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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,160 --> 00:00:07,280 1,000 years ago, one of the world's greatest civilisations 2 00:00:07,280 --> 00:00:11,200 built an empire here in Cambodia. 3 00:00:14,720 --> 00:00:18,560 It dominated Southeast Asia for nearly 600 years... 4 00:00:20,600 --> 00:00:23,960 ..and was the biggest superpower the region has ever seen. 5 00:00:25,520 --> 00:00:28,440 Their capital was the great city of Angkor. 6 00:00:29,440 --> 00:00:31,640 This was an extensive kingdom. 7 00:00:31,640 --> 00:00:34,640 Its power surpassed the modern-day borders, 8 00:00:34,640 --> 00:00:38,600 an empire this great is something to be truly marvelled at 9 00:00:38,600 --> 00:00:41,680 and to have so much remaining from that time, 10 00:00:41,680 --> 00:00:44,440 it's just a remarkable thing to witness. 11 00:00:46,160 --> 00:00:48,680 Starting as a nation of rice farmers, 12 00:00:48,680 --> 00:00:51,560 the Khmer people would go on to build some of the most 13 00:00:51,560 --> 00:00:54,400 spectacular structures of the Medieval age. 14 00:00:56,200 --> 00:01:01,640 The pinnacle of their culture was the great temple Angkor Wat, 15 00:01:01,640 --> 00:01:06,440 still the largest religious monument in the world. 16 00:01:06,440 --> 00:01:11,720 But 500 years ago, the Khmer kings abandoned their capital. 17 00:01:11,720 --> 00:01:15,920 The city of Angkor was quickly devoured by the jungle. 18 00:01:15,920 --> 00:01:21,040 For over 100 years, scientists have been unable to explain why 19 00:01:21,040 --> 00:01:25,520 one of the world's most powerful civilisations abandoned their city. 20 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:30,840 Now an international team of experts is trying to solve 21 00:01:30,840 --> 00:01:34,520 one of the great mysteries of the Medieval age. 22 00:01:34,520 --> 00:01:37,160 As archaeologists, we're interested in questions of, who the 23 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:38,960 people were who built these temples, 24 00:01:38,960 --> 00:01:41,280 where do they come from? How did they survive? 25 00:01:41,280 --> 00:01:44,960 What did their cities look like and what happened to them? 26 00:01:44,960 --> 00:01:48,880 Using a revolutionary laser-scanning technique called LIDAR, 27 00:01:48,880 --> 00:01:52,640 they're looking beneath the jungle to uncover the secrets of this 28 00:01:52,640 --> 00:01:55,640 extraordinary civilisation. 29 00:01:55,640 --> 00:02:00,000 This is the royal palace, the civil centre of that ancient city 30 00:02:00,000 --> 00:02:02,560 where the king would live. 31 00:02:02,560 --> 00:02:05,480 It's amazing. Really amazing. 32 00:02:07,080 --> 00:02:11,360 For the first time in 500 years, LIDAR is helping to reveal 33 00:02:11,360 --> 00:02:15,640 the lost metropolis of the people who built Angkor Wat. 34 00:02:15,640 --> 00:02:18,600 Some colleagues of mine have described it as, essentially, 35 00:02:18,600 --> 00:02:20,400 a scientific revolution. 36 00:02:20,400 --> 00:02:24,440 We are now closer than ever before to 37 00:02:24,440 --> 00:02:27,720 an understanding of how the Khmer people came to dominate 38 00:02:27,720 --> 00:02:33,640 Southeast Asia and why their great city ultimately collapsed. 39 00:02:58,040 --> 00:03:01,200 Deep inside the stone chambers of Angkor Wat, 40 00:03:01,200 --> 00:03:03,880 the annual candle ceremony - Meak Bochea. 41 00:03:09,320 --> 00:03:12,920 A Buddhist ceremony to purify the mind. 42 00:03:12,920 --> 00:03:15,840 Many people think of Angkor Wat as a dead monument, 43 00:03:15,840 --> 00:03:17,240 a place that was abandoned 44 00:03:17,240 --> 00:03:21,160 and the tourists come here just to admire its architecture. 45 00:03:21,160 --> 00:03:23,800 But, you know, it's a living monument. 