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EXCELLENT Based on 69 reviews Rosie H2024-07-21Verified Best driver in Siem Reap - Highly recommend Chan really is the best driver in Siem Reap! He always made sure we were comfortable and hydrated, giving us ice cold water on our return from each temple and driving with care and safety. His knowledge and expertise are amazing and made our 3 day tour of the temples a highlight of our south east Asia trip, providing us with insight into each temple, Cambodian culture & history, and always with a huge smile! If you want to truely enjoy Siem Reap and all its beauty, you need to book Chan! He truely is the best driver we have ever hired :) We cannot wait to return to Cambodia and drive with Chan again one day. Bryony H2024-07-12Verified Brilliant tour guide! Goes above and beyond! Fantastic tour guide! Chan was very informative, gave us as much time as we liked at each temple and was flexible in the temples we wanted to see. Cold water between temples was perfect on such a hot day! Would definitely recommend Chan for a temples tour and super affordable Jonny E2024-07-12Verified Fantastic tour for great value. Kosal is a fantastic tour driver for Angkor Wat. Extremely friendly and accommodating. Kosal has amazing english and a lot of knowledge about the temples you visit so you can ask plenty of questions! He also provides free bottled water at every stop and always gives you plenty of time to look around the temples so that you don’t feel rushed. Absolutely recommend him to anyone looking to visit Angkor Wat! Thank you Kosal! G Black2024-07-12Verified The smiliest tuk tuk driver in Siem Reap Kosal is an amazing tour driver for Angkor Wat. He is incredibly friendly, always with a smile! He speaks English very well, and provides unlimited ice cold water throughout the day which is very much needed between temples. I can’t recommend him enough!!! It was also very good value… Nico R2024-07-09Verified Best tuktuk driver Great guy really helpful and very friendly. He speaks great English and is very informative. 100% recommend him to anyone who wants to get around Angkor Wot. carthaigh q2024-07-08Verified Great guy and guide We had a great three day temple tour with Kosal. We visited the temples around Angkor Way and also some a good bit further from Siem Reap. Doing it by tuc tic was great. Kosal is a really friendly guy., with good English. He was flexible and was a real pleasure to get to know. He is honest and very punctual. Hire him, you won't go wrong. cecilia f2024-07-05Verified Temples Kosal is great for a tour in Cambodia. He is very predisposed, friendly and helpful, and is always willing to adapt the tour to your interests. With your knowledge and kindness, you ensure a unique and memorable experience. Fully recommended. Thomas T2024-07-02Verified Tuktuk driver Amazing lad great time, took us around where we need to go and informed us on the history, speaks great English too. Def recommend and may ask him again Tim M2024-06-24Verified Highly recommended! We spent an amazing 2 days with Kosal. He gave us the history of each temple we visited as well as plenty more information about Cambodia, past and present. He made a few stops along the way and told us about farming practices and traditional building methods. It was a very interesting and informative experience. Kosal is a great guy, he speaks good English and is a very safe driver too! Jana-Alin B2024-06-11Verified Best Tuk Tuk driver Kosal drove us to our hotel when we arrived in Siem Reap and told us a lot about the city during the short drive, including a short language course. We liked him so much that we booked our two Angkor tours with him. Unfortunately, he didn't have time for our first tour (sunset), but he organized a tour with his brother, which was also great. On the second day, we did the sunrise tour with him and it was amazing. We were always provided with water and were able to leave our backpack in the tuk tuk. Kosal knows so much about the temples and Cambodia's history that he is both a tuk tuk driver and a tour guide. You can have a great conversation with him, also about every day stuff and he speaks very good English. And he is so nice and friendly. We can absolutely recommend Kosal and would book a tour with him again at any time.
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South gate, entrance to Angkor Thom
Angkor Thom (Khmer: អង្គរធំ; literally: “Great City”), located in present day Cambodia, was the last and most enduring capital city of the Khmer empire. It was established in the late twelfth century by king Jayavarman VII. It covers an area of 9 km², within which are located several monuments from earlier eras as well as those established by Jayavarman and his successors. At the centre of the city is Jayavarman’s state temple, the Bayon, with the other major sites clustered around the Victory Square immediately to the north.
Angkor Thom was established as the capital of Jayavarman VII’s empire, and was the centre of his massive building programme. One inscription found in the city refers to Jayavarman as the groom and the city as his bride. (Higham, 121)
Angkor Thom seems not to be the first Khmer capital on the site, however. Yasodharapura, dating from three centuries earlier, was centred slightly further northwest, and Angkor Thom overlapped parts of it. The most notable earlier temples within the city are the former state temple of Baphuon, and Phimeanakas, which was incorporated into the Royal Palace. The Khmers did not draw any clear distinctions between Angkor Thom and Yashodharapura: even in the fourteenth century an inscription used the earlier name. (Higham 138) The name of Angkor Thom — great city — was in use from the 16th century.
