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Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Cambodia Half Marathon at Angkor wat Siem Reap
International Half Marathon (10km run) at Angkor Wat ( Late December every year)
The Kingdom is proud of the host nation offering the organization of International Half Marathon at Siem Reap on the site of Angkor Wat late December every year. Participants from all over Cambodia and the world enjoy the 10 km running of the International Half Marathon around the compound of Angkor Wat, where in large evergreen tropical trees, cool weather and the beauty of the Angkor Wat with thousands of participants and spectators are of special and great interests. The 1997 International Half Marathon brought in more than 1,000 participants from all over Cambodia and from 15 foreign countries from different continents. The figure hope to accelerate for the 1998 event--- a chance eagerly anticipated by locals and international travelers alike to enjoy the spot of Angkor Wat, one of the world's leading archeological complex wonder and the spiritual heart and identity of the Khmer people. Marathon this year will calibrate on 1st December 2013 at Siem Reap Angkor. Check-inn siem reap hotel is the best location near to Angkor Wat, so it make easy for running Marathon. www.checkinn-siemreap.com
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Phnom Bakeng
Phnom Bakheng (Khmer:
ប្រាសាទភ្នំបាខែង) at Angkor, Cambodia, is a Hindu temple in the form of a temple mountain. Dedicated to Shiva, it was built
at the end of the 9th century, during the reign of King Yasovarman
(889-910). Located atop a hill, it is nowadays a popular tourist spot for
sunset views of the much bigger temple Angkor Wat,
which lies amid the jungle about 1.5 km to the southeast. The large number
of visitors makes Phnom Bakheng one of the most threatened monuments of Angkor.
[1]Since 2004, World Monuments Fund has been working to
conserve the temple in partnership with APSARA.
Constructed more than two
centuries before Angkor Wat, Phnom Bakheng was in its day the principal temple
of the Angkor region, historians believes. It was the architectural centerpiece
of a new capital, Yasodharapura, that Yasovarman built when he moved the court
from the capital Hariharalaya in the Roluos area located
to the southeast.
An inscription dated 1052 AD and
found at the Sdok Kak Thom temple in present-day Thailand states
in Sanskrit:
"When Sri Yasovardhana became king under the name of Yasovarman, the able
Vamasiva continued as his guru. By the king's order, he set up a linga on Sri
Yasodharagiri, a mountain equal in beauty to the king of mountains."[1]
Scholars believe that this passage refers to the consecration of the Phnom
Bakheng temple approximately a century and a half earlier.
Surrounding the mount and temple, labor teams
built an outer moat. Avenues radiated out in the four cardinal directions from
the mount. A causeway ran in a northwest-southeast orientation from the old
capital area to the east section of the new capital's outer moat and then,
turning to an east-west orientation, connected directly to the east entrance of
the temple.[2]
Phnom Bakheng is a symbolic representation of Mount Meru,
home of the Hindu
gods, a status emphasized by the temple’s location atop a steep hill. The
temple faces east, measures 76 meters square at its base and is built in a
pyramid form of six tiers. At the top level, five sandstone sanctuaries, in
various states of repair, stand in a quincunx pattern—one in the center and one
at each corner of the level’s square. Originally, 108 small towers were arrayed
around the temple at ground level and on various of its tiers; most of them
have collapsed.[3]
Jean
Filliozat of the Ecole Francaise, a leading authority on Indian cosmology
and astronomy, interpreted the symbolism of the temple. The temple sits on a
rectangular base and rises in five levels and is crowned by five main towers.
One hundred four smaller towers are distributed over the lower four levels,
placed so symmetrically that only 33 can be seen from the center of any side.
Thirty-three is the number of gods who dwelt on Mount Meru. Phnom Bakheng's
total number of towers is also significant. The center one represents the axis
of the world and the 108 smaller ones represent the four lunar phases, each
with 27 days. The seven levels of the monument represent the seven heavens and
each terrace contains 12 towers which represent the 12-year cycle of Jupiter.
According to University of Chicago scholar Paul Wheatley, it is "an
astronomical calendar in stone." [4]
Phnom Bakheng is one of three hilltop temples in
the Angkor region that are attributed to Yasovarman's reign. The other two are Phnom Krom
to the south near the Tonle Sap lake, and Phnom Bok,
northeast of the East Baray reservoir.
Following Angkor's rediscovery by the outside
world in the mid-19th century, decades passed before archeologists grasped
Phnom Bakheng's historical significance. For many years, scholars' consensus
view was that the Bayon,
the temple located at the center of Angkor Thom
city, was the edifice to which the Sdok Kak Thom inscription referred. Later
work identified the Bayon as a Buddhist site, built almost three centuries later than
originally thought, in the late 12th century, and Phnom Bakheng as King
Yasovarman's state temple.
copy from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phnom_Bakheng
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Cambodia Climate
Climate, Average Weather of Cambodia
- Of the Land
area, 26.7% has a tropical rainforest climate (Af), 69.6% has a
tropical wet and dry/ savanna climate (Aw), 3.8% has a temperate/
mesothermal climate with dry winters (Cw).