46 00:03:26,800 --> 00:03:31,200 It's a place which has real life in amongst the people of Cambodia. 47 00:03:36,120 --> 00:03:38,600 It's an amazing place, a special place. 48 00:03:40,360 --> 00:03:43,360 Angkor Wat is a place full of surprises. 49 00:03:50,720 --> 00:03:54,480 Angkor Wat is one of the most beautiful and mysterious buildings 50 00:03:54,480 --> 00:03:56,080 in the world. 51 00:03:59,960 --> 00:04:03,560 Five huge towers shaped like lotus buds, 52 00:04:03,560 --> 00:04:06,760 surrounded by a six-kilometre moat. 53 00:04:09,000 --> 00:04:12,400 A temple of perfect symmetry covering an area 54 00:04:12,400 --> 00:04:15,040 of two square kilometres. 55 00:04:15,040 --> 00:04:19,400 This is one of the wonders of the Medieval world. 56 00:04:19,400 --> 00:04:23,360 What I feel when I see Angkor Wat is, I am impressed 57 00:04:23,360 --> 00:04:25,280 by the coming together, 58 00:04:25,280 --> 00:04:29,640 the collectivity of a great many kinds of genius here. 59 00:04:29,640 --> 00:04:31,480 The genius of the mathematician, 60 00:04:31,480 --> 00:04:34,120 the genius of the artist, the genius of the architect, 61 00:04:34,120 --> 00:04:37,240 the genius of the engineer and the genius of the people who 62 00:04:37,240 --> 00:04:39,200 aspired to build these things. 63 00:04:39,200 --> 00:04:41,280 Who cannot be in love with Angkor? 64 00:04:43,000 --> 00:04:46,160 The temple was constructed nearly 1,000 years ago. 65 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:49,560 In Europe at that time, 66 00:04:49,560 --> 00:04:52,480 the Normans would spend over 100 years building their 67 00:04:52,480 --> 00:04:54,240 vast cathedrals. 68 00:04:54,240 --> 00:04:59,280 The Khmer people completed Angkor Wat in under 40, 69 00:04:59,280 --> 00:05:04,360 and that included 2km of intricate engravings with 70 00:05:04,360 --> 00:05:08,760 nearly 2,000 celestial dancers from Hindu mythology, 71 00:05:08,760 --> 00:05:11,440 every one unique. 72 00:05:13,120 --> 00:05:16,720 In the 12th century, this was the spiritual and administrative 73 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:18,880 heart of the city of Angkor. 74 00:05:18,880 --> 00:05:21,360 It would come to rule an empire 75 00:05:21,360 --> 00:05:25,280 that stretched a million square kilometres across Southeast Asia. 76 00:05:33,280 --> 00:05:36,720 Every year, more than two million people are drawn to the Khmer's 77 00:05:36,720 --> 00:05:39,040 archaeological treasures. 78 00:05:39,040 --> 00:05:44,640 They drive a tourist industry worth more than 2 billion a year, 79 00:05:44,640 --> 00:05:48,520 nearly 20% of Cambodia's entire economy. 80 00:05:50,800 --> 00:05:53,000 But the people who built this temple 81 00:05:53,000 --> 00:05:57,640 and the city around it remain an enigma. 82 00:05:57,640 --> 00:06:01,480 Most evidence for how the Khmer people built their city 83 00:06:01,480 --> 00:06:04,480 has been lost or swallowed by the jungle. 84 00:06:04,480 --> 00:06:08,240 Archaeologists and historians have been studying Angkor 85 00:06:08,240 --> 00:06:11,320 for about 150, 160 years, but little was known 86 00:06:11,320 --> 00:06:14,760 about the actual people who inhabited these spaces. 87 00:06:14,760 --> 00:06:17,080 The great stone buildings were one thing, 88 00:06:17,080 --> 00:06:19,800 but not everyone lived in the temples, 89 00:06:19,800 --> 00:06:22,520 and so more and more throughout the 20th century 90 00:06:22,520 --> 00:06:25,520 the questions were being asked, what about the everyday people? 91 00:06:25,520 --> 00:06:28,440 Who were they? Where did they live? What was their life like? 92 00:06:32,800 --> 00:06:37,400 Now a new project is attempting to solve some of these mysteries... 93 00:06:39,120 --> 00:06:42,440 ..by using a revolutionary technology called LIDAR. 