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Temple occupation and the tempo of collapse at Angkor Wat, Cambodia

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, ISSN: 1091-6490, Vol: 116, Issue: 25, Page: 12226-12231
2019
  • 29
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 49
    Captures
  • 16
    Mentions
  • 515
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    29
  • Captures
    49
  • Mentions
    16
    • News Mentions
      14
      • News
        14
    • Blog Mentions
      2
      • Blog
        2
  • Social Media
    515
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      515
      • Facebook
        515

Most Recent Blog

Angkor Wat Archaeological Digs Yield New Clues to Its Civilization’s Decline

Angkor Wat Archaeological Digs Yield New Clues to Its Civilization’s Decline HISTORY, 10 Jun 2019 Alison Kyra Carter – The Conversation Archaeological visualization of Angkor

Most Recent News

Americans Don’t Know What Urban Collapse Really Looks Like

If you’ve ever seen a picture of a lost city—maybe in the pages of National Geographic or in the first Tomb Raider movie—you were probably looking at the crumbling temples and immense, empty canals of Angkor, the former capital of the Khmer empire in present-day Cambodia. Thick tree roots have wrapped themselves around massive blocks of stone in its legendary palaces. Flowers grow from cracks in h

Article Description

The 9th–15th century Angkorian state was Southeast Asia’s greatest premodern empire and Angkor Wat in the World Heritage site of Angkor is one of its largest religious monuments. Here we use excavation and chronometric data from three field seasons at Angkor Wat to understand the decline and reorganization of the Angkorian Empire, which was a more protracted and complex process than historians imagined. Excavation data and Bayesian modeling on a corpus of 16 radiocarbon dates in particular demand a revised chronology for the Angkor Wat landscape. It was initially in use from the 11th century CE with subsequent habitation until the 13th century CE. Following this period, there is a gap in our dates, which we hypothesize signifies a change in the use of the occupation mounds during this period. However, Angkor Wat was never completely abandoned, as the dates suggest that the mounds were in use again in the late 14th–early 15th centuries until the 17th or 18th centuries CE. This break in dates points toward a reorganization of Angkor Wat’s enclosure space, but not during the historically recorded 15th century collapse. Our excavation data are consistent with multiple lines of evidence demonstrating the region’s continued ideological importance and residential use, even after the collapse and shift southward of the polity’s capital. We argue that fine-grained chronological analysis is critical to building local historical sequences and illustrate how such granularity adds nuance to how we interpret the tempo of organizational change before, during, and after the decline of Angkor.

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