Preah Khan
(Khmer: ប្រាសាទព្រះខ័ន
"Royal Sword") is a temple at Angkor, Cambodia, built in the 12th century for King Jayavarman VII to honor his father. It is located northeast of Angkor Thom and just west of the
Jayatataka baray, with which it was associated. It was the centre of a
substantial organisation, with almost 100,000
officials and servants. The temple is flat in design, with a basic plan
of successive rectangular galleries around a Buddhist sanctuary complicated by
Hindu satellite temples and numerous later additions. Like the nearby Ta Prohm,
Preah Khan has been left largely unrestored, with numerous trees and other
vegetation growing among the ruins.
Preah Khan was
built on the site of Jayavarman VII's victory over the invading Chams in 1191.
Unusually the modern name, meaning "holy sword", is derived from the
meaning of the original—Nagara Jayasri (holy city of victory). The site may
previously have been occupied by the royal palaces of Yasovarman II and
Tribhuvanadityavarman. The temple's foundation stela has provided considerable
information about the history and administraktion of the site: the main image,
of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara in the form of the king's father, was
dedicated in 1191 (the king's mother had earlier been commemorated in the same
way at Ta Prohm). 430 other deities also had shrines on the site, each of which
received an allotment of food, clothing, perfume and even mosquito nets; the
temple's wealth included gold, silver, gems, 112,300 pearls and a cow with
gilded horns. The institution combined the roles of city, temple and Buddhist
university: there were 97,840 attendants and servants, including 1000 dancers
and 1000 teachers.
The temple is
still largely unrestored: the initial clearing was from 1927 to 1932, and
partial anastylosis was carried out in 1939. Since then free-standing statues
have been removed for safe-keeping, and there has been further consolidation
and restoration work. Throughout, the conservators have attempted to balance
restoration and maintenance of the wild condition in which the temple was
discovered: one of them, Maurice Glaize, wrote that;
The temple was
previously overrun with a particularly voracious vegetation and quite ruined,
presenting only chaos. Clearing works were undertaken with a constant respect
for the large trees which give the composition a pleasing presentation without
constituting any immediate danger. At the same time, some partial anastylosis
has revived various buildings found in a sufficient state of preservation and
presenting some special interest in their architecture or decoration.
Since 1991, the
site has been maintained by the World Monuments Fund. It has continued the
cautious approach to restoration, believing that to go further would involve
too much guesswork, and prefers to respect the ruined nature of the temple. One
of its former employees has said, "We're basically running a glorified
maintenance program. We're not prepared to falsify history". It has
therefore limited itself primarily to stabilisation work on the fourth eastern
gopura, the House of Fire and the Hall of Dancers.
The outer wall
of Preah Khan is of laterite, and bears 72 garudas holding nagas, at 50 m
intervals. Surrounded by a moat, it measures 800 by 700 m and encloses an area
of 56 hectares (140 acres). To the east of Preah Khan is a landing stage on the
edge of the Jayatataka baray, which measures 3.5 by 0.9 km (2 by 1 mi). This
also allowed access to the temple of Neak Pean in the centre of the baray. Once
dried up, the Jayatataka baray is now filled with water again, as at the end of
each rainy season, all excess water in the area is diverted into it.
As usual Preah
Khan is oriented toward the east, so this was the main entrance, but there are
others at each of the cardinal points. Each entrance has a causeway over the
moat with nāga-carrying devas and asuras similar to those at Angkor Thom;
Glaize considered this an indication that the city element of Preah Khan was
more significant than those of Ta Prohm or Banteay Kdei.
Halfway along
the path leading to the third enclosure, on the north side, is a House of Fire
(or Dharmasala) similar to Ta Prohm's. The remainder of the fourth enclosure,
now forested, was originally occupied by the city; as this was built of
perishable materials it has not survived. The third enclosure wall is 200 by
175 metres (656 by 574 ft). In front of the third gopura is a cruciform
terrace. The gopura itself is on a large scale, with three towers in the centre
and two flanking pavilions. Between the southern two towers were two celebrated
silk-cotton trees, of which Glaize wrote, "resting on the vault itself of
the gallery, [they] frame its openings and brace the stones in substitute for
pillars in a caprice of nature that is as fantastic as it is perilous."
One of the trees is now dead, although the roots have been left in place. The
trees may need to be removed to prevent their damaging the structure. On the
far side of the temple, the third western gopura has pediments of a chess game
and the Battle of Lanka, and two guardian dvarapalas to the west.
West of the third eastern gopura, on the
main axis is a Hall of Dancers. The walls are decorated with apsaras; Buddha
images in niches above them were destroyed in the anti-Buddhist reaction under
Jayavarman VIII. North of the Hall of Dancers is a two-storeyed structure with
round columns. No other examples of this form survive at Angkor, although there
are traces of similar buildings at Ta Prohm and Banteay Kdei. Freeman and
Jacques speculate that this may have been a granary. Occupying the rest of the
third enclosure are ponds (now dry) in each corner, and satellite temples to
the north, south and west. While the main temple was Buddhist, these three are
dedicated to Shiva, previous kings and queens, and Vishnu respectively. They
are notable chiefly for their pediments: on the northern temple, Vishnu
reclining to the west and the Hindu trinity of Vishnu, Shiva and Brahma to the
east; on the western temple, Krishna raising Mount Govardhana to the west.
Connecting the Hall of Dancers and the
wall of the second enclosure is a courtyard containing two libraries. The
second eastern gopura projects into this courtyard; it is one of the few
Angkorian gopuras with significant internal decoration, with garudas on the
corners of the cornices. Buddha images on the columns were changed into hermits
under Jayavarman VIII.
Between the
second enclosure wall (85 by 76 m or 279 by 249 ft) and the first enclosure
wall (62 by 55 m or 203 by 180 ft) on the eastern side is a row of later
additions which impede access and hide some of the original decoration. The
first enclosure is, as Glaize said, similarly, "choked with more or less
ruined buildings". The enclosure is divided into four parts by a cruciform
gallery, each part almost filled by these later irregular additions. The walls
of this gallery, and the interior of the central sanctuary, are covered with
holes for the fixing of bronze plates which would originally have covered them
and the outside of the sanctuary—1500 tonnes was used to decorate the whole
temple. At the centre of the temple, in place of the original statue of
Lokesvara, is a stupa built several centuries after the temple's initial
construction
Stupa with direct sunlight |
The purpose of this two-storied building with round columns is unknown. |
Dancing Hall |
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