94 00:06:44,000 --> 00:06:47,240 We're airborne above Angkor. 95 00:06:47,240 --> 00:06:51,560 Damian Evans, from the University of Sydney, is leading a team 96 00:06:51,560 --> 00:06:55,640 of international experts who are peeling back the layers of forest 97 00:06:55,640 --> 00:06:59,480 to reveal the secrets of the people who built Angkor Wat. 98 00:07:03,440 --> 00:07:06,600 Most of the city that existed here 1,000 years ago 99 00:07:06,600 --> 00:07:10,320 would have been made of very, very flimsy material. 100 00:07:10,320 --> 00:07:14,040 Just light pieces of wood and thatch and so on. 101 00:07:14,040 --> 00:07:17,920 Within one or two years, that stuff just rots away completely. 102 00:07:17,920 --> 00:07:21,400 We can still make out these very, very subtle traces of where 103 00:07:21,400 --> 00:07:26,760 they used to be, by analysing the surface topography of the landscape. 104 00:07:26,760 --> 00:07:30,840 LIDAR works in a similar way to radar. 105 00:07:30,840 --> 00:07:34,880 It scans the ground by sending out a million laser points 106 00:07:34,880 --> 00:07:39,080 every four seconds and analysing the information reflected back. 107 00:07:40,800 --> 00:07:44,120 The time it takes for each pulse to break through the trees, 108 00:07:44,120 --> 00:07:47,680 hit the ground and return is measured. 109 00:07:47,680 --> 00:07:49,600 The results are then mapped. 110 00:07:49,600 --> 00:07:53,680 The shapes revealed are the footprints of structures 111 00:07:53,680 --> 00:07:57,640 from the long-lost capital of the Angkorian empire. 112 00:07:57,640 --> 00:08:00,840 We get this data back to the office, we can click a button, 113 00:08:00,840 --> 00:08:05,000 strip those trees from the picture and really, for the first time, 114 00:08:05,000 --> 00:08:08,120 see those cities of Angkor emerge in incredible detail 115 00:08:08,120 --> 00:08:12,200 on the computer screen in front of us. 116 00:08:12,200 --> 00:08:15,000 The jungle is removed in an instant. 117 00:08:17,800 --> 00:08:21,080 The LIDAR data renders an outline of everything on the surface 118 00:08:21,080 --> 00:08:22,600 of the land. 119 00:08:23,720 --> 00:08:28,360 The glory of Angkor Wat becomes a ghostly outline of digital points. 120 00:08:30,480 --> 00:08:36,720 But LIDAR also reveals the shape of the old city. 121 00:08:41,160 --> 00:08:44,280 Angkor Wat is shown to be surrounded by the ghostly 122 00:08:44,280 --> 00:08:46,560 outline of a vast metropolis. 123 00:08:48,360 --> 00:08:52,160 And we can use this data to re-build the city of Angkor 124 00:08:52,160 --> 00:08:54,880 as it would have looked over 900 years ago. 125 00:09:04,920 --> 00:09:07,400 Shadowy lines that were once roads... 126 00:09:10,880 --> 00:09:14,040 ..canals long since swallowed by the jungle... 127 00:09:23,240 --> 00:09:27,760 ..and the outline of thousands of houses, monasteries and palaces. 128 00:09:34,840 --> 00:09:38,560 It's an incredible leap forward for us to be able to use this technique. 129 00:09:38,560 --> 00:09:41,640 You can imagine that doing things by hand on the ground 130 00:09:41,640 --> 00:09:44,480 is a process that would take decades, basically. 131 00:09:44,480 --> 00:09:47,800 Now, using these new techniques, we have the opportunity 132 00:09:47,800 --> 00:09:52,000 to do a bit of flying, just a few hours, to take that data back to the 133 00:09:52,000 --> 00:09:55,960 office and with a few clicks of the button, we see entire urban 134 00:09:55,960 --> 00:09:59,360 landscapes unfolding on the screen in front of us for the first time. 135 00:10:03,040 --> 00:10:06,040 The LIDAR imagery shows that central Angkor 136 00:10:06,040 --> 00:10:09,280 was organised into regular-sized city blocks... 137 00:10:10,960 --> 00:10:14,640 ..and that many of the dwellings of the Angkorian era 138 00:10:14,640 --> 00:10:17,840 were clustered around thousands of ponds. 