Tuesday, August 20, 2019

History of the Temple

Phnom Da was built on a small hill in the 6th century, probably by the Khmer monarch who reigned at the end of the Funan kingdom, Ruryavarman, according to Mériano, a French archaeologist. It is made of laterite, brick and sandstone, with no rampart to the north, and the top of the temple is partially shattered, whereas the murals of the Sea of ​​Milk are broken into parts. And another part shows Vishnu sleeping on the Ananda dragon.
The square is 12 meters x 12 meters high, with four true doors, one north and three deceptive doors. According to Prak Sovannara, a Cambodian archaeologist from the Ministry of Fine Arts has studied that the temple of Phnom Rupa is the second built on the ancient temple, which was previously built on brick. Built in Angkor, built during the reign of Suryavarman I, the lower part of the temple is laterite. Built in the 11th century Angkor, the upper part of the structure is a remnant of the old temple, which has been renovated. The rest of the collection is housed at the Kme Museum in France, the 11th-century pearl.
There are two sets of moat in Phnom Penh, the remainder of which is the story of the sea, the milk and the other, which are also preserved in the French Museum of Chemme, and the other is the story of the story. Vishnu, the goddess Anan, has been preserved in the Angkor Borei Museum in Takeo province. In addition, the terrace is a sea-fountain of new temples built in the 11th century, while the terrace of which is the Vishnu clan on the Dragon Anchor, an old castle in the 6th century. The study concluded that in the vicinity of the temple and the area there were no less than ten temples dating to the 6th and 7th centuries AD in the Funan but no temple. Which is fine. During the 1930s, French researchers explored the temple, encountering numerous statues, some of which were shipped to France, for example, as Harriet: In 1935 a study followed. The ancient relics found the statues, statues and statues and have been housed in the National Museum of Phnom Penh.
The Temple of Phnom Da At the base of the mountain are five artificial caves, which showcase the structure of Mount Da, similar to that of India. In the cave, there is an inscription for Shiva and Yin Neang, a shrine dedicated to Shiva in Brahmanism. These caves are known as the Temple of the Gross Temple. The Khmer language is the temple of the Khmer man who caved in. During the empire, the temple was built before the brick and stone temples.
One of the five caves was used as a crematorium between 1975 and 1979, either during the Khmer Rouge or Democratic Kampuchea period. Southwest of Phnom Da, about 300 meters away, there is another temple built of sandstone, mostly in Kratie and Kampong Cham provinces, with two-storey temples facing north, two doors and The fuselage is an Indian style called the Mahabharati. At the bottom of the window, there is a magical drainage called the Silk Sutra, or Sashmatra, which means the water flow from the temple.
The Mahabharati Temple was built during the period of the 6th century, the beginning of the 7th century, during the period of the Anakras to Chenla. The Great Basilica was in good condition, having been repainted, and in 1935, by Frenchman Henry Mosse, it was added with laterite and added concrete. In Angkor Borei is an elliptical city that is a heritage of prehistoric times, but it has been altered in Indianism from the first century to the sixth century. The city was a monastery, with many temples on the site of the ruins, which are now destroyed, representing the center in the center. The most important part of the city is on the top of the mountain just outside the capital, Phnom Penh and the Great Angkor Wat. On the floor of Phnom Penh, the brick temple, one encounters the largest Vishnu sculpture.

No comments:

Post a Comment