Archive for the ‘travel’ Category

Angkor Wat - Ta Prohm

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Ta Prohm was originally called Rajavihara, which means Royal Temple. It was built by King Jayavarman VII in the late 12th and early 13th centuries. He was the most prolific builder of all the Angkor Kings, which is quite a distinction when one considers the number of temples erected during the Empire’s golden age. The majority of the sites on the Little Circuit were constructed during his reign.

Jayavarman VII’s rose to power as one of the Empire’s greatest generals. Prior to his ascension to the throne, Angkor was sacked by the Chams, another empire based in present day Vietnam and one of the primary rivals of the Khmer Empire. When the neighboring Chams overthrew the Empire and killed the King, Jayavarman VII led the effort to recapture the Empire. Jayavarman VII vanquished the Chams in 1181 and made his claim to the throne. He ascended the throne after this successful campaign, preserving the Khmer Empire while establishing his rule. Then, Jayavarman VII boldly established Mahayana Buddhism as the state religion. His first wife was a devoted Buddhist and is thought to have largely influenced his decision. While it is cynical to question the religious convictions of Jayavarman VII, it should be noted that his decision also had some significant political benefits as well. His move to make Mahayana Buddhism the state religion effectively removed power from the Hindu aristocracy, who were his primary rivals within the empire. It should be noted that he didn’t outlaw Hinduism, but his change reduced much of the power afforded to his rivals through the Hindu caste system. One province in the south rebelled against this decision, but the rebellion was quickly suppressed. Jayavarman VII effectively consolidated power and became the primary shaper of Angkor.

The relationships between Hinduism and the various sects of Buddhism are quite complicated. Hinduism is the elder religion, and in fact, the Buddha began as a Hindu. He saw the suffering caused by excess and searched for a solution. Initially he believed the suffering could be relieved through an ascetic life of self-denial, but he later came to believe that such a life was a dead end and that there was another way. In the Buddhist philosophy, the end of suffering is not achieved by the denial of desires, but rather by the freedom from attachments that cause desire. To achieve this freedom, he developed the Four Noble Truths and established the Eightfold Path, which guides followers down what is called The Middle Way, as it lies between hedonism and asceticism. Since Buddhism’s roots lie in Hinduism, many stories and traditions are shared between the two. Since Buddhism is rooted in Hindu beliefs, you will see a lot of similar imagery between temples dedicated to the different faiths.

Buddhism has split since the time of the Buddha, with the primary division being between Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism. Most of modern day Southeast Asia including the people of Cambodia practice the form of Buddhism known as Theravada, which is often translated as meaning “The Ancient Teaching” and is the older of the two religions. King Jayavarman VII was a proponent of Mahayana Buddhism, which translates as “Great Vehicle”. Tibetan Buddhism and Zen Buddhism are sects of Mahayana Buddhism that are well known in the West. The proponents of Mahayana Buddhism see it as holding greater insights into the Buddha’s Dharma, or great truth.

As Ta Prohm was built during a time when Mahayana Buddhism was the state religion, the primary deity of the temple is different than most other Angkor temples. The temple is dedicated to Prajnaparamita, which is not actually a deity per se, but rather a Mahayana scripture dedicated to the perfection of wisdom. The scriptures rest on two primary tenets. The first states that one should be a bodhisattva, or Buddha-to-be. A bodhisattva strives to attain total knowledge for the sake of all beings. The second tenet is that there is no such thing as a bodhisattva. The true acceptance of these contradictory tenets is the perfection of wisdom.

