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If
you're in Southeast Asia, Go to Siem Reap City
The
temples outside of Siem
Reap, Cambodia, were
built between the 9th
and 13th centuries by
the ancient Khmer empire,
and they fall in stark
contrast to the state
of the country today.
The empire, at that
time, stretched from
Burma to Vietnam and
the capital at Angkor
boasted over one million
residents when London
had a scant fifty thousand.
The temples were built
by the God-Kings and
served as the religious
and social nexus. Only
the heads of faith and
government were allowed
to inhabit stone dwellings,
so the multitude of
wooden structures comprising
most of the city, are
long gone. In the 1800's,
a French archaeologist
visiting Cambodia learned
of the massive temples,
long buried by jungle,
and brought them back
into the world's view.
The
Kingdom of Cambodia
has had an extraordinarily
tumultuous past, and
the temples serve as
a point of pride for
all Khmers. As well
they should because
they are outstanding.
On our first day, we
visited Angkor Thom,
Ta Prohm, and Bayon
among others. The heat
was overwhelming and
the temple steps were
tall and steep. Despite
the scorching ball of
fire beating down on
us, we had an amazing
time visiting the temples
and admiring how the
intricate artwork adorning
them could remain intact
after so many centuries.
An interesting note
about Ta Prohm, the
tumbling structures
and trees shooting up
between the building
blocks gives it an incredible
ambiance. That's why
it was chosen to be
used in the Tombraider
movie.
The
second day, we awoke early
to visit Angkor Wat for
sunrise. The carved stone
murals blanketing the
massive walls told stories
of historical and religious
importance. Of course
the favorite of Matt and
I was King Rama's monkey
army attacking invaders.
I can't recall the names
of the other temples we
visited that day, but
I fondly recall my siesta
(Matt and I decided to
take a break during the
hottest hours) in a breezy
restaurant hammock. Before
we headed back to the
hotel that day, we took
a ride up on a giant helium
balloon (raised and lowered
every 15 minutes) to view
the temples from above.
It wasn't worth the money,
but the pictures pretty
decent.
On
the third day, I had developed
a rather severe upset
stomach which shortened
the day substantially.
First, we saw Banteay
Srei before heading to
the Cambodia Landmine
Museum which was amazing.
Aki Ra was a child soldier
for the Khmer Rouge, who
slaughtered his family
and forced him to lay
thousands of landmines.
After Pol Pot lost power,
Aki Ra became his own
man and the morals deep
within him found strength
and bubbled to the surface.
He founded the landmine
museum to educate people
and provide funds to care
for his adopted family
of children who were orphaned
or maimed by mines. He
still spends all of his
free time out in the countryside
locating and defusing
hidden mines using only
his toe and a shovel.
The
pictures in this post are:
the view of the Angkor Wat
complex and moat from above,
a shoebox-size carving at
Ta Prohm, a tree oozing out
between blocks at Ta Prohm
with a surprisingly large
termite in the trunk, faces
and carvings at Bayon, Angkor
Wat at sunrise, a detail of
the monkey army mural (I couldn't
get a good shot of one of
the head-biting monkeys so
I though foot- or knee-biting
would work), another favorite
carving of I don't know what,
and domesticating a wild elephant
at Banteay Samre.
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