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  2. The Poem of Angkor Wat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Poem_of_Angkor_Wat

    The Poem of Angkor Wat reveals the poetic potential of the ruins of Angkor Wat. This poetic potential was reflected in the works by generations of bards and poets, both Khmer and foreign, such as American poet Allen Ginsberg's "Ankor Wat", one of the most significant evocations of the Khmer temples in modern literature. [17]

  3. 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.

  4. National symbols of Cambodia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_symbols_of_Cambodia

    In 2005, the Kingdom of Cambodia designated seven flora and fauna as national symbols in an effort to promote nationalism and protection and conservation of these plants and animals. [1] The sugar palm, Borassus flabellifer, and Angkor Wat are two symbols of Cambodia; the latter is also portrayed on the flag of Cambodia.

  5. Reamker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reamker

    Reamker is also mentioned in another literature called L'berk Angkor Wat (“The Story of Angkor Wat”) written in 1620 by Khmer author-Pang Tat (or Nak Pang), celebrating the magnificent temple complex of Angkor Wat and describing the bas-reliefs in the temple galleries that portray the Rama story. [7]

  6. Cambodian art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambodian_art

    Khmer swords became part of Khmer culture and literature through influences that were not only mythogical, as the Chandrahas sword represented in Angkor Wat and found in the Reamker or legendary as the sword that Preah Bath Ponhea Yath, who was the last king of the Angkorian Empire, drew out as he led a victorious battle against the Siamese ...

  7. Khmer architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khmer_architecture

    Angkor's neighbor state of Champa was also the home to numerous brick temples that are similar in style to those of Angkor. The most extensive ruins are at Mỹ Sơn in Vietnam . A Cham story tells of the time that the two countries settled an armed conflict by means of a tower-building contest proposed by the Cham King Po Klaung Garai .

  8. Grande Inscription d'Angkor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grande_Inscription_d'Angkor

    The Grande Inscription d'Angkor is a 53 line poem composed with 152 verses using three different meters followed by a colophon and engraved on a designated wall in the complex of Angkor Wat. Divided in three parts with "true poetic inspiration" according to Khmer historian Mak Phoeun, [ 4 ] it is a poem rich in metaphor , literary allusion and ...

  9. Culture of Cambodia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Cambodia

    Angkor eventually collapsed after much intensive in-fighting between royalty and constant warring with its increasingly powerful neighbors, notably Siam and Dai Viet. Many temples from this period like Bayon and Angkor Wat remain today, scattered throughout Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam as a reminder of the grandeur of Khmer arts and ...