Style
Angkor Thom is in the Bayon style. This manifests itself in the large scale of the construction, in the widespread use of laterite, in the face-towers at each of the entrances to the city and in the naga-carrying giant figures which accompany each of the towers.
The site
The city lies on the west bank of the Siem Reap River, a tributary of Tonle Sap, about a quarter of a mile from the river. The south gate of Angkor Thom is 7.2 km north of Siem Reap, and 1.7 km north of the entrance to Angkor Wat. The walls, 8 m high and flanked by a moat, are each 3 km long, enclosing an area of 9 km². The walls are of laterite buttressed by earth, with a parapet on the top. There are gates at each of the cardinal points,
from which roads lead to the Bayon at the centre of the city. As the
Bayon itself has no wall or moat of its own, those of the city are
interpreted by archaeologists as representing the mountains and oceans
surrounding the Bayon's Mount Meru.Another gate—the Victory Gate—is 500 m north of the east gate; the
Victory Way runs parallel to the east road to the Victory Square and the
Royal Palace north of the Bayon.
The faces on the 23 m towers at the city gates, which are later
additions to the main structure, take after those of the Bayon and pose
the same problems of interpretation. They may represent the king
himself, the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, guardians of the empire's cardinal points, or some combination of these. A causeway spans the moat in front of each tower: these have a row of devas on the left and asuras
on the right, each row holding a naga in the attitude of a tug-of-war.
This appears to be a reference to the myth, popular in Angkor, of the Churning of the Sea of Milk. The temple-mountain of the Bayon, or perhaps the gate itself, Would then be the pivot around which the churning takes place. The
nagas may also represent the transition from the world of men to the
world of the gods (the Bayon), or be guardian figures.The gateways themselves are 3.5 by 7 m, and would originally have been closed with wooden doors.The south gate is now by far the most often visited, as it is the main entrance to the city for tourists.
At each corner of the city is a Prasat Chrung—corner shrine—built of sandstone and dedicated to Avalokiteshvara. These are cruciform with a central tower, and orientated towards the east.
Within the city was a system of canals,
through which water flowed from the northeast to the southwest. The
bulk of the land enclosed by the walls would have been occupied by the
secular buildings of the city, of which nothing remains. This area is
now covered by forest.
Most of the great Angkor ruins have vast displays of bas-relief
depicting the various gods, goddesses, and other-worldly beings from the
mythological stories and epic poems of ancient Hinduism (modified by
centuries of Buddhism). Mingled with these images are actual known
animals, like elephants, snakes, fish, and monkeys, in addition to
dragon-like creatures that look like the stylized, elongated serpents
(with feet and claws) found in Chinese art.
But among the ruins of Ta Prohm, near a huge stone entrance, one can see that the “roundels on pilasters on the south side of the west entrance are unusual in design.”
What one sees are roundels depicting various common animals—pigs,
monkeys, water buffaloes, roosters and snakes. There are no mythological
figures among the roundels, so one can reasonably conclude that these
figures depict the animals that were commonly seen by the ancient Khmer
people in the twelfth century.
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