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

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

6 min · 4 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Leper King: Angkor's Strangest Statue and Its Mystery

Descripción

On the terrace of Angkor Thom stands a naked, enigmatic figure known as the Leper King. For centuries, Cambodians believed the statue depicted a Khmer monarch who died of leprosy — a fate that supposedly explained his uncovered skin and missing royal regalia. But the truth is far stranger. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the statue's origins to the 12th-century reign of Jayavarman VII, examine the Sanskrit and Old Khmer inscriptions that name a 'Yama' or 'Dharmaraja', and explore how French archaeologist George Coedès and later scholars untangled a web of legend and iconography. They discuss the theory that the statue may not depict a king at all, but a lord of the dead or a guardian of justice, and how a later legend about King Dharmasenapati — conflated with the statue — muddied the historical record. They also consider the statue's dual identity: a Yama figure seated in judgement, later reimagined as a leprous monarch in Cambodian folklore. Along the way, they touch on the role of the terrace itself — a platform for royal cremations — and the mystery of why the statue was left exposed to the elements for centuries. #LeperKing #AngkorThom #JayavarmanVII #KhmerEmpire #Cambodia #Yama #GeorgeCoedes #Dharmaraja #AngkorWat #SoutheastAsianHistory #KhmerSculpture #TerraceOfTheLeperKing #Archaeology #Iconography #Folklore #History #FexingoHistory #AncientMysteries Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Khmer Empire: The Lost Civilization Behind Angkor Wat — Fexingo History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

138 episodios

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

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

On the terrace of Angkor Thom stands a naked, enigmatic figure known as the Leper King. For centuries, Cambodians believed the statue depicted a Khmer monarch who died of leprosy — a fate that supposedly explained his uncovered skin and missing royal regalia. But the truth is far stranger. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the statue's origins to the 12th-century reign of Jayavarman VII, examine the Sanskrit and Old Khmer inscriptions that name a 'Yama' or 'Dharmaraja', and explore how French archaeologist George Coedès and later scholars untangled a web of legend and iconography. They discuss the theory that the statue may not depict a king at all, but a lord of the dead or a guardian of justice, and how a later legend about King Dharmasenapati — conflated with the statue — muddied the historical record. They also consider the statue's dual identity: a Yama figure seated in judgement, later reimagined as a leprous monarch in Cambodian folklore. Along the way, they touch on the role of the terrace itself — a platform for royal cremations — and the mystery of why the statue was left exposed to the elements for centuries. #LeperKing #AngkorThom #JayavarmanVII #KhmerEmpire #Cambodia #Yama #GeorgeCoedes #Dharmaraja #AngkorWat #SoutheastAsianHistory #KhmerSculpture #TerraceOfTheLeperKing #Archaeology #Iconography #Folklore #History #FexingoHistory #AncientMysteries Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 de jul de 20266 min
episode Lopburi and the Khmer Frontier: Suryavarman I's Northern Expansion artwork

Lopburi and the Khmer Frontier: Suryavarman I's Northern Expansion

More than a century before Angkor Wat rose from the jungle, King Suryavarman I pushed the Khmer Empire's reach deep into what is now central Thailand. This episode traces his campaign to conquer the Mon kingdom of Lavo (modern Lopburi) around 1010 CE, using the Tak inscription as our primary source. We explore how Suryavarman I, a usurper with no royal blood, leveraged alliances, marriage, and strategic temple building to legitimize his rule. We also discuss the Lavo inscription of 1022-25, which records the king's dedication of a Buddha footprint in the heart of Mon territory—a surprising gesture of religious pluralism from a Hindu monarch. Along the way, we consider the role of the Khorat Plateau as a frontier zone, the influence of the Chola dynasty on Khmer military tactics, and how Suryavarman's northern gambit set the stage for the empire's golden age under his successors. This is the untold story of a frontier that shaped the Khmer Empire. #KhmerEmpire #SuryavarmanI #Lopburi #Lavo #MonKingdom #TakInscription #KhoratPlateau #CholaDynasty #Angkor #SoutheastAsianHistory #MedievalHistory #Buddhism #Hinduism #FrontierHistory #EmpireBuilding #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer10 min
episode The Cham Invasion of 1177 How Warships Reached Angkor artwork

