China Daily

Angkor decline gradual rather than catastroph­ic

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WASHINGTON — Angkor, the ancient capital of the Khmer empire, appears to have suffered a gradual decline rather than a catastroph­ic collapse, according to a study published on Monday.

Archaeolog­ists and historians have long sought to explain the 15th-century abandonmen­t of Angkor, with many attributin­g it to the 1431 invasion by Thai forces from Ayutthaya.

“The historical record is effectivel­y blank for the 15th century at Angkor,” said Dan Penny, a member of a team of Australian and Cambodian archaeolog­ists and geographer­s who took part in the study published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

“We don’t have a written record that tells us why they left or when or how,” said Penny of the University of Sydney. “Everything that survived is carved on stone.”

For the study, the team examined 70-centimeter sediment cores taken from a moat that surrounded Angkor Thom, the capital of the Khmer empire.

Penny said the cores serve as a “natural history book recording changes in land use, and climate, and in vegetation, year after year”.

Where humans live they leave traces through fire, soil erosion through agricultur­e and disturbed vegetation. When they leave, conditions change.

In the first decades of the 14th century, Penny said you start to see a decline in land use, wood burning, destabiliz­ed vegetation and a reduction in soil erosion.

By the end of the 14th century, “the southern moat of Angkor Thom was overgrown with vegetation, and management, by implicatio­n, had ceased”, the authors said in the study.

“Angkor was never fully abandoned,” Penny said, but “the elite were shifting away from Angkor”, moving to new communitie­s elsewhere with more commercial opportunit­ies.

“This was not a collapse,” Penny said. “This was in fact a decisive choice to shift focus away from Angkor.”

The study said: “While the breakdown of Angkor’s hydraulic network, most likely associated with climate variabilit­y in the mid14th and early 15th centuries, represents the end of Angkor as a viable settlement, our data indicate that it was presaged by a protracted demographi­c decline.

“This raises the likelihood that the urban elite did not leave Angkor because the infrastruc­ture failed, as has been suggested, but that the infrastruc­ture failed (or was not maintained and repaired) because the urban elites had already left.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A mahout rides an Asian elephant at the gates of Bayon Temple at Angkor, Cambodia.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A mahout rides an Asian elephant at the gates of Bayon Temple at Angkor, Cambodia.

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