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If you're up on modern movies, you'll recognize Ta Prohm: it's where
Tomb Raider takes place. (Actually, Tomb Raider was shot
all over the Angkor ruins; I have no idea how they kept Angelina Jolie
from getting heatstroke. It's bloody hot out here!)
Ta Prohm was a monastery built by King Jayavarman VII, last of the great
Angkor kings, to obtain merit for his mother. When restoration of the
temples began, the French Ecole Francaise d'Extreme-Orient chose
Ta Prohm to be left in its "natural" state, as an example of
how most of Angkor looked in the early 19th century. (They did, however,
clear away the jungle and the landmines.) As a result, Ta Prohm is full
of giant banyan and silk-cotton trees growing up out of the ruins--some
of them over 400 years old!
Ta Prohm, with Banteay Srei (delicate pink sandstone carvings), is my
favorite of the Angkor temples. The giant trees and mosses give it a pleasantly
ruined/romantic atmosphere, and because it's a little further out than
Angkor Wat, it's not quite as overrun with tourists.
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| Ta Prohm, from the
outside. |
These trees start
out as seedlings that take root in cracks in the roof. The roots grow
down and around the temple, stabilizing the rocks until the tree dies...then
the section collapses. Thus, over a period of centuries, trees slowly
pull down the temple. |
This door appears
in Tomb Raider, or so I'm told... |
Monks being photographed
in the courtyard of Ta Prohm. |
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| Take a closer look;
this ruined tower is overgrown with plants, and is quite pretty. |
Ta Prohm is full
of beautiful carvings, like this naga; but as the trees are
distinctive, I mostly just took photos of the trees. |
Our tour group, gaping
at the trees. |
Tiger in a tree? |
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| Notice
how this root is buckling the stones. When the tree dies and the root
rots away, the stones will collapse--or would, if they hadn't been
invisibly stabilized by conservators. |
This
old man has swept the courtyard of Ta Prohm every day for over ten
years, as part of his devotional duties. Angkor is still very much
an active temple, full of Buddhist and Hindu shrines where one may
pay respects or give offerings. Many people come to pilgrimage here. |
Me communing
with tree roots. |
This
rates a closer look; the wall at the end is collapsing. (The sign
says "Danger! No Entry"--as if the teetering stones weren't
enough!) |
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