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First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia

Architecture represents key evidence of dynastic practice and change in the archaeological world. Chronologies for many important buildings and sequences, including the iconic temples of medieval Angkor in Cambodia, are based solely on indirect associations from inscriptions and architectural styles...

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Autores principales: Leroy, Stéphanie, Hendrickson, Mitch, Delqué-Kolic, Emmanuelle, Vega, Enrique, Dillmann, Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4633138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26535895
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141052
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author Leroy, Stéphanie
Hendrickson, Mitch
Delqué-Kolic, Emmanuelle
Vega, Enrique
Dillmann, Philippe
author_facet Leroy, Stéphanie
Hendrickson, Mitch
Delqué-Kolic, Emmanuelle
Vega, Enrique
Dillmann, Philippe
author_sort Leroy, Stéphanie
collection PubMed
description Architecture represents key evidence of dynastic practice and change in the archaeological world. Chronologies for many important buildings and sequences, including the iconic temples of medieval Angkor in Cambodia, are based solely on indirect associations from inscriptions and architectural styles. The Baphuon temple, one of the last major buildings in Angkor without textual or scientifically-derived chronological evidence, is crucial both for the context and date of its construction and the period when its western façade was modified into a unique, gigantic Reclining Buddha. Its construction was part of a major dynastic change and florescence of the Hindu-Mahayana Buddhist state and the modification is the key evidence of Theravada Buddhist power after Angkor's decline in the 15(th) century. Using a newly-developed approach based on AMS radiocarbon dating to directly date four iron crampons integrated into the structure we present the first direct evidence for the history of the Baphuon. Comprehensive study of ferrous elements shows that both construction and modification were critically earlier than expected. The Baphuon can now be considered as the major temple associated with the imperial reformations and territorial consolidation of Suryavarman I (1010–1050 AD) for whom no previous building to legitimize his reign could be identified. The Theravada Buddhist modification is a hundred years prior to the conventional 16(th) century estimation and is not associated with renewed use of Angkor. Instead it relates to the enigmatic Ayutthayan occupation of Angkor in the 1430s and 40s during a major period of climatic instability. Accurately dating iron with relatively low carbon content is a decisive step to test long-standing assumptions about architectural histories and political processes for states that incorporated iron into buildings (e.g., Ancient Greece, medieval India). Furthermore, this new approach has the potential to revise chronologies related to iron consumption practices since the origins of ferrous metallurgy three millennia ago.
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spelling pubmed-46331382015-11-13 First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia Leroy, Stéphanie Hendrickson, Mitch Delqué-Kolic, Emmanuelle Vega, Enrique Dillmann, Philippe PLoS One Research Article Architecture represents key evidence of dynastic practice and change in the archaeological world. Chronologies for many important buildings and sequences, including the iconic temples of medieval Angkor in Cambodia, are based solely on indirect associations from inscriptions and architectural styles. The Baphuon temple, one of the last major buildings in Angkor without textual or scientifically-derived chronological evidence, is crucial both for the context and date of its construction and the period when its western façade was modified into a unique, gigantic Reclining Buddha. Its construction was part of a major dynastic change and florescence of the Hindu-Mahayana Buddhist state and the modification is the key evidence of Theravada Buddhist power after Angkor's decline in the 15(th) century. Using a newly-developed approach based on AMS radiocarbon dating to directly date four iron crampons integrated into the structure we present the first direct evidence for the history of the Baphuon. Comprehensive study of ferrous elements shows that both construction and modification were critically earlier than expected. The Baphuon can now be considered as the major temple associated with the imperial reformations and territorial consolidation of Suryavarman I (1010–1050 AD) for whom no previous building to legitimize his reign could be identified. The Theravada Buddhist modification is a hundred years prior to the conventional 16(th) century estimation and is not associated with renewed use of Angkor. Instead it relates to the enigmatic Ayutthayan occupation of Angkor in the 1430s and 40s during a major period of climatic instability. Accurately dating iron with relatively low carbon content is a decisive step to test long-standing assumptions about architectural histories and political processes for states that incorporated iron into buildings (e.g., Ancient Greece, medieval India). Furthermore, this new approach has the potential to revise chronologies related to iron consumption practices since the origins of ferrous metallurgy three millennia ago. Public Library of Science 2015-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4633138/ /pubmed/26535895 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141052 Text en © 2015 Leroy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Leroy, Stéphanie
Hendrickson, Mitch
Delqué-Kolic, Emmanuelle
Vega, Enrique
Dillmann, Philippe
First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia
title First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia
title_full First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia
title_fullStr First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia
title_full_unstemmed First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia
title_short First Direct Dating for the Construction and Modification of the Baphuon Temple Mountain in Angkor, Cambodia
title_sort first direct dating for the construction and modification of the baphuon temple mountain in angkor, cambodia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4633138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26535895
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141052
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