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  2. Angkor Wat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angkor_Wat

    Angkor Wat is a unique combination of the temple mountain (the standard design for the empire's state temples) and the later plan of concentric galleries, most of which were originally derived from religious beliefs of Hinduism. [8] The construction of Angkor Wat suggests that there was a celestial significance with certain features of the temple.

  3. Khmer architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khmer_architecture

    The central prang of Angkor Wat temple symbolizes the mount Meru. The central sanctuary of an Angkorian temple was home to the temple's primary deity, the one to whom the site was dedicated: typically Shiva or Vishnu in the case of a Hindu temple, Buddha or a bodhisattva in the case of a Buddhist temple.

  4. Angkor National Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angkor_National_Museum

    Angkor National Museum is an archaeological museum dedicated to the collection, preservation and presentation of Angkorian artifacts, also to provides information and education about art and culture of Khmer civilization, with collections mainly dated from Khmer Empire's Angkor period circa 9th to 14th-century. Most of the artifacts are ...

  5. Royal Palace of Cambodia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Palace_of_Cambodia

    Its main building houses many national treasures such as gold and jeweled Buddha statues. Most notable is a small crystal Buddha (the "Emerald Buddha" of Cambodia) – undetermined whether made of Baccarat Crystal in 19th century or of other kind of crystal in 17th century – and a near-life-size, Maitreya Buddha encrusted with 9,584 diamonds ...

  6. Traditional Khmer Housing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Khmer_Housing

    Zhuo Daguan who visited Angkor in 13th century described the palace walls and audience hall as: ‘The royal palace, officials’ residences, and great houses all face east. The palace… is about five or six li in circumference. The tiles of the main building are made of lead; all the other tiles are made of yellow clay.

  7. Prang (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prang_(architecture)

    After the Khmer Empire collapsed, the Thai building masters of the Sukhothai Kingdom adapted the Prang form. They extended and developed it. The building material was no more separate small sandstone blocks, instead the Thais built the Prang in brick or laterite covered with stucco. And the cella could be reached only by stairs.

  8. Angkor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angkor

    The relationship seems to have changed with the construction of Angkor Wat by King Suryavarman II as his personal mausoleum at the beginning of the 12th century. The central religious image of Angkor Wat was an image of Vishnu, and an inscription identifies Suryavarman as "Paramavishnuloka", or "he who enters the heavenly world of Vishnu". [66]

  9. Khmer sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khmer_sculpture

    An Apsara carving at Angkor Wat.. Earlier Khmer art was heavily influenced by Indian treatments of Hindu subject. By the 7th century, Khmer sculpture begins to drift away from its Hindu influences – pre-Gupta for the Buddhist figures, Pallava for the Hindu figures – and through constant stylistic evolution, it comes to develop its own originality, which by the 10th century can be ...

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