The Rise of the Khmer Empire: from Angkor Borei to Angkor Wat
April 16, 4:00pm - 5:00pmMānoa Campus, Krauss 111
Two of ancient Southeast Asia芒鈧劉s earliest and largest states arose in what is now Cambodia; each centered on a capital called n脙麓k脙麓r or Angkor (from the Sanskrit n脙隆gara), or city. Research in the Mekong Delta of southern Cambodia sheds light on the first millennium CE capital of Angkor Borei, whose populations engaged with international maritime trade networks linking China and Southeast Asia with India and Rome. The Chinese called this polity Funan. Several centuries later, the area we call Greater Angkor rose to prominence more than 200 km northwest of the delta, on the banks of the Tonle Sap Lake. Angkor Wat is the region芒鈧劉s best-known temple, but archaeologists have recorded more than 1,400 temples and shrines in the 1000 km2 area that was the Khmer empire芒鈧劉s urban epicenter. Each of these great ritual-ceremonial cities anchored its polity to the local landscape, and archaeological research since 1995 has deepened our understanding of the regional context and configurations that urbanism assumed in each setting.
This lecture reviews recent archaeological evidence for the rise of the Khmer empire, beginning with an archaeological exploration of the origins of Cambodia芒鈧劉s earliest civilization.
Event Sponsor
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Mānoa Campus
More Information
MIRIAM STARK, (808) 956-7552, miriams@hawaii.edu, Stark Talk Flyer3 (PDF)
Monday, April 16 |
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10:30am |
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12:00pm |
Inclusive Islam Symposium II: Women in Islam Mānoa Campus, Kuykendall 410 91精品黑料吃瓜 Manoa
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4:00pm |
The Rise of the Khmer Empire: from Angkor Borei to Angkor Wat Mānoa Campus, Krauss 111
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7:30pm |
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