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Southeast Asia Digital Library



TitleTa Prohm, giant tree growing on the north wing of east gallery, second enclosureFind Similar by title
DescriptionThis temple-monastery was built in 1186 and posthumously dedicated to Jayavarman VII’s mother, Jayarajachudamani, and his guru, Jayamangalartha. According to its foundation stele, there were 12,640 people in residence, and the temple was served by 79,365 people from surrounding villages. The Ecole Francaise d’Extreme-Orient decided to leave the temple in its ‘natural state’ as an example of how Angkor looked when it was discovered in the 19th century, and since then it has been maintained in this condition of deliberate neglect. Visitors are drawn to the temple ruins because of the dramatic effect created by the entanglement of tree roots and forest vegetation with the architectural structure of the monument.Find Similar by description
DescriptionLocation : Siem Reap.Find Similar by description
DescriptionSource : Rooney, Dawn. Angkor: An Introduction. Hong Kong: Odyssey Guides, 2005.Find Similar by description
DescriptionThis item digitized and made available online with funds provided by United States Department of Education, TICFIA (Technological Innovation and Cooperation for Foreign Information) Grant P337A05006.Find Similar by description
PublisherNorthern Illinois University Libraries - Southeast Asia Digital Library (http://sea.lib.niu.edu)Find Similar by publisher
PublisherThen and Now: Historical Photographs of Cambodia, Northern Illinois University.Find Similar by publisher
ContributorNorthern Illinois University.Find Similar by contributor
Date2007-06-18Find Similar by date
TypePhotographFind Similar by type
IdentifierSEAImages:SRTP03Find Similar by identifier
SourceThen and Now: Historical Photographs of CambodiaFind Similar by source
CoverageCambodiaFind Similar by coverage
RightsNorthern Illinois UniversityFind Similar by rights
Belongs to the Collection: Then and Now: Historical Photographs of Cambodia.