Saturday, 1 August 2015

Cambodia - Day 2 (19.12.2014) Part 2

Second day - 19.12.2014 (Part 2)

Continue from Second day - 19.12.2014 (Part1)

We continue our journey to Ta Prohm Temple after our lunch. Ta Prohm is a unique and beautiful temple, bound by massive roots of huge trees. The temple is cloaked in dappled shadow,its crumbling tower and wall locked in the slow muscular embrace of vast root systems.

Ta Prohm Temple 


                  Crocodile Tree

The most popular of many strangulating root formation is that on the inside of the easternmost gopura (entrance pavilion) of the central enclosure, nicknamed the crocodile tree.

                 Tomb Raider Tree

It's one of the famous spots in Ta Projm is the so-called 'Tomb Raider Tree', where Angelina Jolie's Lara craft picked a jasmine flower before falling through the earth into...Pinewood Studios.

It's used to be possible to climb onto the damaged galleries, but this is now prohibited, to protect both temple and visitor.



We proceed to Banteay Kdei after Ta Prohm.

Banteay Kdei
It's a massive Buddhist monastery from the latter part of 12th century,surrounded by 4 concentric walls.



The inside of central tower was never finished and much of the temple is in a ruinous state due to hasty construction. It's considered less busy than nearby ta Prohm.

Sra Srang

East of Banteay Kdei is an earlier basin, Sra Srang (Pool of Ablutions).A tiny island in the middle once bore a wooden temple, of which only the stone base remains.

Pre Rup



Pre Rup means "Turning the Body" and refer to a traditional method of cremation in which a corpse's outline is traced in the cinders,first in one direction and then in the other; this suggest that the temple may served as an early royal crematorium.

We had our dinner at Little Italy where it is an elegant Italian restaurant.



The pizza was large and very reasonably priced.

Enjoying a glass of Anchor to end our day. 😊

Cambodia - Day 2 (19.12.2014) Part 1

Second Day - 19.12.2014 (Part 1)

We requested packed breakfast from the hotel one day before due to we have to depart at 0430 for Angkor Wat to catch the sunrise.

We bought the three-day entry pass from the large official entrance booth on the road to Angkor Wat. There are choice of one-day pass (US$20), three-day pass (US$40) or a one-week pass (US$60). The passes include a digital photo snapped at the entrance booth, so queues can be slow at peak times.



It's only 430am and it is so crowded.Everyone is waiting for the sunrise.

Unfortunately we are unable to see the sunrise due to cloudy weather.







There are around 1,800 dancing goddesses carvings in Angkor Wat.




Angkor Wat was built in the first half of the 12th century. Angkor Wat is the largest monument of the Angkor group and the best preserved,is an architectural masterpiece.

Angkor Wat was a funerary temple for King Suryavarman II and oriented to the west to conform to the symbolism between the setting sun and death but he was never buried there as he died in the battle during a failed expedition to subdue the Dai Viet (Vietnamese). The bas-reliefs designed for viewing from left to right in order of Hindu funeral ritual, support this function.

The seven-headed naga becomes a symbolic rainbow bridge for man to reach the abode of the gods.


        South Gate of Angkor Throm

Bayon
Bayon looks like a glorified pile of rubble from a distance.It's only when you enter the temple and make your way up to the third level that it's magic becomes apparent.


                          Apsara 

Baphuon


Baphuon was the centre of EFEO restoration efforts when the civil was erupted and work paused for a quarter of a century. The temple was taken apart piece by piece, in keeping with the anastylosis method of renovation, but all the records were destroyed during the Khmer Rouge years,leaving experts with 300,000 stones to put back into place. The EFEO resumed restoration work in 1995 and continues its efforts today. 


     The Reclining Buddha of Baphuon

On the western side of Baphuon, the retaining wall of the second level was fashioned - apparently in the 15th or 16th century - into a reclining Buddha about 60m in length. The unfurnished figure is difficult to make out, but the head is on the northern side of the wall and the gate is where the hips should be; to the left of the gate protrudes an arm. When it comes to the legs and feet - the latter are entirely gone - imagination must suffice.


Royal Palace & Phimeanakas Temple

Pheanakas means 'Celestial Palace'. Most of the decorative features are broken or have disappeared. 

Terrace of Elephants
The 350m-long Terrace of Elephants was used as a giant viewing stand for public ceremonies and served as a base for the king's grand audience hall.

It has five piers extending towards the Central Sq - three in the centre and one at each end. The middle section of the retaining wall is decorated with life-size garudas and lions; towards either end are the two parts of the famous parade of elephants, complete with their Khmer mahouts.

Terrace of the Leper King


The Terrace of the Leper King is just north of the Terrace of Elephants. On the southern side of the Terrace of the Leper King, there is access to the front wall of a hidden terrace that was covered up when the outer structure was built - a terrace within a terrace. 

The 4 tiers of apsaras and other figures, including nagas, look as fresh as if they had been carved yesterday. As you follow the inner wall of the Terrace of the Leper King, notice the increasingly rough chisel marks on the figures, an indication that this wall was never completed, like many of the temples at Angkor.

Tep Pranam

Preah Palilay


Our Lunch 


To be continue...