Angkor Cambodia
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Bakheng Hill
It
is a testimony to the love of symmetry and
balance which evolved its style....in pure
simplicity of rectangles its beauty is achieved.
It is a pyramid mounting in terraces, five of
them ...Below Bak-Keng lays all the world of
mystery, the world of the Khmer, more mysterious
ever under its cover of impenetrable verdure.
Phnom Bakheng is located 1,30 meters (4,265
feet) north of Angkor Wat and 400 meters (1,312
feet) south of Angkor Thom. Enter and leave
Phnom Bakheng by climbing a long steep path with
some steps on the east side of the monument
(height 67 meters, 220 feet) In the 1960 this
summit was approached by elephant and, according
to a French visitor, the ascent was "a promenade
classic and very agreeable"
Tip: Arrive at the summit just before sunset for
a panoramic view of Angkor and its environs. The
golden hues of the setting sun on this vista are
a memorable sight. When Frenchman Henri Mouhot
stood at this point in 1859 he wrote in his
diary: 'Steps.. lead to the top of the mountain,
whence is to be enjoyed a view so beautiful and
extensive, that it is not surprising that these
people , who have shown so much taste in their
buildings, should have chosen it for a site.
It is possible to see: the five towers of Angkor
Wat in the west, Phnom Krom to the southwest
near the Grand Lake, Phnom Bok in the northeast,
Phnom Kulen in the east, and the West Baray.
Phnom Bakheng was built in late ninth to early
tenth century by King Yasovarman dedicated to
Siva (Hindi).
Background
After Yasovarman became king in 889, he founded
his own capital, Tasoharapura, Northwest of
Roluos and built Bakheng as his state temple.
The sites known today as Angkor and thus Bakheng
is sometimes called 'the first Angkor '. A
square wall; each side of which is 4 kilometers
(2.5 miles) long, surrounded the city. A natural
hill in the center distinguished the site.
A Day On The Hill of
The Gods
This is most solitary place in all Angkor and
the pleasantest. If it was truly the Mount Meru
of the gods, then they chose their habitation
well. But if the Khmers had chanced to worship
the Greek pantheon instead of that of India,
they would surely have built on Phnom Bakheng a
temple to Apollo; for it is at sunrise and
sunset that you feel its most potent charm. To
steal out of the Bungalow an hour before the
dawn, and down the road that skirts the faintly
glimmering moat of Angkor Wat before it plunges
into the gloom of the forest; and then turn off,
feeling your way across the terrace between the
guardian lions (who grin amiably at you as you
turn the light of your torch upon them); then
clamber up the steep buried stairway on the
eastern face of the hill, across the plateau and
up the five flights of steps, to emerge from the
enveloping forest on to the cool high terrace
with the stars above you is a small pilgrimage
whose reward is far greater than its cost in
effort.
Here at the summit it is very still. The
darkness has lost its intensity; and you stand
in godlike isolation on the roof of a world that
seems to be floating in the sky, among stars
peering faintly through wisps of filmy cloud.
The dawn comes so unobtrusively that you are
unaware of it, until all in a moment you realize
that the world is no longer dark. The
sanctuaries and altars on the terrace have taken
shape about you as if by enchantment; and far
below, vaguely as yet but gathering intensity
with every second, the kingdom of the Khmers and
the glory thereof spreads out on every side to
the very confines of the earth; or so it may
well have seemed to the King-god when he visited
his sanctuary how many dawns ago.
Soon, in the east, a faint pale gold light is
diffused above a grey bank of cloud flat-topped
as a cliff, that lies across the far horizon; to
which smooth and unbroken as the surface of a
calm sea, stretches the dark ocean of forest,
awe-inspiring in its tranquil immensity. To the
south the view is the same, save where along low
hill, the shape of a couchant cat, lies in the
monotonous sea of foliage like an island.
Westward, the pearl-grey waters of the great
Baray, over which a thin mist seems to be
suspended, turn silver in the growing light, and
gleam eerily in their frame of overhanging
trees; but beyond them, too, the interminable
forest flows on to meet the sky. It is only on
the north and northeast that a range of
mountains the Dangrengs, eighty miles or so away
breaks the contour of the vast, unvarying
expanse; and you see in imagination on its
eastern rampart the almost inaccessible temple
of Prah Vihear.
