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Angkor Wat

AUSTRALIAN archaeologists have uncovered hidden underground cities near Angkor Wat. The discovery, which was revealed using lasers, sheds new light on the civilisation behind the world’s largest religious complex. While the research has been going on for several years, the new findings uncover the sheer scale of the Khmer Empire’s urban sprawl and temple complexes. The findings also reveal it was significantly bigger than was previously thought. The research, drawing on airborne laser scanning technology known as lidar, was unveiled in full at the Royal Geographic Society in London overnight by Australian archaeologist Damian Evans. “We always imagined that their great cities surrounded the monuments in antiquity,” Evans said. “But now we can see them with incredible precision and detail, in some places for the very first time, but in most places where we already had a vague idea that cities must be there,” he added. Angkor Wat, a UNESCO World Heritage site seen as among the most important in southeast Asia, is considered one of the ancient wonders of the world. It was constructed from the early to mid 1100s by King Suryavarman II at the height of the Khmer Empire’s political and military power and was among the largest pre-industrial cities in the world. But scholars had long believed there was far more to the empire than just the Angkor complex. The Cambodian Archaeological Lidar Initiative (CALI) shows the Angkor-period temple of Banteay Top, within the Banteay Chhmar acquisition block, in Siem Reap province. Picture: Damian Evans.

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Fri, 10 June 2016 សែន រ៉ាឌី បង្ហាញ​មុខ​ជាថ្មី​ដើម្បី​ប៉ះ Poun Sawath ភ្នំពេញ: កីឡាករ​ប្រដាល់​ជើង​ខ្លាំង​សែន​ រ៉ាឌី មក​ពី​អប្សរាគុន​ខ្មែរ ដែល​មាន​ប្រជា​ប្រិយ​ខ្លាំងនោះ នឹងវិល​ទៅកាន់​ការ​ប្រកួត​វិញ​ហើយ​ដោយ​ត្រូវ​ប្រកួត​ជាមួយ​កីឡាករ​ជើង​ខ្លាំងថៃ​ Poun Sawath នៃសង្វៀន​អប្សរា​ នៅ​កំបូល ខាងលិច​

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Khmer Apsaras

Apsaras represent an important motif in the stone bas-reliefs of the Angkorian temples in Cambodia (8th–13th centuries AD), however all female images are not considered to be apsaras. In harmony with the Indian association of dance with apsaras, Khmer female figures that are dancing or are poised to dance are considered apsaras; female figures, depicted individually or in groups, who are standing still and facing forward in the manner of temple guardians or custodians are called devatas.[6]
Angkor Wat, the largest Angkorian temple (built AD 1116–1150), features both apsaras and devata, however the devata type are the most numerous with more than 1,796 in the present research inventory.[7] Angkor Wat architects employed small apsara images (30–40 cm as seen at left) as decorative motifs on pillars and walls. They incorporated larger devata images (all full-body portraits measuring approximately 95–110 cm) more prominently at every level of the temple from the entry pavilion to the tops of the high towers. In 1927, Sappho Marchal published a study cataloging the remarkable diversity of their hair, headdresses, garments, stance, jewelry and decorative flowers, which Marchal concluded were based on actual practices of the Angkor period. Some devata appear with arms around each other and seem to be greeting the viewer. “The devatas seem to epitomize all the elements of a refined elegance,” wrote Marchal.[8]

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