The Khmer Empire: The Lost Civilization Behind Angkor Wat — Fexingo History

Angkor's Rice Revolution and the Great Baray Grid

6 min · 28 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Angkor's Rice Revolution and the Great Baray Grid

Descripción

Angkor's vast baray reservoirs weren't just for irrigation — they were part of a massive state-managed rice production system that fueled the Khmer Empire's power. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the engineering behind the West Baray, the role of paddy fields in the Angkorian economy, and how water management shaped everything from temple construction to political control. Drawing on the work of the Greater Angkor Project, they discuss the grid of channels, embankments, and reservoirs that transformed the landscape around Yasodharapura. How did the Khmer empire feed hundreds of thousands of people? Why did the system eventually fail? And what can lidar scans tell us about the scale of this agricultural machine? Specifics include the East Baray, Indratataka, the role of the tonle sap floodplain, and the surprising evidence of elite control over rice surpluses. A look at the crop that built Angkor — and the water that made it possible. #KhmerEmpire #Angkor #RiceAgriculture #Baray #WaterManagement #GreaterAngkorProject #Lidar #Yasodharapura #WestBaray #EastBaray #Indratataka #TonleSap #Irrigation #SoutheastAsia #AncientEngineering #FoodHistory #Archaeology #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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160 episodios

episode The Leper King: Angkor's Strangest Statue and Its Secret artwork

The Leper King: Angkor's Strangest Statue and Its Secret

In this episode of The Khmer Empire, Lucas and Luna explore one of Angkor's most mysterious figures: the Leper King. They discuss the enigmatic statue at the Terrace of the Leper King in Angkor Thom, its possible identities—including the legendary king Yasovarman I and the god Yama—and the medical and cultural context behind the name. The conversation delves into the statue's unique posture, the discovery of a hidden underground chamber beneath the terrace, and what the leprosy motif might reveal about Khmer attitudes toward disease and kingship. They also touch on the restoration work by the Angkor Conservation Office and the statue's current home in the National Museum of Cambodia. This episode offers a fresh perspective on a lesser-known corner of Angkorian art and mythology. #LeperKing #AngkorThom #YasovarmanI #KhmerArt #Yama #Leprosy #TerraceOfTheLeperKing #JayavarmanVII #AngkorConservation #NationalMuseumCambodia #SoutheastAsianHistory #CambodianMythology #AngkorWat #FexingoHistory #History #Archaeology #AncientMysteries #KhmerEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20267 min
episode The Cham Invasion of 1177: Angkor's Greatest Defeat artwork

The Cham Invasion of 1177: Angkor's Greatest Defeat

In 1177, the Khmer Empire suffered its most humiliating defeat when a Cham fleet sailed up the Mekong and Tonlé Sap rivers, sacked the capital Yasodharapura, and killed the reigning king. The attack exposed the vulnerabilities of Angkor's riverine defenses and triggered a radical transformation of the empire under Jayavarman VII. This episode reconstructs the invasion from Khmer and Cham sources, including the role of King Jaya Indravarman IV, the naval battle on the Great Lake, and the brutal aftermath that led to Jayavarman VII's unprecedented building program. We also examine the geopolitical rivalry between the two mainland powers—Champa and Kambuja—that had simmered for centuries, and the fate of the Cham prisoners who later served in Jayavarman VII's construction projects. A riveting story of hubris, revenge, and resilience that reshaped Southeast Asia. #KhmerEmpire #ChamInvasion #JayavarmanVII #Angkor #Champa #Yasodharapura #TonleSap #MekongDelta #JayaIndravarmanIV #NavalWarfare #1177 #SoutheastAsianHistory #MedievalHistory #MilitaryHistory #Cambodia #Vietnam #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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episode The Preah Khan Inscription: Jayavarman VII's Lost Foundation Text artwork

The Preah Khan Inscription: Jayavarman VII's Lost Foundation Text

Episode 158 of The Khmer Empire podcast deciphers the Preah Khan inscription, the longest and most detailed foundation text from Angkor. Discovered by French archaeologist Louis Finot in 1902, this 247-line Sanskrit stele records Jayavarman VII's dedication of the temple in 1191 CE. We explore how the inscription lists the temple's 97,840 servants, 2,200 monks, and 952 deities, along with the staggering wealth donated: 2,390 kg of silver, 3,800 kg of gold, and 40,000 pearls. The text also reveals Jayavarman VII's personal grief over his father's death and his mother's role as a Buddhist nun. The inscription names the temple 'Nagarindra Yasodhara' and describes the consecration of the central Buddha image, Avalokiteshvara, and other deities. We discuss how this single stone provides a census of Angkorian society, from palace officials to rice farmers, and details the seven-year construction process. The episode also touches on the Cham invasion of 1177 that preceded the temple's construction, and how Jayavarman VII used this monument as both a religious statement and a political manifesto. Join Lucas and Luna as they unravel the secrets of the Preah Khan stele, the Rosetta Stone of Khmer history. #PreahKhan #JayavarmanVII #KhmerInscription #Sanskrit #Stele #Angkor #KhmerEmpire #BuddhistArt #Avalokiteshvara #AngkorWat #SoutheastAsianHistory #Archaeology #MedievalAsia #Cambodia #FoundationText #LouisFinot #ChamInvasion #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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episode The Preah Vihear Dispute: A Khmer Temple on a Cliff artwork

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episode The Sandstone That Built Angkor: Khmer Quarrymen and the Mountain of Phnom Kulen artwork

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For centuries, the temples of Angkor have stood as monuments to Khmer ambition and artistry. But behind every carved lintel and towering gopura lay an immense logistical challenge: moving millions of tons of sandstone from a sacred mountain to the capital. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Phnom Kulen quarries, where workers extracted the very stone that became Angkor Wat, the Bayon, and Banteay Srei. They discuss the discovery of the quarry site, the experimental archaeology that revealed how Khmer stonecutters split sandstone blocks without metal tools, the economics of the stone trade under Suryavarman II and Jayavarman VII, and the mysterious statues known as the 'Phnom Kulen Brahmas' that still stand unfinished on the mountain. Along the way, they consider the human cost of the empire's building projects and the environmental impact of quarrying on such a scale. This episode draws on recent archaeological surveys by the French School of Asian Studies and the APSARA Authority, as well as the thirteenth-century account of Zhou Daguan. It offers a ground-level view of the empire's most essential industry: the stone that made the gods visible. #PhnomKulen #AngkorQuarries #KhmerEmpire #Sandstone #SuryavarmanII #JayavarmanVII #BanteaySrei #APSARA #EFEO #ZhouDaguan #KhmerStonecarving #ExperimentalArchaeology #SoutheastAsianHistory #AncientLogistics #Quarrying #MountainSacred #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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