Immediately below you there is morning is
windless; but one after the other, the tops of
the trees growing on the steep sides of the
Phnom sway violently to and fro, and a fussy
chattering announces that the monkeys have
awakened to a new day. Near the bottom of the
hill on the south side, threadlike wisps of
smoke from invisible native hamlets mingle with
patches of mist. And then, as the light
strengthens, to the southeast, the tremendous
towers of Angkor Wat push their black mass above
the grey-green monotony of foliage, and there
comes a reflected gleam from a corner of the
moat not yet overgrown with weeds. But of the
huge city whose walls are almost at your feet,
and of all the other great piles scattered far
and near over the immense plains that surround
you, not a vestige is to be seen. There must
surely be enchantment in a forest that knows how
to keep such enormous secrets from the all –
Seeing Eye of the sun.
In
the afternoon the whole scene is altered. The
god-like sense of solitude is the same; but the
cool, grey melancholy of early morning has been
transformed into a glowing splendor painted in a
thousand shades of orange and amber, henna and
gold. To the west, the bray, whose silvery
waters in the morning had all the inviting
freshness of a themes backwater, seems now, by
some occult process to have grown larger, and
spreads, gorgeous but sinister, a sheet of
burnished copper, reflecting the fiery glow of
the waste ring sun. Beyond it, the forest, a
miracle of color, flows on to be lost in the
splendid conflagration; and to the north and
east, where the light is less fierce, you can
see that the smooth surface of the sea of
treetops wears here and there all the tints of
an English autumn woodland: a whole gamut of
flowing crimson flaring scarlet, chestnut brown,
and brilliant yellow; for even these tropic
trees must 'winter
By this light you can see, too, what was hidden
in the morning that for a few miles towards the
south, the sweep of forest is interrupted by
occasional patches of cultivation; rice fields,
dry and golden at this season of the year, where
cattle and buffaloes are grazing.
As for the Great Wat, which in the morning had
showed itself an indeterminate black mass
against the dawn; in this light, and from this
place, it is unutterably magical. You have not
quite an aerial view the Phnom is not high
enough for that; and even if it were, the ever
encroaching growth of trees on its steep sides
shuts out the view of the Wat's whole immense
plan. But you can see enough to realize
something of the superb audacity of the
architects who dared to embark upon a single
plan measuring nearly a mile square. You point
of view is diagonal; across the north west
corner of the moat to the soaring lotus-tip of
the central sanctuary you can trace the perfect
balance of every faultless live. Worshipful for
its beauty, bewildering in its stupendous size
there is no other point from which the Wat
appears so inconceivable an undertaking to have
been attempted much less achieved by human
brains and hands.
But however that may be even while it, the scene
is changing under your eyes. The great warm-grey
mass in its setting of foliage, turns from grey
to gold; from the fold to amber, glowing with
ever deeper and deeper warmth as the sun sinks
lower. Purple shadows creep upwards from the
moat, covering the galleries, blotting out the
amber glow; chasing it higher and higher, over
the poled up roofs, till it rests for a while on
the tiers of carved pinnacles on the highest
tower, where an odd one here and there glitters
like cut topaz the level golden rays strike it.
The forest takes on coloring that is ever more
autumnal the Baray for ten seconds is a lake of
fire; and then, as though the lights had been
turned off the pageant is over...and the moon,
close to the full, com into her owe, shining
down eerily on the scene that has suddenly
become so remote and mysterious; while a cool
little breeze blows up from the east, and sends
the stiff, dry teak-leaves from the trees on the
hillside, down through the branches with a
metallic rattle.
There is one more change before this nightly
transformation-scene is over: a sort of
anti-climax to be seen in these. Soon after the
sun has disappeared, an after-glow lights up the
scene again so warmly as almost to create the
illusion that the driver of the sun's chariot
has turned his horses, and come back again. Here
on Bakheng, the warm tones of sunset return for
a few minutes, but faintly, mingling weirdly
with the moonlight, to bring effects even more
elusively lovely than any that have before.
Then, they too fade; and the moon, supreme at
last, shines down unchallenged on the airy
temple.
It is lonelier now. After the gorgeous living
pageantry of the scene that went before it, the
moon's white radiance and the silence are almost
unbearably deathlike far more eerie than the
deep darkness of morning with dawn not far
behind. With sunset, the companionable chatter
of birds and monkeys in the trees below has
ceased; they have all gone punctually to bed;
even the cicadas for a wonder are silent.
