Saturday, September 1, 2007

Angkor - the World's Mega City

Discover
Angkor, the world's first mega-city; The famous Cambodian temple complex sat amid a vast settlement that flourished until the 15th century. Then it was mysteriously abandoned. And now archeologists are struggling to find out why.
Kathy Marks
The Independent, London
1783 words
25 August 2007
The Hamilton Spectator
Final
D14
English
Copyright (c) 2007 The Hamilton Spectator.

The huge sandstone temples of Angkor, built nearly 1,000 years ago and unearthed from the Cambodian jungle in the last century, are considered one of man's most outstanding architectural achievements. Last year, more than a million tourists wandered through the ruins and watched the sun rise over the main temple's distinctive towering spires.

But, magnificent though the temple complex may be, it tells only part of the story of Angkor: A thriving metropolis, the world's first mega-city mysteriously abandoned in the 15th century, and the former capital of the vast Khmer empire.

An international team of archeologists has ascertained that the temple environs were just the core of a sprawling urban settlement that covered 1,800 square kilometres, almost twice the size of New York City. They have spent 15 years mapping the area and putting together a picture of life in what is now established to have been the world's largest medieval city.

The "lost city of Angkor" was painstakingly uncovered by French archeologists who spent much of the last century rescuing it from the forest and restoring it. Not surprisingly, they concentrated their efforts on the massive temples, which were built between the ninth and 13th centuries as monuments to the power and wealth of the Khmer kings. The rest of the region remained carpeted with vegetation, with few remnants of the ancient civilization visible to the human eye at ground level.

A French, Cambodian and Australian team used aerial photographs, satellite imagery and high-resolution ground-sensing radar, provided by NASA, to investigate what lay beneath. What they found was the remains of 74 temples, as well as the sites of thousands of houses, roads, embankments, canals and ponds -- all believed to have been part of an extensive, interconnected residential complex that included a large system of waterways. The team has just published its findings, together with a detailed map, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a U.S. journal.

Damian Evans, an Australian archeologist who is deputy director of the Greater Angkor Project, said: "People never really considered Angkor as being much more than a scattering of temples in the landscape. In fact, it would have been a huge and popular city, full of life."

He and his colleagues report in their paper that "even on a conservative estimate, greater Angkor at its peak was the world's most extensive pre-industrial low-density urban complex", far larger than the ancient Mayan cities of Central America, for instance. Evans, who is based at the University of Sydney's archeological computing library, said the Khmers of 1,000 years ago appear to have lived very similar lives to modern-day Cambodians. "They lived in clusters of houses on raised mounds to keep above the flood waters in the wet season," he said.

"The mounds were in clusters, and scattered through them were these small village ponds. Between the houses were rice fields. And the core of this system was the village temple, in much the same way that Buddhist temples are the core of contemporary Cambodian communities."

The Khmer people subsisted on rice agriculture, just as many Cambodians still do, and the water management system, designed to trap water coming down the hills in the north, was partly used for irrigation, it is believed. The village ponds, from seven to 20 metres long, were used for drinking and domestic purposes during the dry season, as well as for watering livestock.

Evans said the newly discovered temples were not grand, like those at the heart of Angkor. Most now consist only of a pile of brick rubble, plus the occasional sandstone door frame or pedestal, which once bore a statue. But while they hold little interest for tourists, they are valuable archeological finds, and members of the team believe there are nearly 100 others out there.

Evans said the temples not only had a religious function, but were centres of taxation, education and water control. "So they can tell us about the everyday life at Angkor," he said.

A succession of Khmer kings ruled the Angkor area from about 800 AD, producing the architectural masterpieces and sculpture now preserved as a World Heritage site. By the 13th century the civilization was in decline, and most of Angkor was abandoned by the early 15th century, apart from Angkor Wat, the main temple, which remained a Buddhist shrine. When the lost city -- swallowed by the jungle for centuries -- was rediscovered, archeologists were, understandably, absorbed by the need to rescue and conserve the dozen or so main temples and their bas-relief carvings. Few excavations were carried out outside the temple precinct.

"No one really thought to look beyond them and into the broader landscape, to see how people actually lived," Evans said.