A stele is a carved stone column that commemorates important events. Discovery of a temple’s stele is often integral to piecing together its true history. The stele found in Ta Prohm dates the construction of the temple to 1186 and claims that the temple was home to over 12,500 people, including 18 high priests and 650 dancers. More than 80,000 people lived outside the temple grounds. Jayavarman VII established the temple as a Mahayana monastery and university, which further explains why the temple is dedicated to the Prajnaparamita, the scriptures of wisdom. The representation of the Prajnaparamita in the temple was modeled after Jayavarman VII’s mother, and the temple is also meant to honor her. Satellite temples on the ground were dedicated to Jayavarman VII’s guru and his older brother, and another nearby temple, Preah Khan, honors his father. His father’s image is used to represent Avalokitshvara, the primary deity of that temple, who is the bodhisattva of compassion.
Though his building campaign undoubtedly required much effort from his people to serve as laborers, his focus as king was on his people. Most of his early constructions were hospitals, rest houses, and reservoirs. His later buildings were the ones dedicated to his family and himself. Led by his Buddhist faith, his goal as king was to relieve the suffering of his people.

The primary archaeological organization that has been responsible for untangling the mysteries of the temples of Angkor is the Ecole Francaise d’Extreme Orient, more commonly referred to as the EFEO. This French institute is devoted to the study of Asian cultures. Founded in 1900. it conducted its first studies in Saigon. Angkor Wat quickly became one of its focuses and has remained so ever since, although with a conspicuous gap. The organization began extensively restoring temples in the early 20th century. Since most had been completely abandoned for hundreds of years at that point, restoration often meant wrestling the temples from the clutches of the jungle. But the condition of Ta Prohm was deemed too beautiful to change. It was decided that Ta Prohm would be left in its current state, as a “concession for the general taste for the picturesque.”

Ironically, much restoration has been undertaken to preserve this appearance of neglect. In recent years, the ongoing labor has become more intrusive. While a few spots are less picturesque as a result, the only other option is waiting for the walls to crumble, and possibly the grand trees to fall with them. The architecture of the Khmers, while quite impressive, has not stood the test of time as well as other comparable architectural traditions. Their buildings have fallen prey to two main flaws. First, the Khmers sometimes did not stagger their blocks. Where the edges lined up, whole walls could be toppled by structural movements caused by shifting sands or gigantic tree roots. Also, the Khmers never developed a true arch. They used a false-arch technique known as corbelling. Large stones were stacked reaching successively inwards until they touched. This false arch was much heavier and not as stable as a true arch and resulted in many collapses.

Learn more about Ta Prohm

Temple of Ta Keo

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

The original name of the temple was ‘Hema-sringagiri’, meaning ‘The Mountain with Golden Peaks’. It is one of the few temples where you can still see mae ji, as the female devotees of Buddha are known. They are recognizable by their shaven heads and white garb. In past years, they tended the Buddhist shrines that had been placed in the often Hindu temples. More recently, due to the influx of tourists, one sees less of the mae ji and more of the locals dressed up in traditional garb to pose for photos. The mae ji can be considered female monks, but that is not quite accurate. The mae ji occupy a place between the monks and lay people. Many sects of the Buddhist faith allow women to be ordained, and their numbers are growing, but those rights have still not been extended to women in this area of the Buddhist world. Still, they take the same vows of faith that the male monks do. In the temples they often sell incense sticks to be presented to the shrine they tend.

The climb to the top of the temple is an arduous one, especially in the hot sun. The east-facing stair is the easiest of the four, yet still quite steep. Take great care if you decide to go all the way to the top of the 22-meter-high temple. The temple plan is straightforward: the stairs on each side lead directly up each level, eventually leaving you at the top where you can enter the central tower.

You probably won’t be able to notice just from looking or walking around, but the temple is slightly asymmetrical. The third level is slightly west of center, and the southern edge is slightly wider than the north edge. It is unknown if these variations were intentional or not. However, it was intentional that Jayavarman V built his state temple in a place other than the center of his capital, though the significance of this is unknown.

In accordance with the symbolism of Mt. Meru, the third level is the most holy place. One of the kings succeeding Jayavarman V, a man named Suryavarman I, gave the temple as a gift to Yogisvara Pandita, one of the religious leaders of the time. Despite the esteem that others felt for this yogi, the man himself used only the lower two levels and considered himself unworthy of the highest level. If you make it to the top, you will see that it is a special place, with a great view over the treetops and even a glimpse of the very tip of Angkor Wat to the southwest, though it’s easy to miss.