139 00:10:19,320 --> 00:10:21,680 LIDAR is an incredibly valuable tool, 140 00:10:21,680 --> 00:10:25,840 because what it allows us to do is to breathe life back into that landscape. 141 00:10:25,840 --> 00:10:29,160 For the first time, it reveals with exceptional clarity 142 00:10:29,160 --> 00:10:32,360 these vanished cities that surrounded the monuments 143 00:10:32,360 --> 00:10:36,600 and allows us to create a new image of Angkor as a place 144 00:10:36,600 --> 00:10:39,040 that was teeming with life and full of activity. 145 00:10:45,400 --> 00:10:47,800 LIDAR confirms that the city 146 00:10:47,800 --> 00:10:51,840 spanned an area larger than the whole of New York City. 147 00:10:51,840 --> 00:10:55,640 In the 12th century, when Angkor Wat was being built, 148 00:10:55,640 --> 00:10:58,880 London had a population of 18,000. 149 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:03,440 It's been estimated that Angkor had a population 150 00:11:03,440 --> 00:11:06,160 approaching three-quarters of a million. 151 00:11:07,480 --> 00:11:09,640 Until the 19th century, 152 00:11:09,640 --> 00:11:14,000 Angkor was the most extensive city in the world. 153 00:11:19,640 --> 00:11:22,040 Bringing the old capital back to life 154 00:11:22,040 --> 00:11:24,720 was only one of the project's ambitions. 155 00:11:24,720 --> 00:11:28,720 LIDAR has also started giving revolutionary insights 156 00:11:28,720 --> 00:11:31,520 into the origins of the Khmer Empire. 157 00:11:38,120 --> 00:11:43,440 Since 1999, French archaeologist Jean-Baptiste Chevance 158 00:11:43,440 --> 00:11:49,000 has been studying the Kulen Hills, 40km north of Angkor. 159 00:11:49,000 --> 00:11:52,120 He has dedicated his life to uncovering 160 00:11:52,120 --> 00:11:55,640 the remains of a 9th-century Khmer settlement. 161 00:11:55,640 --> 00:11:58,160 It's a tough, simple existence. 162 00:11:59,680 --> 00:12:03,520 I've been driving around for years, so I know the place pretty well. 163 00:12:03,520 --> 00:12:05,360 I feel comfortable with the local people, 164 00:12:05,360 --> 00:12:07,560 with the research, with the temples. 165 00:12:07,560 --> 00:12:09,440 It's part of my life. 166 00:12:12,040 --> 00:12:16,480 The dirt bike is fun, it's the easiest way to go from A to B, 167 00:12:16,480 --> 00:12:20,520 especially in rainy season. Roads are turning into rivers, so you have to be cautious. 168 00:12:36,120 --> 00:12:39,480 Historians believe that the Khmer Empire 169 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:42,000 began here in the Kulen Hills 170 00:12:42,000 --> 00:12:45,000 300 years before Angkor Wat was built. 171 00:12:51,880 --> 00:12:53,800 Before the LIDAR project, 172 00:12:53,800 --> 00:12:56,600 Jean-Baptiste used conventional archaeology 173 00:12:56,600 --> 00:13:00,720 to piece together a picture of an early Khmer capital. 174 00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:04,360 This is Rong Chen temple. 175 00:13:09,840 --> 00:13:14,560 Rong Chen sits on one of the highest peaks in the Kulen Hills. 176 00:13:14,560 --> 00:13:16,920 At the time it was being built, 177 00:13:16,920 --> 00:13:21,720 Anglo-Saxon Britain was being attacked by the Vikings. 178 00:13:21,720 --> 00:13:25,400 Rong Chen is the only mountain temple in Phnom Kulen. 179 00:13:26,560 --> 00:13:29,760 A temple made of different levels, like a pyramid, 180 00:13:29,760 --> 00:13:33,960 it has always been considered the centre of the religious city. 181 00:13:35,800 --> 00:13:38,760 Nobody has really studied and maintained this temple, 182 00:13:38,760 --> 00:13:42,000 because Angkor was attracting most of the attention. 183 00:13:43,960 --> 00:13:47,440 Inscriptions in temples built 200 years later 184 00:13:47,440 --> 00:13:50,320 suggest that Rong Chen was the religious heart 185 00:13:50,320 --> 00:13:53,440 of a new capital called Mahendrapravata. 