By the 1960s, it was clear that rich archeological pickings lay beyond the walled city. A program was put in place to investigate the wider area, but never got off the ground because of civil war, followed by the advent of the Khmer Rouge and Pol Pot's murderous regime. It was not until the 1990s that the security situation improved, enabling work to resume. But when the international mapping team started their project, they still needed an armed escort for protection in certain areas. And even now, Evans said he never steps off marked paths, because of the risk posed by unexploded landmines.

Until now, Angkor was never looked at as an extended urban area.

The city was thought to consist of the central walled precinct, covering more than 2 square kilometres, where tens of thousands of people lived. "No one really considered the fact that there might be an urban fabric that stretched between and beyond the temples of Angkor," Evans said.

The settlement mapped by the team existed from AD 500 to AD 1500, and could have supported a population of up to one million people. But some of the terrain may have been sparsely populated, particularly in outlying areas. "Now we have the map, we can quantify this residential space," Evans said.

"We can start to do proper demographic studies and work out how many people were living on these mounds. But we can say now, from a preliminary point of view, that it would have had a population of several hundred thousand, at least."

The city was criss-crossed by roadways and canals, and was similar to modern cities that suffer from urban sprawl. "It had the same sort of dense core and pattern of spreading out into rural areas," Evans said.

The team may also have found the key to Angkor's collapse, or confirmed an existing theory: That the city "built itself out of existence".

"The water management system, in particular, had the potential to create some very serious environmental problems and radically remodel the landscape. You can see the city pushing into forested areas, stripping vegetation and re-engineering the landscape into something that was completely artificial," said Evans.

"The city was certainly big enough, and the agricultural exploitation was intensive enough, to have impacted on the environment.

"Angkor would have suffered from the same problems as contemporary low-density cities, in terms of pressure on the infrastructure, and poor management of natural resources like water.

"But they had limited technology to deal with these problems and failed to, ultimately, perhaps."

The team also found evidence of embankments that had been breached, and of ad hoc repairs to bridges and dams, suggesting the water system had become unmanageable over time. Evans said overpopulation, deforestation, topsoil erosion and degradation, with subsequent sedimentation or flooding, could have been disastrous for medieval residents.

Excavations in the next few years will examine the theory in more detail, and try to gather more data, for instance, on sedimentation in the canals.

The radar images provided by NASA distinguished the contours of the landscape under the surface of the earth, identifying the location of roads and canals.

The radar also showed up different levels of soil moisture in the rice fields.

When excavations were carried out, they proved to have been the site of a canal or temple moat.

The new archeological evidence will pose a challenge for conservationists, as the current World Heritage site covers 390 sq. km, which are intensively managed and protected.

Cambodian authorities, meanwhile, are grappling with the problem of how to preserve the precious ruins within the temple precinct from increasing numbers of visitors. Just 7,600 people ventured to Angkor in 1993, when it was added to Unesco's World Heritage list.

Since then, with Cambodia becoming accepted as a "safe" destination, tourism has boomed.

The government is expecting three million visitors in 2010, and many of those will head to the temples.

Angkor Wat is now one of Southeast Asia's leading attractions.

Tourism, which brought impoverished Cambodia $325 million in revenue last year, is helping the country to rebuild after its long dark period. But Soeung Kong, deputy director-general of the Aspara Authority, which oversees Angkor's upkeep, told Agence France Press recently: "The harm to the temples is unavoidable when many people walk in and out of them. We are trying to keep that harm at a minimal level."

Teruo Jinnai, Unesco's senior official in Cambodia, said: "When you have such a huge mass of tourists visiting, then we are concerned about damage to the heritage site and the temples and the monuments. Many temples are very fragile."

The main problem lies in Siem Reap, the nearby town that has mushroomed in recent years to accommodate the growing numbers of world tourists. There are more than 250 guest houses and hotels, and they have been sucking up groundwater and destabilizing the earth beneath Angkor.

At least one monument, the Bayon temple, famous for the serene faces carved on its 54 towers, is collapsing into the sandy ground, a development confirmed by its sinking foundations, and widening cracks between its carefully carved stones.

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