The central tower that is accessed by the long flights of stairs does not have a roof. The absence makes the room of the central tower seem like it has a skylight and, along with the unfinished carvings, is evidence that Ta Keo was left incomplete. Scholars believe that it was just too ambitious a project for its time. This certainly may be true, but it must also be considered that the temple builders experienced a big setback during construction.

Work was interrupted when lightning hit the crowning stone. In Khmer culture, this was a very inauspicious occurrence. A ceremony had to be held to cleanse the temple of the bad luck, and new stone had to be ordered. The stone was high-quality sandstone known as grauwacke, which had to be cut and shipped in. This setback may very well have made the building project too much to finish.

Learn more about Ta Keo

Angkor Wat Tour Released

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Geogad has just released a full length audio tour of Cambodia’s, Angkor Wat.  Starting at the Exterior of Angkor Wat, travelers are taken through the temples of Ta Prohm, Ta Keo, and the Baphuon.  Travelers will get a unique sense of the roles these temples played in the life of the Khmer kings, and the people.

“Rediscovered by Westerners in 1860, the Angkor Wat Temple Complex is what remains of the Khmer Empire, which was one of the greatest empires that the world had ever seen. It is a testament to the power of the Khmer kings and the ingenuity of its people. This tour explores the religious beliefs that formed the temples and the personalities that drove the kings to build even bigger temples than their predecessors. Ancient history and modern politics is merged to explain what life was like in the Khmer Empire and how Angkor Wat is bringing Cambodia a new future.”

Watch the Angkor Wat Tour

Hawaii National Park - Thurston Lava Tube

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

At the turn of the century, Lorrin Thurston, publisher and owner of the Honolulu Pacific Advertiser, and majority investor in the Volcano House, spent many of his days exploring the area of Kīlauea volcano.  One of his discoveries was a giant lava tube.  Lava tubes are formed when rivers of lava cool and crust over.  The still molten lava in the interior continues to flow down hill.  Eventually the lava drains out of the tube leaving a cave like shell.  Some of these tubes can be up to ten miles long and quite large in the interior.  Some have been measured from twenty to fifty feet from floor to top and twenty to thirty feet wide. They are indicative of the great volume of lava which has passed through them. What is most interesting geologically about the Thurston Lava Tube is where did the lava come from which formed this tube.  The lava tube is above the summits of Kilauea Iki and Kīlauea. The answer to this puzzle is that Thurston lava tube is of great age. It was created well over ten thousand years ago when the summit of Kīlauea was much higher than it is today. Geologists call this ancient Kīlauea, `Ailau (pronounced: “eye-lau”), meaning “to eat much.”  The summit of `Ailau was located where Kīlauea Iki is today and disappeared in a massive summit explosion over ten thousand years ago, leaving behind the only evidence of its existence in the Thurston Lava Tube  

The Thurston Lava Tube is a major attraction along the Crater Rim Drive. Thurston Lava Tube is located in the rain forest ecological zone. The abundant rainfall contributes to the lush growth of the forest canopy trees and the under storey vegetation one sees along the trail to the lava tube.  These forests are most characterized by the presence of large `ōhi`a trees and hapu`u (pronounced: “ha-poo-oo”), or the large tree ferns which dominate the forest here.  These tree sized ferns grow slowly, maybe only one inch per year, so some of the larger tree ferns here are over one hundred years old. The lush growth also attracts abundant native birds such as the `amakihi and `apapane which can be easily heard and seen in this area. Lava tubes have extremely interesting ecology and support rare live forms such as blind crickets and spiders which have adapted to these dark, cave like, structures.  The visit here consists of a short walk down a paved trail as it descends into a pit crater (the sides of which are hard to distinguish because they are covered with vegetation) and then through a short section of the lava tube itself.  The tube has interior lighting so you may be able to observe the drip line and features of the once liquid lava.  Tree roots dangle from the roof and water drip in the cool, dark, environment. Finally, the trail loops back to the starting point. 

