- Angkor Thom
Angkor Thom(Khmer: អង្គរធំ) was the last and most enduring capital city of the
Khmer empire . It was established in the late twelfth century by kingJayavarman VII . It covers an area of 9 km², within which are located several monuments from earlier eras as well as those established by Jayavarman and his successors. At the centre of the city is Jayavarman's state temple, theBayon , with the other major sites clustered around the Victory Square immediately to the north.Angkor Thom was established as the capital of Jayavarman VII's empire, and was the centre of his massive building programme. One inscription found in the city refers to Jayavarman as the groom and the city as his bride. (Higham, 121)
Khmer capital on the site, however.
Yasodharapura , dating from three centuries earlier, was centred slightly further northwest, and Angkor Thom overlapped parts of it. The most notable earlier temples within the city are the former state temple ofBaphuon , andPhimeanakas , which was incorporated into the Royal Palace. The Khmers did not draw any clear distinctions between Angkor Thom and Yashodharapura: even in the fourteenth century an inscription used the earlier name. (Higham 138) The name of Angkor Thom — great city — was in use from the 16th century.The last temple known to have been constructed in Angkor Thom was
Mangalartha , which was dedicated in 1295. Thereafter the existing structures continued to be modified from time to time, but any new creations were in perishable materials and have not survived. In the following centuries Angkor Thom remained the capital of a kingdom in decline until it was abandoned some time prior to 1609, when an early western visitor wrote of an uninhabited city, "as fantastic as theAtlantis ofPlato " which some thought to have been built by the Roman emperorTrajan . (Higham 140)tyle
Angkor Thom is in the Dom style. This manifests itself in the large scale of the construction, in the widespread use of
laterite , in the back-towers at each of the entrances to the south cheack and in the naga-carrying giant monsters which accompany each of the towers.The site
. (Glaize 81). Another gate — the Victory Gate — is 500 m north of the east gate; the Victory Way runs parallel to the east road to the Victory Square and the Royal Palace north of the Bayon.
The faces on the 23 m towers at the city gates (which are later additions to the main structure) take after those of the Bayon, and pose the same problems of interpretation. They may represent the king himself, the
bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara , guardians of the empire's cardinal points, or some combination of these. Acauseway spans the moat in front of each tower: these have a row of devas on the left andasura s on the right, each row holding a naga in the attitude of a tug-of-war. This appears to be a reference to the myth, popular in Angkor, of the Churning of the Sea of Milk. The temple-mountain of the Bayon, or perhaps the gate itself, (Glaize 82) would then be the pivot around which the churning takes place. The nagas may also represent the transition from the world of men to the world of the gods (the Bayon), or be guardian figures. (Freeman and Jacques 76). The gateways themselves are 3.5 by 7 m, and would originally have been closed with wooden doors. (Glaize 82) The south gate is now by far the most often visited, as it is the main entrance to the city for tourists.At each corner of the city is a Prasat Chrung — corner shrine — built of
sandstone and dedicated to Avalokiteshvara. These are cruciform with a central tower, and orientated towards the east.Within the city was a system of
canal s, through which water flowed from the northeast to the southwest. The bulk of the land enclosed by the walls would have been occupied by the secular buildings of the city, of which nothing remains. This area is now covered by forest.Angkor Thom in popular culture:
In the videogame "", Angkor Thom is the resting place of
Mantorok , initially worshipped by the Khmer people as a fertility god."" features several characters visiting Angkor Thom during their trip to Cambodia to recover the first piece of the Triangle of Light.
In "The Judas Strain" (A novel by
James Rollins ): The characters are on a journey to find a cure for a plague, and are following in the steps ofMarco Polo .In "Patlabor the Movie 2", the opening scene appears to be based on the Angkor Thom, as said by
Hayao Miyazaki in an interview with Animage magazine on October 1993.In "", Angkor Thom is the third city to build in
Khmer Empire after Yasodharapura and Hariharalaya.References
*Freeman, Michael and Jacques, Claude (1999). "Ancient Angkor". River Books. ISBN 0-8348-0426-3.
*Glaize, Maurice (2003 edition of an English translation of the 1993 French fourth edition). [http://www.theangkorguide.com/text/part-two/angkorwat-to-angkorthom/angkorwat.htm The Monuments of the Angkor Group] . Retrieved14 July 2005 .
*Higham, Charles (2001). "The Civilization of Angkor". Phoenix. ISBN 1-84212-584-2.
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