Decidedly it is time to go. Five almost
perpendicular flights of narrow-treaded steps
leading down into depths of darkness are still
between you and the plateau on the top of the
Phnom: the kind of steps on which a moment of
sudden, silly panic may easily mean a broken
neck –such is the bathos of such mild
adventures. And once on the plateau you can take
your choice of crossing it among the crumbled
ruins, and plunging down the straight
precipitous that was once a stairway- or the
easy, winding path through the forest round the
south side of the hill, worn by the elephants of
the explorers and excavators. Either will bring
you to where the twin lions sit in the darkness
black now, for here the trees are too dense to
let the moonlight through, and so home along the
straight road between its high dark walls of
forest, where all sorts of humble, half-seen
figures flit noiselessly by on their bare feet,
with only a creak now and again from the bundles
of firewood they carry, to warn you of their
passing. Little points of light twinkle out from
unseen houses as you pass a hamlet; and,
emerging from the forest to the moat-side, the
figures of men figures of men fishing with
immensely long bamboo rods, from the outer wall,
are just dimly visible in silhouette against the
moonlit water.
HW
Ponder, Cambodian Glory, The Mystery of the
Deserted Khmer Cities and their Vanquished
Splendor, and a Description of Life in Cambodia
today) Thornton Butter worth, London, 1936)
It is difficult to believe, at first, that the
steep stone cliff ahead of you is, for once, a
natural feature of the landscape, and not one of
those mountains of masonry to which Angkor so
soon accustoms you. The feat of building a
flight of wide stone steps up each of its four
sides, and a huge temple on the top, is a feat
superhuman enough to tax the credulity of the
ordinary mortal.
The temple of Bakheng was cut from rock and
faced with sandstone. Traces of this method are
visible in the northeast and southeast corners.
It reflects improved techniques of construction
and the use of more durable. This temple is the
earliest example of the plan with five sandstone
sanctuaries built on the top level of a tiered
base arranged like the dots on a die, which
became popular later. It is also the first
appearance of secondary towers on the tiers of
the base.
Symbolism
The number of towers at Bakheng suggests a
cosmic symbolism. Originally 109 towers in
replica of Mount Meru adorned the temple of
Phnom Bakheng but many are missing. The total
was made up of five towers on the upper terrace,
12 on each of the five tiers of the base, and
another 44 towers around the base. The brick
towers on the tiers represent the 12-year cycle
of the animal zodiac (11). Excluding the Central
Sanctuary, there are 108 towers, symbolizing the
four lunar phases with 27 days in each phase.
The levels (ground, five tiers, upper terrace)
number seven and correspond to the seven heavens
of Hindu mythology.
Layout
Every
haunted corner of Angkor shares in the general
mystery of the Khmers. And here the shadows seem
to lie a little deeper, for this hill is like
nothing else in the district.
Phnom Bakheng is square with a base of five
tiers (1-5) and five sanctuaries (6-10) on the
top level, occupying the corners and the middle
of the terrace. The sides of the base are each
76 meters (249 feet) long and the total height
is 13 meters (43 feet). Each side of the base
has a steep stairway with a 70 incline. Seated
lions flank each of the five tiers. Vestiges of
the wall with entry towers (12) surrounding the
temple remain.
Seated lions sculpted in the round are on each
side of the slope near the summit. The
proportions on these lions are particularly
fine. Further on, there is a small building on
the right with sandstone pillars; the two lingas
now serve as boundary stones. Continuing towards
the top, one comes to a footprint of the Buddha
in the center of the path. This is enclosed in a
cement basin and covered with a wooden roof.
Closer to the top, remains of an entry tower in
the outside wall enclosing the temple are
visible. Two sandstone libraries on either side
of the walkway are identified by rows of
diamond-shaped holes in the walls. Both
libraries open to the west and have a porch on
the east side.
Small brick sanctuary towers (11) occupy the
corners of each tier and each side of the
stairway.
Top Level
Five towers are arranged like the dots on a die.
The tower in the middle contained the linga. It
is open to all four cardinal points. The other
four sanctuaries on the top level also sheltered
a linga on a on a pedestal and are open on two
sides.
The evenly spaced holes in the paving near the
east side of Central sanctuary probably held
wooden posts, which supported a roof. The
Central Sanctuary (10) is decorated with female
divinities under the arches of the corner
pillars and Apsaras with delicately carved bands
of foliage above; the pilasters have a raised
interlacing of figurines. The Makaras on the
tympanums are lively and strongly executed. An
inscription is visible on the left-hand side of
the north door of the Central Sanctuary.