The Cham Invasion of 1177 How Warships Reached Angkor

In 1177, the Cham kingdom launched a stunning naval raid that reached the heart of the Khmer Empire. Lucas and Luna explore how Cham warships sailed up the Tonlé Sap river, sacked the capital, and killed the Khmer king. They examine the geopolitical backdrop — Khmer-Cham rivalry, the strategic port of Vijaya, and the monsoon-driven tactics. The episode also covers the aftermath: how Jayavarman VII rose from the ashes to drive out the invaders and build Angkor Thom. Along the way, they reflect on what the siege reveals about Angkor's vulnerabilities and the interconnected world of medieval Southeast Asia. #ChamInvasion1177 #TonleSap #JayavarmanVII #Vijaya #Angkor #KhmerEmpire #Champa #NavalWarfare #MedievalSoutheastAsia #Tribhuvanadityavarman #JayaIndravarmanIV #TonleSapRiver #SiegeOfAngkor #KhmerChamWars #AngkorWat #History #FexingoHistory #SoutheastAsianHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Preah Khan: Jayavarman VII's Temple of Sacred Glory artwork

Preah Khan: Jayavarman VII's Temple of Sacred Glory

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Preah Khan, the sprawling temple complex built by Khmer king Jayavarman VII in 1191 CE. More than a place of worship, Preah Khan was a Buddhist monastery, a military base, and a city of 100,000 people, all dedicated to the king's father. Lucas explains the temple's dual purpose as a 'sacred sword' stronghold and a reflection of Jayavarman's Mahayana Buddhist devotion, including the stunning Avalokiteshvara face carvings and the unusual combination of Buddhist and Hindu iconography. He also discusses the temple's decline after the Theravada shift and its recent restoration by the World Monuments Fund. Luna asks about the famous inscription that describes the temple's founding and the 515 deities it housed, leading to a deeper dive into Khmer daily life at the site. The episode also touches on the puzzling fact that Preah Khan was never fully completed, leaving some chambers unfinished—a rare glimpse into the empire's construction practices. #PreahKhan #JayavarmanVII #Angkor #KhmerEmpire #MahayanaBuddhism #Avalokiteshvara #WorldMonumentsFund #Cambodia #SoutheastAsianHistory #TempleArchitecture #Devaraja #Lokeshvara #BuddhistMonastery #SacredSword #Kambuja #AngkorThom #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

2 de jul de 20268 min
episode The Desertion of Angkor: Why 750,000 People Walked Away artwork

The Desertion of Angkor: Why 750,000 People Walked Away

Why would a million people abandon the world's largest pre-industrial city? In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the slow-motion collapse of Angkor after the 1431 Thai sack — not a single dramatic fall, but a century-long drift. They trace the crumbling canal system that locked boats in dead-end lakes, the hollowing out of the devaraja cult as Theravada Buddhism offered kings a quieter covenant, and the final blow: the Mekong's shifting silt that turned Angkor's water grid into a liability. Along the way, they meet the last known Angkorian inscription, King Ponhea Yat's move to Phnom Penh, and the forest that swallowed everything. No single cause, no dramatic battle — just a city that slowly became unlivable. Based on research by the Greater Angkor Project, the episode pieces together environmental data, Chinese diplomatic records, and temple inscriptions to reconstruct why a civilization chose to leave. #Angkor #KhmerEmpire #AngkorCollapse #PonheaYat #GreaterAngkorProject #TonleSap #MekongRiver #TheravadaBuddhism #devaraja #ZhouDaguan #PhnomPenh #1431 #watermanagement #urbanabandonment #Cambodia #SoutheastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

2 de jul de 20267 min