High Middle Ages · Southeast Asia · Culture

1055

Baphuon Temple-Mountain Rises at Angkor

1055

Under King Udayadityavarman II, the Khmer empire raised the Baphuon, a three-tiered sandstone pyramid soaring fifty meters above the Angkor plain. Dedicated to Shiva and symbolizing Mount Meru, the temple's bas-reliefs depicted scenes from Hindu epics and daily Khmer life with equal finesse. A Chinese envoy later described it as a 'Tower of Bronze' - the kind of structure that made visitors recalibrate what stone and ambition could accomplish together.