 .* Laur, Jean. "Angkor: An Illustrated Guide to the Monuments." Flammarion
2002
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