The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor

<p>The development of the medieval city of Angkor (802-1431 CE) in the floodplains of the Tonle Sap Lake has lead researchers to believe that Angkor made use of its extensive river network; however, little attention has been given to Angkor's relationship with its watery environment. Prev...

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Main Author: Vadillo, V
Other Authors: Robinson, D
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
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author Vadillo, V
author2 Robinson, D
author_facet Robinson, D
Vadillo, V
author_sort Vadillo, V
collection OXFORD
description <p>The development of the medieval city of Angkor (802-1431 CE) in the floodplains of the Tonle Sap Lake has lead researchers to believe that Angkor made use of its extensive river network; however, little attention has been given to Angkor's relationship with its watery environment. Previous studies have presented a fragmentary view of the subject by analyzing different components in a compartmentalized way, placing the focus on nautical technology or neglecting discussion on water transport in academic works on land transport. This work aims to provide a more comprehensive study on Angkor's specific cognitive and functional traits that could be construed as a distinctive form of fluvial and cultural landscape. This is done by examining the environment, nautical technology, and the cultural biography of boats within the theoretical framework of the maritime cultural landscape and using a cross-disciplinary approach that integrates data from archaeology, iconography, history, ethnography, and environmental studies. A new topological map of Angkor's landscape of communication and transport is presented, as well as new insights on the use of boats as liminal agents for economic and political activities.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:20b045c4-3e2e-4f61-99b2-5fcd904e3cdb2024-12-01T17:46:58ZThe fluvial cultural landscape of AngkorThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:20b045c4-3e2e-4f61-99b2-5fcd904e3cdbMaritime archaeologyEnglishORA Deposit2016Vadillo, VRobinson, DGosden, CHulin, LMiksic, J<p>The development of the medieval city of Angkor (802-1431 CE) in the floodplains of the Tonle Sap Lake has lead researchers to believe that Angkor made use of its extensive river network; however, little attention has been given to Angkor's relationship with its watery environment. Previous studies have presented a fragmentary view of the subject by analyzing different components in a compartmentalized way, placing the focus on nautical technology or neglecting discussion on water transport in academic works on land transport. This work aims to provide a more comprehensive study on Angkor's specific cognitive and functional traits that could be construed as a distinctive form of fluvial and cultural landscape. This is done by examining the environment, nautical technology, and the cultural biography of boats within the theoretical framework of the maritime cultural landscape and using a cross-disciplinary approach that integrates data from archaeology, iconography, history, ethnography, and environmental studies. A new topological map of Angkor's landscape of communication and transport is presented, as well as new insights on the use of boats as liminal agents for economic and political activities.</p>
spellingShingle Maritime archaeology
Vadillo, V
The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor
title The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor
title_full The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor
title_fullStr The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor
title_full_unstemmed The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor
title_short The fluvial cultural landscape of Angkor
title_sort fluvial cultural landscape of angkor
topic Maritime archaeology
work_keys_str_mv AT vadillov thefluvialculturallandscapeofangkor
AT vadillov fluvialculturallandscapeofangkor