Angkor
Thom is quadrangle of defensive walls totaling 12 kilometers that
once protected the Khmer capital of the same name (Angkor Thom means
"Great City"). Built in the late 12th and early 13th centuries
by King Jayavarman VII, the walls are divided by two axes running
north-south and east-west. A gateway lies at the end of each axis,
four in total, facing the four cardinal directions. An additional
gate, called the "Gate of Victory", pierces the east wall
just north of the "Gate of the Dead", the east gate along
the central axis. The significance of the additional gate is that
it provided access to a terrace of the royal palace. As for the
other gates, the two axes intersect at the center of the enclosed
area where the Bayon temple sits.
The
south gate of Angkor Thom is the best preserved. It is approached
from outside via a causeway that extends about fifty meters across
a moat. On each side of the causeway are railings fashioned with
54 stone figures engaged in the performance of a famous Hindu story:
the myth of the Churning of the Ocean. On the left side of the moat,
54 'devas' (guardian gods) pull the head of the snake 'Shesha' while
on the right side 54 'asuras' (demon gods) pull the snake's tail
in the opposite direction. In this myth, the body of the snake is
wrapped around the central mountainMt. Meruperhaps corresponding
here to the Bayon temple at the center of the site. In any case,
the myth relates that as the Devas pulled the snake in one direction
and the gods pushed in the other, the ocean began to churn and precipitate
the elements. By alternating back and forth, the ocean was "milked",
forming the earth and the cosmos anew.
The central tower of the stone gate is capped by three face-towers
that face the four directions (the central tower faces both out
and in). Below them at the base of the gate are two sets of elephant
statues that flank the entrance on both sides. Sitting on each elephant
is a figure of the god Indra carrying his usual weaponthe 'vadra'
(a lightning bolt). The gate itself is shaped like an upside-down
"U" and is corbelled at the top (instead of arches, the
builders of Angkor preferred to use corbelling to span distances).
It is still possible to see where wooden doors once fitted to the
gate through openings in the stone.
There
is some debate as to the functionality of Angkor Thom as a whole.
If it was a wall intended for defense, it was rather poorly designed,
since there is nowhere along the wall for defenders to take refuge
from incoming fire or shoot back from a shielded location. This
is surprising since Angkor had been sacked in 1177 by Champa invaders,
and one can readily imagine that its new King, Jayavarman VII would
have been concerned with defense should the invaders return.
If not intended for defense, the walls may simply have been an
additional enclosure around the Bayon temple, more for ceremony
than for practical use. As in Southern India, the Angkor rulers
built temples surrounded by walls, but usually not with walls as
thick and grand as those of Angkor Thom.
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