The Ancients & Origins Podcast
What if the greatest monument of the world's largest pre-industrial city wasn't a temple, but a machine? Beneath the iconic spires of Angkor Wat lies a forgotten metropolis, powered not by gods, but by water. This episode plunges into the revolutionary engineering that turned a monsoon-soaked jungle into the beating heart of the Khmer Empire. We journey with archaeologists using cutting-edge LiDAR technology to peel back the forest canopy, revealing a sprawling grid of canals, reservoirs, and intricate water management systems. We explore how these "hydraulic cities" like Angkor Thom and its vast barays (water reservoirs) were not just for ritual, but formed a sophisticated economic engine, enabling three rice harvests a year to feed a population of nearly a million. Listeners will discover how the Khmer's mastery of hydraulics was the true source of their imperial power, and how the eventual failure of this delicate water network—through climate shifts, siltation, or engineering overreach—may hold the key to understanding the empire's mysterious retreat from Angkor in the 15th century. The stones tell stories of gods, but the earth whispers the secrets of survival. #KhmerEmpire #Angkor #HydraulicEngineering #LiDARArchaeology #MegaCity #MonsoonCivilization #ClimateAndCollapse Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
20 episodios
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