Faces on Prasat Bayon
The last temple known to have been constructed in Angkor Thom was Mangalartha, which was dedicated in 1295. Thereafter the existing structures continued to be modified from time to time, but any new creations were in perishable materials and have not survived. In the following centuries Angkor Thom remained the capital of a kingdom in decline until it was abandoned some time prior to 1609, when an early western visitor wrote of an uninhabited city, “as fantastic as the Atlantis of Plato” which some thought to have been built by the Roman emperor Trajan. (Higham 140) It is believed to have sustained a population of 80,000-150,000 people.
Style
Angkor Thom is in the Bayon style. This manifests itself in the large scale of the construction, in the widespread use of laterite, in the face-towers at each of the entrances to the city and in the naga-carrying giant figures which accompany each of the towers.
The Site
The city lies on the right bank of the Siem Reap River, a tributary of Tonle Sap, about a quarter of a mile from the river. The south gate of Angkor Thom is 7.2 km north of Siem Reap, and 1.7 km north of the entrance to Angkor Wat. The walls, 8 m high and flanked by a moat, are each 3 km long, enclosing an area of 9 km². The walls are of laterite buttressed by earth, with a parapet on the top. There are gates at each of the cardinal points, from which roads lead to the Bayon at the centre of the city. As the Bayon itself has no wall or moat of its own, those of the city are interpreted by archaeologists as representing the mountains and oceans surrounding the Bayon’s Mount Meru. (Glaize 81). Another gate — the Victory Gate — is 500 m north of the east gate; the Victory Way runs parallel to the east road to the Victory Square and the Royal Palace north of the Bayon.
The faces on the 23 m towers at the city gates (which are later additions to the main structure) take after those of the Bayon, and pose the same problems of interpretation. They may represent the king himself, the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, guardians of the empire’s cardinal points, or some combination of these. A causeway spans the moat in front of each tower: these have a row of devas on the left and asuras on the right, each row holding a naga in the attitude of a tug-of-war. This appears to be a reference to the myth, popular in Angkor, of the Churning of the Sea of Milk. The temple-mountain of the Bayon, or perhaps the gate itself, (Glaize 82) would then be the pivot around which the churning takes place. The nagas may also represent the transition from the world of men to the world of the gods (the Bayon), or be guardian figures. (Freeman and Jacques 76). The gateways themselves are 3.5 by 7 m, and would originally have been closed with wooden doors. (Glaize 82) The south gate is now by far the most often visited, as it is the main entrance to the city for tourists.
At each corner of the city is a Prasat Chrung — corner shrine — built of sandstone and dedicated to Avalokiteshvara. These are cruciform with a central tower, and orientated towards the east.
Within the city was a system of canals, through which water flowed from the northeast to the southwest. The bulk of the land enclosed by the walls would have been occupied by the secular buildings of the city, of which nothing remains. This area is now covered by forest.
Most of the great Angkor ruins have vast displays of bas-relief depicting the various gods, goddesses, and other-worldly beings from the mythological stories and epic poems of ancient Hinduism (modified by centuries of Buddhism). Mingled with these images are actual known animals, like elephants, snakes, fish, and monkeys, in addition to dragon-like creatures that look like the stylized, elongated serpents (with feet and claws) found in Chinese art.
But among the ruins of Ta Prohm, near a huge stone entrance, one can see that the “roundels on pilasters on the south side of the west entrance are unusual in design.”
What one sees are roundels depicting various common animals—pigs, monkeys, water buffaloes, roosters and snakes. There are no mythological figures among the roundels, so one can reasonably conclude that these figures depict the animals that were commonly seen by the ancient Khmer people in the twelfth century (Jacques/Freeman/Cole).
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider features several characters visiting Angkor Thom during their trip to Cambodia to recover the first piece of the Triangle of Light
In The Judas Strain (A novel by James Rollins): The characters are on a journey to find a cure for a plague, and are following in the steps of Marco Polo.
In The Golden Pagans (A novel by Peter Bourne c.1956): The main characters are sent to Arabia during the crusades, captured and forced into servitude by the Khmers. They build a portion of what becomes known as Angkor Thom.
In Patlabor the Movie 2, the opening scene appears to be based on the Angkor Thom, as said by Hayao Miyazaki in an interview with Animage magazine on October 1993.
In Civilization IV: Beyond the Sword, Angkor Thom is the third city to build in Khmer Empire after Yasodharapura and Hariharalaya.
In Eternal Darkness: Sanity’s Requiem, Angkor Thom is the region where a Cambodian temple is located, housing the Ancient Mantorok.