Learn more about Hawaii National Park

Tourist Attractions in New Orleans - French Quarters

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

The Presbytere and the Cabildo

The two similar looking buildings on either side of the St. Louis cathedral are the Presbytere to the right and the Cabildo to the left. Both buildings were built after the great fires. The Presbytere was originally designed to house the priests from the cathedral, but it never preformed this function, serving instead as a courthouse for both the Spanish and the Americans. Today it holds the Mardi Gras Museum of the Louisiana State Museum.

The Cabildo is the more historic of the two buildings. It was where the Spanish council, called Cabildo in Spanish, meaning to run the colony. The front room on the second floor was where the official transfer of the Louisiana Purchase from France to the United States was made. France had regained controlled over the Louisiana colony only 3 weeks before it was transferred to the United States. France’s disastrous loss of the French colony of Haiti from a slave uprising convinced France’s ruler, Napoleon Bonaparte, that Louisiana was not important to his empire. In addition, the Americans were getting frustrated with the government of New Orleans for restricting trade on the Mississippi River and confiscating their cargoes at the port of New Orleans. The American frustration had reached the point that some citizens of Kentucky were plotting to attack New Orleans. In an attempt to head off trouble and to improve trade for the interior United States, President Thomas Jefferson offered to buy the “island of New Orleans” from Napoleon for $3 million. Napoleon surprised Jefferson by offering to sell the entire Louisiana colony for $15 million. Napoleon needed the money to finance his war on England. The United States did not have enough money for the purchase. In an ironic twist, the United States borrowed the money from England to pay to Napoleon, who then used the money to attack England. After Louisiana was transferred to the United States, the Cabildo served as a city hall and Supreme Court for Louisiana before it was converted into a part of the Louisiana State Museum. Today it holds many historic objects from old Louisiana including the death mask of Napoleon.

Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop

There are so many tales about Jean Lafitte that it is hard to know what to believe. Some researchers claim that he was a pirate while others claim that he was a gentleman privateer. The difference between pirate and privateer is a matter of degrees. A pirate was a ruthless murderer that attacked ships and towns, murdering everyone for money and treasure. By definition, privateers sailed on armed ships that carried letters of marque from a nation at war, which gave them the legal right to attacked weaker commercial ships that sailed under enemy flags. The privateer could keep and sell any captured enemy vessel and its cargo. In reality, these “privateers” attacked any weaker ship, regardless of the flag it sailed under, murdered the crew, and sold the cargo. The small Louisiana town of Barataria, 60 miles south of New Orleans, was a favorite home for some of these pirates. The local merchants wanted to buy the very low priced, stolen goods, but they were afraid to deal with the dangerous pirates. Into this illegal mess came Lafitte to act as a middleman. Sometime in 1806 Jean Lafitte and his brother Pierre established their blacksmith-shop on St. Philip St. as their “front” to sell the pirated goods. This building dating to around 1772 is one of the few that survived the two great fires of New Orleans in 1788 and 1794. It is also one of the few remaining buildings built by the earliest settlers using soft clay bricks from the Mississippi River. These soft clay bricks must be covered with timber to prevent them from quickly eroding away.

Lafitte was an efficient businessman who changed the pirates’ smuggling activities from unorganized crimes into a well-run criminal business. He had regularly scheduled auctions of the pirated goods in both New Orleans and even directly from the pirates’ warehouses in Barataria. He took customer service to the highest level by organizing his own fleet of barges that made regularly scheduled deliveries of the auctioned goods to their new owners. He profited handsomely from his illegal activities and had mansions both in New Orleans and in Barataria.

Madame John’s Legacy

The building known as “Madame John’s Legacy” was named after a character in a short story by George Washington Cable that described a wealthy Creole man named John who died and bequeathed a wooden home and his fortune to his African-American mistress. This building is very much like the type of Creole style house that would have been common to the French Quarter before the great fires of 1788 and 1794. This building was damaged in the fires but was rebuilt from the original plans. The large doors and windows combined with the building’s high ceiling would allow cooling breezes to flow through the interior rooms. The wide porch on the house would also shade the interior of the home to provide maximum cooling. The house also reflects the design of tropical homes in the West Indies.