Cambodia completes temple renovation 'puzzle'
03 Jul 2011 2127 | Cambodia Travel News
AN ancient Angkor temple has reopened in Cambodia following decades of reconstruction work – a task described as the world’s largest puzzle.The work has involved taking apart the Baphuon monument’s 300,000 sandstone blocks and piecing them back together.
The project began in the 1960s but was interrupted by Cambodia’s civil war, and restarted in the mid-1990s.The 11th-Century three-tier tower is part of the Angkor complex which draws two million tourists a year.
The reopening was marked by a ceremony attended by Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni and French Prime Minister Francois Fillon.“The work at Baphuon has been exceptional,” Fillon said.Meanwhile, King Sihamoni expressed “profound gratitude to France” for funding the 10-million euro (US$14 million) project.
The BBC’s Guy De Launey in Phnom Penh says the Baphuon was once among the finest of the great monuments of Angkor, but by the 1950s it was on the brink of collapse.A French-led team of archaeologists decided that the only way to save the temple was to take it apart, our correspondent says.
They dismantled the monument, laying all the stone blocks in the surrounding jungle. Each piece was painted with a number, matching an entry on the master plan, so the tower could be rebuilt.But work was disrupted by the civil war and the records needed to reconstruct it were destroyed by the Khmer Rouge, a hardline communist regime that took power in 1975.
Source = khpost.com