Bayon is located in the heart of Angkor Thom. Built at the end of the 12th-century and 13th-century Christianity by Jayavarman VII. The temple consists of four towers with 49 faces and a total of 54 top 50 gateways representing the 54 provinces of the Khmer Cities at that time. Some scholars think that the four faces represent the bodhisattvas, some of whom are thought to represent the king of Jisvarman VII. Bayon has a three-story layout. The first and second floors have a fairly good gallery. The tower is in the 16th floor and is on the third floor in the shape of a cross. The construction of Bayon is complicated in both the street and the stairs. Apart from the smiling face of Bayon, the temple has a beautiful carving of myths in the inner and outer galleries, describing the living conditions of the people of Angkor including fishing, fishing, boxing, etc. And even details of fighter history and paralyzing. The carving carved deeper than at Angkor Wat, but it was simple. Scenes of sculptures are displayed by two or three rows.
History of Bayon
The word Bayon, teacher of Pov Savvar, raised the idea of Boisselier, which defined the root of the word, suggesting that the Bayon was a masterpiece of Jayavarman VII, built in a circular difference that reminds the mechanism. The idea was not possible, and Pov Savv added to Cœdès's idea, which suggested the comparison of the Bayon word with the spelling spoken in the inscriptions. The movie is the royal palace, according to the ancient Khmer-inspired Angkor Wat story, that Preah Pisnouka (Temple of Angkor) has come down to the center to build a temple for Preah Ket Mealea, which commemorates his palace in Khmer concept, a mechanical or mechanical mechanism. The name comes from many repetitions and shows of the homogeneity of the Temple of Heaven.
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