Sunday, March 6, 2011

ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS

We came to Cambodia for one reason: to see the temples of Angkor Wat, one of the Seven Wonders of the World, and one of its most celebrated sacred sites. After a short flight from Saigon, we arrived in Siem Reap, which has burgeoned in recent years, to accommodate the flood of tourists who pour into town with the same purpose as we. The temples themselves are, in a word, magnificent. They were "discovered", they say, in the 19th century, having been buried by the ever-encroaching jungle for 800 years.

Each day we hire Mr. Lam, one among a throng of tuk-tuk drivers, to drive us to and around the chosen sites.He has a scooter which hauls a covered three-wheeled contraption with two facing benches There are many temples spread over a huge area, each one different, according to the dictates of its god-king creator/designer.. I have to agree with the Lonely Planet guide which describes the temples' "extravagent beauty and spine-tingling grandeur." Angkor Wat is the largest religious structure in the world -- and photos follow of some of what we saw there. But we were perhaps most drawn to Ta Prohn, where nature has had its way, trifling with the best efforts of man to produce artful works which would stand forever. Merciless time, though, has taken over; nature has invaded the grand walls, lifting slabs of unbelieveable weight and beauty, tumbling great structures into a hodge-podge of finely-carved stone. It is clear that in time, the jungle will once again hold sway.

Enough talk. Gaze. More on the town of Siem Reap later.




























1 comment:

  1. incredible site! we are putting angkor wat on our to-visit-list ! pietro

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