Angkorean Civilization
Indravarman’s son and successor, Yaśovarman I (ruled c. 890–c. 910), moved the capital again, now closer to Simrab, to a location that subsequently became Angkor—a name derived from the Sanskrit word nagara, meaning “city”—which has become one of the world’s most-celebrated archaeological sites (as well as a UNESCO World Heritage site), as well as the popular name for Cambodia’s medieval
civilization. The city that Yaśovarman founded, Yaśodharapura, retained
that name and remained Cambodia’s capital until it was abandoned in the
16th century. His temple mountain, now called Bakheng
(literally “Mighty Ancestor”), was built on a natural hill that
overlooked a teeming city, the more-distant rice-growing plain, and the Tonle Sap. The mountain occupied the centre of the city, just as Mount Meru, the mythical home in India
of the Hindu gods, was said to stand at the centre of the universe.
Yaśovarman built a large reservoir nearby. The city wall of
Yaśodharapura measured 2.5 miles (4 km) on each side. For such an
ambitious building program, the king needed to command a large labour
pool. Other evidence suggests that his reign was characterized by tolerance
toward a variety of Buddhist and Hindu sects that occasionally blended
into local cults honouring ancestral spirits and spirits of the soil.
Indeed, for all the apparent absolutism of its kings, a consistent
feature of Angkorean civilization unmatched in medieval Europe was
religious toleration.
The closing years of the 11th century were ones of turmoil and fragmentation. At different times, two and even three “absolute monarchs” contended simultaneously for the title of chakravartin. At the end of the century, however, a new dynasty—which was to last for more than a century—began to rule at Angkor. Its most powerful monarch took the name of Suryavarman II (ruled 1113–c. 1150), although he probably was not descended from the earlier king of that name. Like his namesake predecessor, Suryavarman II was a formidable military campaigner. He avenged earlier attacks on Angkor by armies launched from the kingdom of Champa, in what is now south-central Vietnam, and led expeditions into northern and southern Thailand. A campaign against Vietnam, which had recently declared its independence from China, was less successful.
Suryavarman’s major accomplishment, from a modern perspective, was the Angkor Wat temple complex, still the largest religious structure in the world and one of the most beautiful. The temple, which eventually became his tomb and probably was an astronomical observatory as well, was dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu. Its bas-reliefs, running for nearly a half mile inside its third enclosure, depict events in the well-known Indian epics Mahabharata and Ramayana—confirming that those texts were widely known at Angkor—as well as Suryavarman himself holding court. The elegance of the carvings, the hundreds of graceful statues of angelic dancers (apsaras) that adorn the temple, and its reflection in the moats that surround it continue to give Angkor Wat an awe-inspiring air; in the 12th century, when its towers were gilded and its moats properly maintained, it must have been even more breathtaking.
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