Facebook Twitter Google RSS
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Ta Prohm. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Ta Prohm. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Chủ Nhật, 21 tháng 6, 2015

Around Angkor Thom (Part 1)

Beauty Spots 

Ta Prohm BUDDHIST TEMPLE

The eventual Indiana Jones fantasy, Ta Prohm is cloaked in dappled darkness , its collapsing towers and walls locked in the relaxed, muscular encirclement of huge primary systems. If Angkor Wat, the Bayon and other temples are evidence to the genius of the ancient Khmers, Ta Prohm reminds us equally of the excellent prolificacy and power of the wilderness. We have a lyrical cycle to this august , with humanity foremost discovering wildlife to rapidly create, and nature once again discovering humanity to gradually damage .
Constructed from 1186 and initially known as Rajavihara (Monastery of the King), Ta Prohm was a Buddhist temple devoted to the mother of Jayavarman VII. Ta Prohm is a temple of towers, close courtyards and narrow corridors. Very old trees tower overhead, their leaves filtering the daylight and casting a greenish pall over the whole scene. It is the nearest most of us may get to feeling the charm of the explorers of old.

Phnom Bakheng HINDU TEMPLE

Approximately 400m south of Angkor Thom, that hill’s primary draw is the sunset view of Angkor Wat, though this has turned into something of a circus, with hundreds of visitors jockeying for space. The temple, built by Yasovarman I (r 889–910), has five tiers with seven levels.

Preah Khan BUDDHIST TEMPLE

(Sacred Sword) The temple of Preah Khan (Sacred Sword) is one of the largest complexes at Angkor, a maze of vaulted corridors, fine carvings and lichen-clad stonework. Constructed by Jayavarman VII, it contains a very large area, but the temple itself is within a rectangular wall of around 700m by 800m. Preah Khan is a genuine fusion temple, the eastern entrance devoted to Mahayana Buddhism, with equal-sized doors, and the other cardinal directions dedicated to Shiva, Vishnu and Brahma, with successively smaller doors, emphasising the unequal nature of Hinduism.



Preah Neak Poan BUDDHIST TEMPLE

Another late-12th-century work of – no surprises here – Jayavarman VII, this petite temple just east of Preah Khan has a big square pool surrounded by four smaller square pools, with a circular ‘island’ in the middle. Water once flowed from the central pond into the four peripheral pools via four ornamental spouts, in the form of an elephant’s head, a horse’s head, a lion’s head and a human head.

Roluos Group HINDU TEMPLE

The monuments of Roluos, which served as the capital for Indravarman I (r 877–89), are among the earliest wide eternal temples built by the Khmers and mark the dawn of Khmer classical art. Preah Ko, dedicated to Shiva, has elaborate inscriptions in Sanskrit on the doorposts of each tower and some of the best surviving instances of Angkorian plasterwork. The city’s central temple, Bakong, with its five-tier central pyramid of sandstone, is a representation of Mt Meru. Roluos is 13km southeast of Siem Reap along NH6.