2009
DOI: 10.3406/asean.2009.2104
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Le Prasat Trapeang Phong à Hariharâlaya : histoire d’un temple et archéologie d’un site

Abstract: Bien que peu connu et peu étudié, le Prasat Trapeang Phong — qui fait partie du groupe de Roluos situé au sud-est d’Angkor — occupe une place particulière et paradoxale dans l’histoire des premiers établissements angkoriens : certains auteurs y ont placé le centre de la première capitale de Jayavarman II dans la région d’Angkor avant la fin du ixe siècle ; d’autres y ont vu un prototype des aménagements hydrauliques angkoriens ; et, plus récemment, on a suggéré que le site était plutôt caractéristique des nomb… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Connecting these features was a vast and intricate web of infrastructure consisting of embankments, canals, and a network of field systems. Pottier and colleagues began to use the spatial logic of the network to address long-standing issues about the development of Angkor and its urban and agricultural systems (Pottier 2000a(Pottier , 2000bPottier and Bolle 2009).…”
Section: Landscape Approaches and The Advent Of Lidarmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Connecting these features was a vast and intricate web of infrastructure consisting of embankments, canals, and a network of field systems. Pottier and colleagues began to use the spatial logic of the network to address long-standing issues about the development of Angkor and its urban and agricultural systems (Pottier 2000a(Pottier , 2000bPottier and Bolle 2009).…”
Section: Landscape Approaches and The Advent Of Lidarmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Phase I (Formative Phase), Angkor's urban form, like its 9th-century predecessors of Mahendraparvata (Phnom Kulen) and Hariharālaya, was axial and loosely structured: settlements were organized along the cardinal causeways of central state temples and their reservoirs (e.g., Chevance et al, 2019Chevance et al, , 1315Evans et al, 2013, 3;Groslier, 1979, 174-75;Heng and Lavy, 2018;Pottier and Bolle, 2009). Moats demarcated some temple spaces, but few temple and residential spaces were enclosed by walls, and habitation mounds and ponds that surrounded temples lacked a clear grid system of city blocks.…”
Section: Angkorian Urban Formmentioning
confidence: 99%