Cambodia is home to an ancient city. For over five centuries Angkor, ancient seat of the Buddhist god-kings, was the capital of the Khmer empire. Abandoned in the 15th century, this city was swallowed up by the jungle and almost forgotten until, four centuries later, it was uncovered by European explorers. This book traces the origins of these mysterious ruins and tells the story of their rediscovery through documentary photographs, maps and illustrations.
A fascinating book about a fascinating place. The only knock I have against it is that the book has such a small trim size, which means that the dozens of illustrations and photos are too small. Otherwise, this is very nicely done.
A neat little compendium, aptly covering the history of Angkor, it’s “rediscovery”, history, and all the strange and intrepid characters along the way. Slightly awkward to read due to the ‘exciting’ formatting of the narrative around images and callouts. Nonetheless, a concise, fascinating and informative book. What’s great is that it takes a mass of sources and compresses them into a well-oriented mini-guide, but also gives additional and expanded material in the appendix, allowing one to read the full journal entry, log, article or excerpt referenced. I hope to read more books in this series.
Interesting read for those who want to delve deeper into the charms of Angkor. Delightful excerpts (at the end of the book) from accounts of 19th&20th century travelers including Pierre Loti. Learned a lot about selfless curators or custodians who got stabbed on the site. Also was delighted to learn that George Groslier called Malraux “petit voleur”.
I lead trips in Angkor and surprised for the low marks about this book, it being one of the most visually and richly designed books on Angkor - and in a portable format convenient for bringing along. A favorite along with Booth and Rooney's guides.
Picked this up in Siem Reap while tooling around Angkor and environs.
A great little survey of the modern history — colonial and a brief view of post-colonial —of the anthropology, key figures, and popular culture treatment of Angkor and the surrounding temples. Well illustrated to the point where you really wish the book was larger to show off the plates better. Excellent selection of source documents at the end of the book.
Tells the story of the Angkor after its "rediscovery" chronicled in Henri Mouhot's posthumous journal through the personalities of the park curators, artists, photographers and various characters associated with the Ecole Français d'Extrême-Orient with the notes from the Chinese envoy, Chou Ta-kuan thrown in for good measure. Good stuff.
This is a beautifully illustrated little volume detailing the basic history of the temple complex at Angkor in Cambodia and it's rediscovery by European adventurers in the 19th century. It includes some terrific primary sources, like one of the only known written accounts of life at the height of the Khmer Empire in the 11th century written by a visiting Chinese ambassador. Of the many great books in the Abrams Discoveries series, this one is my favorite.