CREDIT TO : WIKIPEDIA
Bayon Temple
Bayon was the state temple of Jayavarman VII, a powerful ruler in the
late 13th century. The temple sat at the center of Angkor Thom, a walled
city that served as the capital of the Khmer Empire. Four of the city's
five gates sat on axis with the temple, and the walls of the city
substituted for the enclosure walls normally found at Khmer temples. The
walls sit at such a distance from the temple that the temple seems to
rise abruptly from the ground like an artificial mountain. In fact, the
temple was intended to evoke the form of Mt. Meru—the cosmic mountain at
the center of the world in Buddhist cosmology. In keeping with this
cosmic symbolism, the plan of the temple is based on a 'yantra', a
symbol used by Tantric Buddhists as the basis of mandala diagrams that
represent the layout of the universe. The temple honored not just one
deity, but a host of gods found throughout the Khmer empire. Its central
shrine held an image of Jayavarman VII, who perhaps imagined himself as
a god-King ruling in the name of the Buddha.
The temple is best known today for the gigantic face sculptures that
adorn its thirty-seven surviving towers. Facing in four directions on
each tower, the faces are thought to represent Lokeshvara, a Buddhist
deity that projected benevolence outward to the four directions.
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