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

The Water Crisis That Helped Bring Down Angkor

6 min · 27 jun 2026
aflevering The Water Crisis That Helped Bring Down Angkor artwork

Beschrijving

Angkor Wat is the world's largest religious monument, but the Khmer Empire that built it collapsed around the same time as the cathedral-building era in Europe. This episode digs into a less-known factor in the empire's decline: its water management system. The Khmer kings engineered an enormous network of canals, reservoirs called barays, and embankments to control the monsoon floods and sustain rice agriculture for a population of nearly a million. But by the 14th century, climate change—prolonged droughts followed by intense monsoon rains—pushed that system past its limits. Sedimentation choked the canals, the barays silted up, and the elaborate waterworks became more of a liability than an asset. We look at the evidence from tree-ring studies and sediment cores from the Tonlé Sap lake, and how the shift to Theravada Buddhism and the rise of Ayutthaya accelerated the move of the capital south to the riverine trade routes near modern Phnom Penh. The stone temples survived; the hydraulic state did not. #Angkor #KhmerEmpire #WaterManagement #Baray #TonleSap #AngkorWat #ClimateChange #Drought #SoutheastAsianHistory #HydraulicEngineering #TheravadaBuddhism #Ayutthaya #Sedimentation #TreeRingDating #GreaterAngkorProject #Collapse #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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

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

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]

13 jul 202611 min
aflevering Suryavarman II and the Construction of Angkor Wat artwork

Suryavarman II and the Construction of Angkor Wat

Angkor Wat is the world's largest religious monument, but who built it and why? In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the reign of Suryavarman II, the warrior-king who unified Cambodia and commissioned the temple as his state temple and eventual mausoleum. They discuss the temple's unique west-facing orientation, its vast bas-reliefs depicting the Churning of the Ocean of Milk and the king's military campaigns, and the engineering feat of its construction without mortar. The episode also covers the king's diplomatic mission to China and the little-known Cham invasion that occurred just decades after his death. Along the way, Lucas and Luna touch on the temple's symbolism as a microcosm of Mount Meru, the role of the devaraja cult, and how the temple survived centuries of neglect and war. A must-listen for anyone curious about the epic story behind Cambodia's most iconic structure. #AngkorWat #SuryavarmanII #KhmerEmpire #Cambodia #Angkor #MountMeru #ChurningOfTheOceanOfMilk #devaraja #Champa #TemplesOfAngkor #WorldHeritage #Hinduism #Vishnu #BasRelief #SoutheastAsianHistory #MedievalHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren6 min
aflevering The Khmer Empire's Spice Trade and the Route to China artwork

The Khmer Empire's Spice Trade and the Route to China

Before Angkor Wat rose from the jungle, the Khmer Empire thrived on a web of trade routes stretching from the South China Sea to the Bay of Bengal. This episode explores the spice trade that powered Angkor's economy and connected it to China, India, and beyond. We follow the route of cardamom, pepper, and benzoin from the Cardamom Mountains to the ports of the Mekong Delta, where Chinese junks loaded cargo for the Middle Kingdom. We examine the role of the port city of Srei Santhor, the Chinese tribute missions recorded in the Ming annals, and the economic shift that accompanied the rise of Theravada Buddhism. Along the way, we encounter the mysterious 'water vases' of the Khmer cargo ships, the legend of the Chinese admiral Zheng He's visit to Cambodia, and the forgotten port of Oc Eo that linked Southeast Asia to Rome. This episode is a deep dive into the economic engine behind the temples. #KhmerEmpire #Angkor #SpiceTrade #Cambodia #SoutheastAsia #CardamomMountains #Pepper #Benzoin #OcEo #ZhengHe #MingDynasty #SreiSanthor #TonleSap #MekongDelta #TradeRoutes #History #FexingoHistory #AncientEconomy Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren8 min
aflevering The Bayon's Stone Faces: Jayavarman VII's Enigmatic Smile artwork

The Bayon's Stone Faces: Jayavarman VII's Enigmatic Smile

In this episode of the Khmer Empire series, Lucas and Luna explore the enigmatic Bayon temple at the heart of Angkor Thom. Built by Jayavarman VII in the late 12th century, the Bayon is famous for its towering stone faces — over 200 of them — each with a serene, enigmatic smile. But who do they represent? The standard theory says Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva of compassion, but Lucas digs into the evidence: the temple's layout, inscriptions, and the king's own Mahayana Buddhist beliefs. He shares the story of how Jayavarman VII, after repelling the Cham invasion in 1177, embarked on a massive building spree, transforming Angkor into a cosmic city. The Bayon was his state temple, but unlike the Hindu mountaintop temples of his predecessors, it was built low, its faces watching over the city. Lucas explains the architectural symbolism — the central tower as Mount Meru, the faces looking in all directions — and the political message: the king as a 'god-king' but also as a compassionate ruler. They also touch on the later conversion to Theravada Buddhism and the ongoing mysteries: why were the faces carved at different stages? Did the temple's design change mid-construction? A fascinating dive into one of Angkor's most iconic monuments. #Bayon #JayavarmanVII #AngkorThom #KhmerEmpire #Avalokiteshvara #MahayanaBuddhism #MountMeru #Cambodia #AngkorWat #12thCentury #ChamInvasion #StoneFaces #Theravada #SoutheastAsianHistory #TempleArchitecture #Devaraja #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11 jul 20268 min
aflevering The Banteay Chhmar Temple and Jayavarman VII's Deserted Masterpiece artwork

The Banteay Chhmar Temple and Jayavarman VII's Deserted Masterpiece

Deep in the Cambodian jungle, 60 kilometers from the Thai border, lies Banteay Chhmar — a massive temple complex built by Jayavarman VII that rivals the scale of Angkor Wat but has been largely forgotten. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore why this sprawling Mahayana Buddhist sanctuary, adorned with thousands of Avalokiteshvara faces and a haunting bas-relief of a multi-armed king, was abandoned so soon after its construction. They examine the temple's mysterious purpose — was it a memorial for a fallen prince, a provincial capital, or both? — and the logistical challenges of building such a monument in a remote area. The conversation also covers the famous Banteay Chhmar inscription (K. 79), which records Jayavarman VII's conquest of Champa and the tragic death of his son Indravarman, as well as the recent restoration efforts by the Global Heritage Fund and the Cambodian government. Along the way, they touch on the temple's unique 'gopura' with the eight-armed Lokeshvara, the theft of many statues in the 1990s, and how Banteay Chhmar offers a more intimate, haunting window into Jayavarman VII's reign than the polished temples of Angkor. #BanteayChhmar #JayavarmanVII #KhmerEmpire #Angkor #Cambodia #MahayanaBuddhism #Avalokiteshvara #Indravarman #Champa #K79 #GlobalHeritageFund #SoutheastAsia #Temple #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory #CulturalHeritage #Jungle Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11 jul 20264 min