This temple, adapted from Bayon Style, was built during the late 12th
and early 13th centuries, during the reign of King Jayavarman VII (AD
1181 - 1120) as a place of worship for Brahmans and Buddhists. The
temple is 42 meters long, 36 meters wide and 11 meters high. Today the
temple body, the gallery, the wal, the (gateway) and the moat
surrounding the temple are heavily damaged. The temple was constructed
of brick and laterite and devided into many rooms.
The outsite
wall is decorated with bas-reliefs illustrating the Brahman story about
the celestial nymph. Insite the temple are five rooms and a 13th century
Buddha statue that faces east.Ta Prohm is the modern name of a temple
at Angkor, Cambodia, built in the Bayon style largely in the late 12th
and early 13th centuries and originally called Rajavihara . Located
approximately one kilometre east of Angkor Thom and on the southern edge
of the East Baray near Tonle Bati, it was founded by the Khmer King
Jayavarman VII as a Mahayana Buddhist monastery and university. Unlike
most Angkorian temples, Ta Prohm has been left in much the same
condition in which it was found: the photogenic and atmospheric
combination of trees growing out of the ruins and the jungle
surroundings have made it one of Angkor's most popular temples with
visitors.
After ascending the throne of Cambodia in 1181 A.D.,
Jayavarman VII embarked on a massive program of construction and public
works. Rajavihara ("royal temple"), today known as Ta Prohm ("ancestor
Brahma"), was one of the first temples founded pursuant to that program.
The stele commemorating the foundation gives a date of 1186 A.D. The
temple's main image, representing Prajnaparamita, the personification of
wisdom, was modelled on the king's mother. The northern and southern
satellite temples in the third enclosure were dedicated to the king's
guru and his elder brother respectively. As such, Ta Prohm formed a
complementary pair with the temple monastery of Preah Khan, dedicated in
1191 A.D., the main image of which represented the Bodhisattva of
compassion Lokesvara and was modelled on the king's father.
The
temple's stele records that the site was home to more than 12,500 people
(including 18 high priests and 615 dancers), with an additional 80,000
souls in the surrounding villages working to provide services and
supplies. The stele also notes that the temple amassed considerable
riches, including gold, pearls and silks. Expansions and additions to Ta
Prohm continued as late as the rule of Srindravarman at the end of the
13th century. After the fall of the Khmer empire in the 15th century,
the temple of Ta Prohm was abandoned and neglected for centuries. When
the effort to conserve and restore the temples of Angkor began in the
early 20th century, the ?cole fran?aise extreme-Orient decided that Ta
Prohm would be left largely as it had been found, as a "concession to
the general taste for the picturesque." According to pioneering Angkor
scholar Maurice Glaize, Ta Prohm was singled out because it was "one of
the most imposing [temples] and the one which had best merged with the
jungle, but not yet to the point of becoming a part of it".
Nevertheless,
much work has been done to stabilize the ruins, to permit access, and
to maintain "this condition of apparent neglect." As of 2010, however,
it seems authorities have started to take a more agressive approach to
restoration. All the plants and shrubs have been cleared from the site
and some of trees are also getting removed. A crane has been erected and
a large amount of building work is underway to restore the temple, with
much of the work seemingly just rebuilding the temple from scratch as
at other sites. Wooden walkways, platforms, and roped railings have been
put in place around the site which now block some of the previously
famous postcard photo opportunities. The design of Ta Prohm is that of a
typical "flat" Khmer temple (as opposed to a temple-pyramid or
temple-mountain, the inner levels of which are higher than the outer).
Five rectangular enclosing walls surround a central sanctuary. Like most
Khmer temples, Ta Prohm is oriented to the east, so the temple proper
is set back to the west along an elongated east-west axis.
The
outer wall of 1000 by 650 metres encloses an area of 650,000 square
metres that at one time would have been the site of a substantial town,
but that is now largely forested. There are entrance gopuras at each of
the cardinal points, although access today is now only possible from the
east and west. In the 13th century, face towers similar to those found
at the Bayon were added to the gopuras. Some of the face towers have
collapsed. At one time, moats could be found inside and outside the
fourth enclosure. The three inner enclosures of the temple proper are
galleried, while the corner towers of the first enclosure form a
quincunx with the tower of the central sanctuary. This basic plan is
complicated for the visitor by the circuitous access necessitated by the
temple's partially collapsed state, as well as by the large number of
other buildings dotting the site, some of which represent later
additions. The most substantial of these other buildings are the
libraries in the southeast corners of the first and third enclosures;
the satellite temples on the north and south sides of the third
enclosure; the Hall of Dancers between the third and fourth eastern
gopuras; and a House of Fire east of the fourth eastern gopura.
Ta
Prohm has few narrative bas-reliefs. One explanation that has been
proffered for this dearth is that much of the temple's original Buddhist
narrative artwork must have been destroyed by Hindu iconoclasts
following the death of Jayavarman VII. At any rate, some depictions of
scenes from Buddhist mythology do remain. One badly eroded bas-relief
illustrates the "Great Departure" of Siddhartha, the future Buddha, from
his father's palace.[5] The temple also features stone reliefs of
devatas (minor female deities), meditating monks or ascetics, and
dvarapalas or temple guardians. The trees growing out of the ruins are
perhaps the most distinctive feature of Ta Prohm, and "have prompted
more writers to descriptive excess than any other feature of Angkor."
Two species predominate, but sources disagree on their identification:
the larger is either the silk-cotton tree (Ceiba pentandra) or thitpok
Tetrameles nudiflora, and the smaller is either the strangler fig (Ficus
gibbosa). or Gold Apple (Diospyros decandra). Indulging in what might
be regarded as "descriptive excess," Angkor scholar Maurice Glaize
observed, "On every side, in fantastic over-scale, the trunks of the
silk-cotton trees soar skywards under a shadowy green canopy, their long
spreading skirts trailing the ground and their endless roots coiling
more like reptiles than plants."
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