186 00:13:55,400 --> 00:14:00,320 And it was built for a powerful Khmer king, Jayavarman II. 187 00:14:02,480 --> 00:14:09,120 Before his rule, Cambodia was a collection of small kingdoms ruled by local lords. 188 00:14:11,120 --> 00:14:14,760 11th-century inscriptions suggest that Jayavarman 189 00:14:14,760 --> 00:14:17,680 came to dominate the area by declaring himself 190 00:14:17,680 --> 00:14:21,160 to be a special mediator between God and man. 191 00:14:23,600 --> 00:14:27,560 Jayavarman II was the first king to unify those kingdoms. 192 00:14:27,560 --> 00:14:31,040 He also installed a new cult of the god-king, 193 00:14:31,040 --> 00:14:33,840 which made him even more powerful. 194 00:14:33,840 --> 00:14:39,160 That cult was perpetrated by all the kings that were following him 195 00:14:39,160 --> 00:14:41,040 and therefore Jayavarman II 196 00:14:41,040 --> 00:14:45,680 has always been referred as the king who was unifying the Khmer kingdom 197 00:14:45,680 --> 00:14:49,720 and starting the Angkorian period leading to Angkor Wat. 198 00:14:52,600 --> 00:14:55,760 With only a few ruins and inscriptions to go on, 199 00:14:55,760 --> 00:15:00,920 understanding the early days of the Khmer Empire has always been difficult, 200 00:15:00,920 --> 00:15:06,240 and for many years, archaeological digs here were also impossible. 201 00:15:10,240 --> 00:15:17,080 From 1975 to 1979, the Communist Party of Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge, 202 00:15:17,080 --> 00:15:22,480 established a totalitarian state based on the teachings of Mao Tse Tung. 203 00:15:24,320 --> 00:15:27,200 Under the leadership of dictator Pol Pot, 204 00:15:27,200 --> 00:15:28,760 they ruled by terror, 205 00:15:28,760 --> 00:15:35,080 rejecting urban culture and trying to build a self-sufficient agricultural society. 206 00:15:37,720 --> 00:15:39,240 By the end of Pol Pot's rule 207 00:15:39,240 --> 00:15:43,520 more than a million-and-a-half Cambodians had been killed. 208 00:15:43,520 --> 00:15:47,400 Many more were left with permanent injuries. 209 00:15:47,400 --> 00:15:52,640 The Kulen Hills was one of the last strongholds of the Khmer Rouge. 210 00:15:53,640 --> 00:15:56,800 Until '96, it was completely impossible to come here. 211 00:15:56,800 --> 00:16:02,760 At that time, the Khmer Rouge were occupying an artillery battery just behind this temple. 212 00:16:02,760 --> 00:16:06,160 As a Westerner, you would've been kidnapped or killed. 213 00:16:06,160 --> 00:16:09,920 Even the Cambodians couldn't come here, it would have been just too dangerous. 214 00:16:11,680 --> 00:16:15,160 Today, the Kulen Hills remain heavily mined. 215 00:16:18,240 --> 00:16:22,480 So this part of the Khmer Empire is one of the least explored. 216 00:16:24,600 --> 00:16:30,320 Jean-Baptiste's work and his participation in the LIDAR project is changing that. 217 00:16:30,320 --> 00:16:34,840 Laser information reflected from the surface of the Kulen Hills 218 00:16:34,840 --> 00:16:37,720 revealed the shadow of Jayavarman's city 219 00:16:37,720 --> 00:16:40,720 for the first time in more than 1,000 years. 220 00:16:42,320 --> 00:16:45,960 The LIDAR results showed that Mahendrapravata 221 00:16:45,960 --> 00:16:50,280 was a much more sophisticated city than anyone had expected. 222 00:16:50,280 --> 00:16:53,760 It also covered a much greater area. 223 00:16:53,760 --> 00:16:56,520 We found the urban network, which is massive, 224 00:16:56,520 --> 00:17:00,080 which is covering at least 8km by 4km, 225 00:17:00,080 --> 00:17:03,320 what you have here is the area which was covered by the LIDAR. 226 00:17:03,320 --> 00:17:08,400 It's very, very surprising, because we passed over those sites for years. 