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ANGKOR AND THE KHMER CIVILIZATION
Michael D. Coe
ANCIENT PEOPLE AND PLACES SERIES
NEW IN PAPERBACK
"The best account of Angkor now available in English . . . takes the reader on a panoramic tour Cambodian history from earliest times to the latest finds." Ben Kiernan, author of The Pol Pot Regime
The ancient city of Angkor has fascinated Westerners since its rediscovery in the mid-nineteenth century. A great deal is now known about the brilliant Khmer civilization that flourished among the monsoon forests and rice paddies of mainland Southeast Asia, thanks to the pioneering work of French scholars and the application of modern architectural techniques such as remote sensing from the space shuttle.
The classic-period Khmer kings ruled over their part-Hindu and part-Buddhist empire from AD 802 for more than five centuries. This period was the construction of many architectural masterpieces, including the huge capital of Angkor, with the awe-inspiring Angkor Wat, the world's largest religious structure. Numerous other provincial centers, bound together by an impressive imperial road system, were scattered across the Cambodian Plain, northeast Thailand, southern Laos, and the Delta of southern Vietnam. Khmer civilization by no means disappeared with the gradual abandonment of Angkor that began in the fourteenth century, and the book's final chapter describes the conversion of the Khmer to a different kind of Buddhism, the move of the capital downriver to the Phnom Penh area, and the reorientation of the Khmer state to maritime trade.
Angkor and the Khmer Civilization presents a concise but complete picture of Khmer cultural history from the Stone Age until the establishment of the French Protectorate in 1863, and is lavishly illustrated with maps, plans, drawings, and photographs. Drawing on the latest archaeological research, Michael D. Coe brings to life Angkor's extraordinary society and culture.
Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Yale University and a frequent traveler to Southeast Asia since 1954, Dr. Coe is a specialist in the comparative study on ancient, tropical forest civilization.
"Brings a new perspective to studies of the great civilization of Angkor."
Roland Fletcher, director of the Greater Angkor Project
"A dangerously seductive book: I found myself starting to read it within a few minutes of picking it up, and I couldn't stop until I had reached the last page."
Jared Diamond, author of Guns, Germs, and Steel
ISBN 0-500-28442-3
· 61/4" x 91/2"
· 130 illustrations, 22 in color · 240 pages · HISTORY / ARCHAEOLOGY
Hardcover edition: 0-500-02117-1
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