Angkor is one of the most important archaeological sites in
South-East Asia. Stretching over some 400 km2, including forested area, Angkor
Archaeological Park contains the magnificent remains of the different capitals
of the Khmer Empire, from the 9th to the 15th century. They include the famous
Temple of Angkor Wat and, at Angkor Thom, the Bayon Temple with its countless
sculptural decorations. UNESCO has set up a wide-ranging programme to safeguard
this symbolic site and its surroundings.
Brief synthesis
Angkor, in Cambodia’s northern province of Siem Reap, is one
of the most important archaeological sites of Southeast Asia. It extends over
approximately 400 square kilometres and consists of scores of temples,
hydraulic structures (basins, dykes, reservoirs, canals) as well as
communication routes. For several centuries Angkor, was the centre of the Khmer
Kingdom. With impressive monuments, several different ancient urban plans and
large water reservoirs, the site is a unique concentration of features
testifying to an exceptional civilization. Temples such as Angkor Wat, the
Bayon, Preah Khan and Ta Prohm, exemplars of Khmer architecture, are closely
linked to their geographical context as well as being imbued with symbolic
significance. The architecture and layout of the successive capitals bear
witness to a high level of social order and ranking within the Khmer Empire.
Angkor is therefore a major site exemplifying cultural, religious and symbolic
values, as well as containing high architectural, archaeological and artistic
significance.
The park is inhabited, and many villages, some of whom the
ancestors are dating back to the Angkor period are scattered throughout the
park. The population practices agriculture and more specifically rice
cultivation.
Criterion (i): The Angkor complex represents the entire
range of Khmer art from the 9th to the 14th centuries, and includes a number of
indisputable artistic masterpieces (e.g. Angkor Wat, the Bayon, Banteay Srei).
Criterion (ii): The influence of Khmer art as developed at
Angkor was a profound one over much of South-east Asia and played a fundamental
role in its distinctive evolution.
Criterion (iii): The Khmer Empire of the 9th-14th centuries
encompassed much of South-east Asia and played a formative role in the
political and cultural development of the region. All that remains of that
civilization is its rich heritage of cult structures in brick and stone.
Criterion (iv): Khmer architecture evolved largely from that
of the Indian sub-continent, from which it soon became clearly distinct as it
developed its own special characteristics, some independently evolved and
others acquired from neighboring cultural traditions. The result was a new
artistic horizon in oriental art and architecture.
Integrity
The Angkor complex encompasses all major architectural
buildings and hydrological engineering systems from the Khmer period and most
of these “barays” and canals still exist today. All the individual aspects
illustrate the intactness of the site very much reflecting the splendor of the
cities that once were. The site integrity however, is put under dual pressures:
endogenous: exerted by more than 100,000 inhabitants
distributed over 112 historic settlements scattered over the site, who
constantly try to expand their dwelling areas;
exogenous: related to the proximity of the town of Siem
Reap, the seat of the province and a tourism hub.
Authenticity
Previous conservation and restoration works at Angkor
between 1907 and 1992, especially by the École Française d’Extrême-Orient
(EFEO), the Archaeological Survey of India, the Polish conservation body PKZ,
and the World Monuments Fund have had no significant impact on the overall
authenticity of the monuments that make up the Angkor complex and do not
obtrude upon the overall impression gained from individual monuments.
Protection and management requirements
The property is legally protected by the Royal Decree on the
Zoning of the Region of Siem Reap/Angkor adopted on 28 May 1994 and the Law on
the protection of the natural and cultural heritage promulgated on 25 January
1996, the Royal Decree on the creation of the APSARA National Authority
(Authority for the protection of the site and the management of the Angkor
Region) adopted on 19 February 1995, the No. 70 SSR government Decision, dated
16 September 2004 providing for land‐use in the Angkor Park: “All lands located
in zone 1 and 2 of the Angkor site are State properties”, and the sub-decree
No. 50 ANK/BK on the organisation and functioning of the APSARA National
Authority adopted on 9 May 2008, specifically provided for the establishment of
a Department of Land‐use and Habitat Management in the Angkor Park.
In order to strengthen and to clarify the ownership and
building codes in the protected zones 1 and 2, boundary posts have been put in
2004 and 2009 and the action was completed in 2012.
As off 1993, the ICC-Angkor (International Coordinating
Committee for the Safeguarding and Development of the historic site of Angkor)
created on 13 October 1993, ensures the coordination of the successive
scientific, restoration and conservation related projects, executed by the
Royal Cambodian Government and its international partners. It ensures the
consistency of the various projects, and defines, when necessary, technical and
financial standards and calls the attention of all the concerned parties when
required. It also contributes to the overall management of the property and its
sustainable development.
The successful conservation of the property by the APSARA
National Authority, monitored by the ICC-Angkor, was crowned by the removal of
the property from the World Heritage List in danger in 2004.
Angkor is one of the largest archaeological sites in
operation in the world. Tourism represents an enormous economic potential but
it can also generate irreparable destructions of the tangible as well as intangible
cultural heritage. Many research projects have been undertaken, since the
international safeguarding program was first launched in 1993.The scientific
objectives of the research (e.g. anthropological studies on socio-economic
conditions) result in a better knowledge and understanding of the history of
the site, and its inhabitants that constitute a rich exceptional legacy of the
intangible heritage. The purpose is to associate the “intangible culture” to
the enhancement of the monuments in order to sensitize the local population to
the importance and necessity of its protection and preservation and assist in
the development of the site as Angkor is a living heritage site where Khmer
people in general, but especially the local population, are known to be
particularly conservative with respect to ancestral traditions and where they
adhere to a great number of archaic cultural practices that have disappeared
elsewhere. The inhabitants venerate the temple deities and organize ceremonies
and rituals in their honor, involving prayers, traditional music and dance.
Moreover, the Angkor Archaeological Park is very rich in medicinal plants, used
by the local population for treatment of diseases. The plants are prepared and
then brought to different temple sites for blessing by the gods. The Preah Khan
temple is considered to have been a university of medicine and the NeakPoan an
ancient hospital. These aspects of intangible heritage are further enriched by
the traditional textile and basket weaving practices and palm sugar production,
which all result in products that are being sold on local markets and to the
tourists, thus contributing to the sustainable development and livelihood of
the population living in and around the World Heritage site.
A Public Investigation Unit was created as « measure
instrument » for identifying the needs, expectations and behaviors of visitors
in order to set policies, monitor its evolution, prepare a flux management
policy and promote the unknown sites.
The management of the Angkor Site, which is inhabited, also
takes into consideration the population living in the property by associating
them to the tourist economic growth in order to strive for sustainable
development and poverty reduction.
Two major contributions supporting the APSARA National
Authority in this matter are:
The Angkor Management Plan (AMP) and Community Development
Participation Project (CDPP), a bilateral cooperation with the Government of
New Zealand. The AMP helps the APSARA National Authority to reorganize and
strengthen the institutional aspects, and the CDPP prepares the land use map
with an experimental participation of the communities and supports small
projects related to tourist development in order to improve the income of
villagers living in the protected zones;
The Heritage Management Framework composed of a Tourism
Management Plan and a Risk map on monuments and natural resources; a
multilateral cooperation with the Government of Australia and UNESCO.
Preliminary analytical and planning work for the management strategy will take
into account the necessity to preserve the special atmosphere of Angkor. All
decisions must guarantee physical, spiritual, and emotional accessibility to
the site for the visitors.
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