- Of the
population, 36% live in a tropical rainforest climate (Af), 63.8%
live in a tropical wet and dry/ savanna climate (Aw), 0.3% live in a
temperate/ mesothermal climate with dry winters (Cw).
copy from http://www.cambodia.climatemps.com/
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Prasat West Mebon
Prasat
West Mebon is located four kilometres (2.4miles) west of Angkor
Thom. The south dyke of the West Baray, take a boat to the island in the
center; walk to the east entrance of the temple. It was built in second half of
the 11th century by Udayadityavarman II, probably dedicated to Visnu
(Hindu), with following to PrasatBaphuon art
style
BACKGROUND
The West Mebon is situated at the center of an artificial lake
on a circular island with a diameter of about 150 meters (492 feet).
With sun set view that we can see at West Mebon Temple, in
the middle of west Baray . Because this
month it have over by water around temple that we can see a clear and beauty of
sun set.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Ta Prohm Temple
Ta Prohm (Khmer: ប្រាសាទតាព្រហ្ម)
is the modern name of a temple at Angkor, Siem Reap Province, Cambodia, built in the Bayon style
largely in the late 12th and early 13th centuries and originally called Rajavihara (in Khmer: រាជវិហារ). Located approximately one kilometre east of Angkor Thom and on the southern edge of
the East Baray, 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. UNESCO inscribed Ta Prohm on the World Heritage
List in 1992. Today, it is one of the most visited complexes in Cambodia’s
Angkor region. The conservation and restoration of Ta Prohm is a partnership
project of the Archaeological
Survey of India and the APSARA (Authority for the Protection
and Management of Angkor and the Region of Siem Reap) copy right from (Photos by Mr. Chean Sopheaktra)
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Banteay Srei Temple
Constructed :
Late 10th century – 967
Religion :
Hindu
Style :
Banteay Srey
King :
Rajendravarman II (944-968) & Jayavarman V (968-1001)
Location
: At 37km in north east of Siem Reap, and about 20km from the large
circuit, the road of Banteay Srey
is very practicable and now indicated well.
Comment : Jewel of Khmer
art, this temple with restricted dimensions is well outside the whole of
Angkor, in a zone still difficult to access a short time ago, which explains
its relatively late discovery and its restoration which intervened only after
the complete release in 1924.
It emanates from this small
temple a very special softness, a kind of undoubtedly calms mainly with the
color of the stones used for its construction, a pink liking which slightly
changes color with the sun. The many sculptures, their smoothness and their
excellent state of conservation contribute to the charm of this unit.
The term of “Banteay Srey” can be
translated by “fortress of the women” but it’s real significance differs
according to various interpretation. Some say that this temple was reserved to
the women, or that many women there found, but most probable in our eyes is
that according to which the temple would have been built in homage to the
women.
The visit of Bnteay Srey is to be
envisaged over at least a half-day, visits that one will be able to combine
with that of Run Ta Ek eco-village, Banteay Samre temple and, on the return at
the end of the afternoon with the splendid sunset visible from the top of Pre
rub temple.
Copy from Hotel directly book
on page 150-151
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Angkor Wat, Siem Reap
Angkor
Wat
Constructed : Early or Mid 12th
Century : 1113-1150
Religion : Hindu
King : SuryavarmanII
Location : On the
small circuit.
7Km from City, by the Saldego way are Dokmai Way.
Believed to have been
constructed as a temple and mausoleum for King SuryavarmaII at the Khmer empire
in the first half of the 12th century, Angkor wat is probably the
best-preserved of the Angkorian temples. As with other Angkorian temple and
walled cities such as Angkor Thom, the central theme of Khmer architecture revolved
around the idea of the temple-mountain. By the time building on Angkor Wat was
begun early in the 12th century, this had been elaborated to a
central tower surrounded by four small towers. The central monument represents
the mythical mount Meru, the holy mountain at the center of the universe
symbolize Mountain Meru’s five peaks.
There is a gate
in each side of the wall, but unusually for the mainly Hindu-influenced
Angkorian temple, the main entrance face west. This entrance is a richly
decorated portico, 235 m wide with three gates. However, the temple’s greatest sculptural
treasure is its 2 km-long bas-reliefs around the walls of the outer gallery and
the hundred figures of devatas and apsaras. This intricately carved gallery
tells stories of the god Vishnu and of Suryavarman II’s successes on the
battlefield. The whole complex covers 81 hectares.
Copy from Hotel Directory on
page 128-129.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Siem Reap Province
Siem Reap Province is the cradle
of Angkorean civilization and a province that offer plenty of opportunity to
tourists enthralled by the cultural patrimony. Siem Reap Angkor is the most
attractive landmark in Cambodia. It is the terms of cultural tourism in the
southeast Asia.
The Siem Reap Province is
conveniently situated 314Km northwest of Phnom Penh, along national Road No. 6.
It can be reached all year round by National Road No. 6 from Phnom Penh
Capital, Poi Pet Border Checkpoint, Banteay Meanchey Province, and by national
Road No. 5 and 6 from Kampong Chnang Province, Pursat Province and Battambang
Province.
Siem Reap Province is
accessibility on direct flights from many major cities in the region, and can
also be reached by speedboats along the Tonle Sap River and its lake from Phnom
Penh capital and Battambang Province. Located between rice paddies and flanking
the Siem Reap River, the small provincial capital of Siem Reap serves as the
gateway to the millennium-old temple ruins of the Khmer Empire, Angkor Wat.
Copy right from The
book Hotel Directory page 106.
Post by Mr. SEM SARA
Social Medea of eOrang Company
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