This is one of the familiar faces of Angkor – literally. Ta Prohm is
the temple with the big face on the rounded front of it that appears in
numerous photos of Angkor. It was built as a monastery and university
in the late 12th or early 13th Century and these days is one of the few
temples that has been left in its originally re-discovered over grown
state. Efforts have been made to protect the temple from merging any
further with the jungle though, it’s kept in a carefully maintained aura
of ‘apparent neglect’. The other unusual thing about this temple is
the lack of narrative relief work. Some scholars think it was there
originally but then removed when the Hindu faith overtook the popularity
of the Buddhist one with the leaders. A few Buddhist carvings remain
though, mostly depicting temple guardians, monks meditating and dancing
girls.
While many of the Angkor temples are built up like the beginnings of
pyramids, Ta Prohm is a flat temple built with five shrinking walls all
around a central sanctuary. The outer wall is about 1000m by 650m. The
purist layout has been slightly garbled by later additions including a
large library in the southeast corner.
The temple has it’s own records printed on it, one of them is a bit
of a census and says the temple was home to more than 12,500 people
including 18 high priests and 615 temple dancers, and that there were
around 80,000 more people living in the vicinity in the town that
surrounded it.
The face is Prajnaparamita, the personification of wisdom – but it
looks quite similar to the statues and records of the King’s mother…
Source:
World Reviewer Staff.
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