Angkor Wat History
Angkor Wat
lies 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi) north of the modern town of Siem Reap and a
short distance south and slightly east of the previous capital, which was
centred at Baphuon. In an area of Cambodia where there is an important group of
ancient structures, it is the southernmost of Angkor's main sites.
According to
legend, the construction of Angkor Wat was ordered by Indra to serve as a
palace for his son Precha Ket Mealea. According to the 13th-century Chinese traveler
Zhou Daguan some believed that the temple was constructed in a single night by
a divine architect.
The initial
design and construction of the temple took place in the first half of the 12th
century, during the reign of Suryavarman II (ruled 1113 – c. 1150). Dedicated
to Vishnu, it was built as the king's state temple and capital city. As neither
the foundation stela nor any contemporary inscriptions referring to the temple
have been found, its original name is unknown, but it may have been known as
"Varah Vishnu-lok" after the presiding deity. Work seems to have
ended shortly after the king's death, leaving some of the bas-relief decoration
unfinished. In 1177, approximately 27 years after the death of Suryavarman II,
Angkor was sacked by the Chans, the traditional enemies of the Khmer.
Thereafter the empire was restored by a new king, Jayavarman VII, who
established a new capital and state temple (Angkor Thom and the Bayon
respectively) a few kilometres to the north.
Towards the
end of the 12th century, Angkor Wat gradually transformed from a Hindu centre
of worship to Buddhism, which continues to the present day. Angkor Wat is
unusual among the Angkor temples in that although it was somewhat neglected
after the 16th century it was never completely abandoned, its preservation
being due in part to the fact that its moat also provided some protection from
encroachment by the jungle.
One of the
first Western visitors to the temple was Antonio da Madalena, a Portuguese monk
who visited in 1586 and said that it "is of such extraordinary
construction that it is not possible to describe it with a pen, particularly
since it is like no other building in the world. It has towers and decoration
and all the refinements which the human genius can conceive of.
By the 17th
century, Angkor Wat was not completely abandoned and functioned as a Buddhist
temple. Fourteen inscriptions dated from the 17th century discovered in Angkor
area testify to Japanese Buddhist pilgrims that had established small
settlements alongside Khmer locals. At that time, the temple was thought by the
Japanese visitors as the famed Jetavana garden of the Buddha, which originally
located in the kingdom of Magadha, India. The best-known inscription tells of
Ukondafu Kazufusa, who celebrated the Khmer New Year at Angkor Wat in 1632.
In the
mid-19th century, the temple was visited by the French naturalist and explorer
Henri Mouhot, who popularised the site in the West through the publication of
travel notes, in which he wrote:
"One of
these temples—a rival to that of Solomon, and erected by some ancient
Michelangelo might take an honorable place beside our most beautiful buildings.
It is grander than anything left to us by Greece or Rome, and presents a sad
contrast to the state of barbarism in which the nation is now plunged.
Mouhot, like
other early Western visitors, found it difficult to believe that the Khmers
could have built the temple and mistakenly dated it to around the same era as
Rome. The true history of Angkor Wat was pieced together only from stylistic
and epigraphic evidence accumulated during the subsequent clearing and
restoration work carried out across the whole Angkor site. There were no
ordinary dwellings or houses or other signs of settlement, including cooking
utensils, weapons, or items of clothing usually found at ancient sites. Instead
there is the evidence of the monuments themselves.
Angkor Wat
required considerable restoration in the 20th century, mainly the removal of
accumulated earth and vegetation Work was interrupted by the Cambodia Civil War
and Khmer Rouge control of the country during the 1970s and 1980s, but
relatively little damage was done during this period. Camping Khmer Rouge
forces used whatever wood remained in the building structures for firewood, a
pavilion was ruined by a stray American shell, and a shoot-out between Khmer
Rouge and Vietnamese forces put a few bullet holes in a bas relief. Far more
damage was done after the wars, by art thieves working out of Thailand, which,
in the late 1980s and early 1990s, claimed almost every head that could be
lopped off the structures, including reconstructions.
The temple is
a powerful symbol of Cambodia, and is a source of great national pride that has
factored into Cambodia's diplomatic relations with France, the United States
and its neighbour Thailand. A depiction of Angkor Wat has been a part of
Cambodian National flag since the introduction of the first version circa 1863.
From a larger historical and even transcultural perspective, however, the
temple of Angkor Wat did not become a symbol of national pride sui generis
but had been inscribed into a larger politico-cultural process of
French-colonial heritage production in which the original temple site was
presented in French colonial and universal exhibitions in Paris and Marseille
between 1889 and 1937. Angkor Wat's aesthetics were also on display in the
plaster cast museum of Louis Delaport called musée Indo-chinois which
existed in the Parisian Trocadero Palace from c.1880 to the mid-1920s.
The splendid artistic
legacy of Angkor Wat and other Khmer monuments in the Angkor region led
directly to France adopting Cambodia as a protectorate on 11 August 1863 and
invading Siam to take control of the ruins. This quickly led to Cambodia
reclaiming lands in the northwestern corner of the country that had been under
Siamese (Thai) control since AD 1351 (Manich Jumsai 2001), or by some accounts,
AD 1431. Cambodia gained independence from France on 9 November 1953 and has
controlled Angkor Wat since that time. It is safe to say that from the colonial
period onwards until the site's nomination as UNESCO World Heritage in 1992,
this specific temple of Angkor Wat was instrumental in the formation of the
modern and gradually globalised concept of built cultural heritage.
In December
2015, it was announced that a research team from University of Sydney had found
a previously unseen ensemble of buried towers built and demolished during the
construction of Angkor Wat, as well as massive structure of unknown purpose on
its south side and wooden fortifications. The findings also include evidence of
low-density residential occupation in the region, with a road grid, ponds and
mounds. These indicate that the temple precinct, bounded by moat and wall, may
not have been used exclusively by the priestly elite, as was previously
thought. The team used LiDAR, ground-penetrating radar and targeted excavation
to map Angkor Wat.
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