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   Cambodge > Angkor > Bayon of Angkor Thom > The upper terrace : 200 faces of Lokesvara
The upper terrace : 200 faces of Lokesvara
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The upper terrace : 200 faces of Lokesvara
Section 10 on 10

Bayon of Angkor Thom
Outdoor Architecture

Periode : approx. between 1200 and 1290
Area related : Angkor

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Description   
The inner gallery is nearly filled by the upper terrace, raised one level higher again. The lack of space between the inner gallery and the upper terrace has led scholars to conclude that the upper terrace did not figure in the original plan for the temple, but that it was added shortly thereafter following a change in design. Originally, it is believed, the Bayon had been designed as a single-level structure, similar in that respect to the roughly contemporaneous foundations at Ta Prohm and Banteay Kdei.

The upper terrace is home to the famous "face towers" of the Bayon, each of which supports two, three or (most commonly) four gigantic smiling faces. In addition to the mass of the central tower, smaller towers are located along the inner gallery (at the corners and entrances), and on chapels on the upper terrace. "Wherever one wanders," writes Maurice Glaize, the faces of Lokesvara follow and dominate with their multiple presence."

Efforts to read some significance into the numbers of towers and faces have run up against the circumstance that these numbers have not remained constant over time, as towers have been added through construction and lost to attrition. At one point, the temple was host to 49 such towers; now only 37 remain. The number of faces is approximately 200, but since some are only partially preserved there can be no definitive count.

The central tower and sanctuary
Like the inner gallery, the central tower was originally cruciform but was later filled out and made circular. It rises 43 metres above the ground. At the time of the temple's foundation, the principal religious image was a statue of the Buddha, 3.6 m tall, located in the sanctuary at the heart of the central tower. The statue depicted the Buddha seated in meditation, shielded from the elements by the flared hood of the serpent king Mucalinda. During the reign of Hindu restorationist monarch Jayavarman VIII, the figure was removed from the sanctuary and smashed to pieces. After being recovered in 1933 from the bottom of a well, it was pieced back together, and is now on display in a small pavilion at Angkor.
Site's content    

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Bas-relief
approx. from 1200 to 1290

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Tour
approx. from 1200 to 1290

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Bas-relief
approx. from 1200 to 1290

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Galerie
approx. from 1200 to 1290

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Balustrade
approx. from 1200 to 1290

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Lieu de culte
approx. from 1200 to 1290

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Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290
Anonyme
Tête monumentale
approx. from 1200 to 1290

Anonyme
Têtes monumentales
approx. from 1200 to 1290
More pictures   
Bayon of Angkor Thom
The upper terrace : 200 faces of Lokesvara (23)