227 00:17:08,400 --> 00:17:12,040 This is a modern road we use almost every day, 228 00:17:12,040 --> 00:17:14,760 but you go in the field and you barely see things. 229 00:17:14,760 --> 00:17:17,800 We knew that in Kulen Hills you had a high concentration of temples, 230 00:17:17,800 --> 00:17:20,040 one of them being the mountain temple, 231 00:17:20,040 --> 00:17:24,000 but we didn't really know how it was connected together. 232 00:17:24,000 --> 00:17:28,600 We didn't have the link between all these religious sites. 233 00:17:28,600 --> 00:17:32,760 The LIDAR give us a complete vision, but in a way that is so spectacular 234 00:17:32,760 --> 00:17:34,840 that we couldn't really believe it. 235 00:17:34,840 --> 00:17:38,920 When we saw the result, that was like a big surprise, to be honest. 236 00:17:43,920 --> 00:17:47,880 The LIDAR survey provides precise information 237 00:17:47,880 --> 00:17:52,320 about where to look for the remains of further hidden structures. 238 00:17:52,320 --> 00:17:56,520 This is a GPS, which allows me to know exactly where I am. 239 00:17:56,520 --> 00:17:59,280 And we have downloaded the LIDAR result on it, 240 00:17:59,280 --> 00:18:02,920 so I know exactly where I am, according to the LIDAR. 241 00:18:02,920 --> 00:18:04,800 And I can check every feature, 242 00:18:04,800 --> 00:18:07,960 I can check everything going back on the field. 243 00:18:09,480 --> 00:18:11,600 In an area cleared of mines, 244 00:18:11,600 --> 00:18:14,680 Jean-Baptiste is following up LIDAR data 245 00:18:14,680 --> 00:18:18,920 that suggests the presence of an unexpected structure. 246 00:18:31,360 --> 00:18:33,400 This is what I was looking for. 247 00:18:33,400 --> 00:18:37,280 We have, actually, here two termites. 248 00:18:37,280 --> 00:18:39,400 One here and one over there. 249 00:18:39,400 --> 00:18:42,800 They're all in a line and this is not natural. 250 00:18:44,520 --> 00:18:47,960 Termites don't build their mounds in straight lines in nature, 251 00:18:47,960 --> 00:18:50,320 yet here there are six of them. 252 00:18:51,600 --> 00:18:55,360 The LIDAR map suggests that the termites built their nests 253 00:18:55,360 --> 00:18:59,040 on the remains of an earth bank built in the 9th century 254 00:18:59,040 --> 00:19:01,520 at the edge of a medieval Khmer road. 255 00:19:02,680 --> 00:19:05,720 So we're standing exactly on the blue arrow here. 256 00:19:05,720 --> 00:19:10,040 What we have beneath is the LIDAR images 257 00:19:10,040 --> 00:19:13,800 and on the top, we have highlighted the main road. 258 00:19:13,800 --> 00:19:18,280 So if you go this way, you will see that line that we have on the screen here, 259 00:19:18,280 --> 00:19:22,200 and this is exactly the bank of that massive road. 260 00:19:24,800 --> 00:19:29,000 The termites are unwitting markers of a vast boulevard... 261 00:19:30,160 --> 00:19:33,960 ..80m wide, 6km long. 262 00:19:35,680 --> 00:19:38,200 The size of these roads are amazing. 263 00:19:38,200 --> 00:19:40,480 You could have a plane landing here, 264 00:19:40,480 --> 00:19:43,080 you could have dozens of elephant running, 265 00:19:43,080 --> 00:19:46,240 and probably hundreds if not thousands of people. 266 00:19:47,520 --> 00:19:50,520 It would have been a very impressive sight. 267 00:19:52,080 --> 00:19:55,160 The LIDAR images of Mahendrapravata 268 00:19:55,160 --> 00:20:00,800 reveal that Jayavarman II began the construction of a remarkable city. 269 00:20:00,800 --> 00:20:05,360 The Khmer people managed to clear tens of kilometres of jungle 270 00:20:05,360 --> 00:20:09,240 to begin the construction of their new capital. 