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67 results for "Angkor Thom" — page 1 of 4
D_1_15 — Angkor Thom and Bayon: Faces of the Devaraja
Angkor Thom ("Great City") — the last and most enduring capital city of the Khmer Empire — was built by Jayavarman VII (r. c. 1181–1218 CE) as a walled, moated urban complex of approximately 9 square kilometers in presen
W_2_02 — Angkor Wat, Khmer Cosmology, and Hindu-Buddhist Temple Mountains
Angkor Wat is the largest religious monument ever built — a 162.6-hectare temple complex in northwestern Cambodia, constructed under King Suryavarman II (r. ~1113-1150 CE) as a Hindu temple dedicated to Vishnu. It repres
W_2_21 — The Khmer Empire and Angkor
The Khmer Empire (~802–1431 CE), centered in present-day Cambodia, was one of the most powerful and spatially extensive states in Southeast Asian history, and its capital Angkor was the largest preindustrial city on Eart
W_2_17 — Khmer Empire & Angkor Hydraulics
The Khmer Empire (c. 802–1431 CE), centered in modern Cambodia, was one of the most powerful and technologically sophisticated states in Southeast Asian history. Its capital, Greater Angkor, covered approximately 1,000 k
M_3_10 — Ancient Astronomical Precision: Were They Really That Accurate?
Claims of extraordinary astronomical precision in ancient monuments — temples aligned to specific stars, pyramids oriented to true north within fractions of a degree, megalithic sites encoding the 25,920-year precession
ZH_2_18 — Angkor Wat Astronomical Alignments
Angkor Wat — the vast Hindu-Buddhist temple complex in Siem Reap, Cambodia, built by King Suryavarman II between approximately 1113 and 1150 CE — is not only the largest religious monument on Earth (covering 162.6 hectar
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
H_2_19 — Forbidden Archaeology — Cremo & Thompson Claims
Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of the Human Race (1993, revised edition 1998, 914 pages), authored by Michael A. Cremo and Richard L. Thompson, is the most comprehensive compendium of anomalous archaeological a
A_2_10 — Gospel of Thomas: Sayings Gospel and Hidden Wisdom
The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of 114 sayings (logia) attributed to "the living Jesus," preserved in a complete Coptic translation within the Nag Hammadi library (Codex II, discovered 1945 in Upper Egypt) and in fr
W_2_12 — Khmer Empire Beyond Angkor: Jayavarman, Hydraulics, and Collapse
The Khmer Empire (c. 802–1431 CE) — centered in present-day Cambodia and extending across much of mainland Southeast Asia — was one of the most powerful and sophisticated civilizations in world history, yet its true scal
ZH_5_02 — Megalithic Lunar Observatories: Thom's Hypothesis Revisited
The hypothesis that Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monuments in Britain, Ireland, and Brittany functioned as sophisticated lunar observatories — capable of tracking the Moon's complex motions to high precision — is
M_5_15 — LiDAR Archaeological Discoveries Catalog
Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) — an active remote sensing technology using pulsed laser light to create high-resolution three-dimensional surface models — has revolutionized archaeology since its first systematic ar
M_3_07 — Stone Age Precision — Avebury, Carnac, and European Megaliths
The European megalithic tradition — spanning from approximately 4800 to 1500 BCE across Atlantic Europe (Iberia, France, the British Isles, Scandinavia, and the central Mediterranean) — produced tens of thousands of monu
A_2_02 — Nag Hammadi & Gnostic Texts
The Nag Hammadi Library is a collection of 13 leather-bound papyrus codices containing 52 texts, discovered in 1945 near Nag Hammadi, Upper Egypt. Written in Coptic and dated to the 3rd–4th centuries CE (with originals p
X_1_13 — Indigenous Bone-Setting and Manual Therapy
Bone-setting and manual therapy — the physical manipulation of bones, joints, and soft tissues to treat musculoskeletal injuries and conditions — have been practiced in virtually every known culture throughout human hist
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
W_2_22 — Southeast Asian Classical Kingdoms: Srivijaya, Majapahit, Champa & Pagan
The classical kingdoms of Southeast Asia (c. 3rd–15th centuries CE) — maritime empires and agrarian states spanning from Sumatra to Vietnam — represent some of history's most sophisticated polities, yet remain underrepre
W_2_15 — Champa Kingdom: Southeast Asian Hindu-Buddhist Maritime Power
The Kingdom of Champa (c. 192–1832 CE) was an Austronesian-speaking, Hindu-Buddhist maritime polity occupying the central and southern coast of modern-day Vietnam — a configuration that placed it at the crossroads of the
W_5_05 — Southeast Asian Spirit Traditions (Thai, Burmese, Khmer)
Southeast Asia presents one of the world's most complex religious landscapes, where Theravada Buddhism has been practiced for over a millennium in deep synthesis with pre-Buddhist animistic traditions rather than displac
ZH_4_01 — Stonehenge Astronomical Alignments: Solar, Lunar, Eclipse
Stonehenge, the iconic late Neolithic/early Bronze Age monument on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, England (constructed in phases from c. 3000–2000 BCE), has been at the center of archaeoastronomical debate since the 18th ce
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