271 00:20:12,240 --> 00:20:17,120 The LIDAR survey reveals a huge centrally planned metropolis - 272 00:20:17,120 --> 00:20:19,840 canals, 273 00:20:19,840 --> 00:20:22,200 reservoirs, 274 00:20:22,200 --> 00:20:24,840 dams 275 00:20:24,840 --> 00:20:27,360 and a network of giant boulevards 276 00:20:27,360 --> 00:20:31,720 covering an area of at least 30 square kilometres. 277 00:20:56,920 --> 00:20:58,840 We're actually here on a dam, 278 00:20:58,840 --> 00:21:01,800 which is a massive dyke blocking the valley, 279 00:21:01,800 --> 00:21:04,760 one of the main valleys of the Kulen Hills, 280 00:21:04,760 --> 00:21:06,760 and it's running over 300 metres 281 00:21:06,760 --> 00:21:10,280 and blocking right behind me a huge reservoir. 282 00:21:10,280 --> 00:21:14,640 It's covered now by vegetation, it's a big swamp, 283 00:21:14,640 --> 00:21:17,800 but at that time you have to imagine water all over. 284 00:21:21,120 --> 00:21:25,760 LIDAR allows us to re-imagine this early Khmer city. 285 00:21:32,520 --> 00:21:35,960 A huge reservoir of eight square kilometres 286 00:21:35,960 --> 00:21:39,560 to sustain a rapidly growing population. 287 00:21:46,640 --> 00:21:50,680 In a sense you could say that LIDAR is literally and figuratively 288 00:21:50,680 --> 00:21:54,480 shining a light into these forgotten aspects of Khmer history. 289 00:21:54,480 --> 00:21:58,000 The focus has always been on the temples and the monuments 290 00:21:58,000 --> 00:22:01,120 and these elite aspects of Khmer civilisation. 291 00:22:01,120 --> 00:22:04,040 For the first time we can consider the bigger picture 292 00:22:04,040 --> 00:22:09,520 and put people back and consider these cities in all of their complexity. 293 00:22:09,520 --> 00:22:12,560 Constructions like the dam 294 00:22:12,560 --> 00:22:15,160 show that the city was ruled by a leader 295 00:22:15,160 --> 00:22:19,080 who could plan and deliver huge engineering projects. 296 00:22:19,080 --> 00:22:20,680 BIRDSONG 297 00:22:22,400 --> 00:22:24,600 You have a massive structure 298 00:22:24,600 --> 00:22:27,960 irrigating and controlling the water system up here. 299 00:22:27,960 --> 00:22:30,400 This required a huge amount of labour, 300 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:34,640 therefore whoever is behind this is quite strong in terms of power, 301 00:22:34,640 --> 00:22:36,080 in terms of politics. 302 00:22:41,000 --> 00:22:45,360 A powerful political system was also needed to help overcome 303 00:22:45,360 --> 00:22:48,680 one of the Khmer people's major challenges. 304 00:22:48,680 --> 00:22:51,040 THUNDER RUMBLES 305 00:23:03,440 --> 00:23:06,640 A metre-and-a-half of rain falls in the monsoon 306 00:23:06,640 --> 00:23:11,480 between May and November, nearly 90% of the annual total, 307 00:23:11,480 --> 00:23:17,640 and then, after six months of deluge, the long dry season begins. 308 00:23:17,640 --> 00:23:24,280 Temperatures hover around 40 Celsius and for six months nothing grows. 309 00:23:24,280 --> 00:23:29,520 If the crops fail during the wet season...famine follows. 310 00:23:36,440 --> 00:23:39,320 The Khmer were obsessed with water 311 00:23:39,320 --> 00:23:42,360 and at this river in the Kulen Hills, 312 00:23:42,360 --> 00:23:44,920 they sought to sanctify it 313 00:23:44,920 --> 00:23:49,080 by creating an elaborate underwater shrine. 314 00:23:50,880 --> 00:23:53,520 These carvings in the rock of the river bed 315 00:23:53,520 --> 00:23:55,480 were made in the 11th century, 316 00:23:55,480 --> 00:23:59,600 200 years after Jayavarman founded his capital. 317 00:23:59,600 --> 00:24:04,320 The shapes represent Hindu symbols of male and female fertility. 318 00:24:06,040 --> 00:24:10,040 This is one of my favourite places here because it's beautiful. 319 00:24:10,040 --> 00:24:13,840 It's a river bed which is completely carved for more than 1km, 320 00:24:13,840 --> 00:24:17,400 carved with this symbol of the Khmer and the Indian mythologies. 321 00:24:17,400 --> 00:24:19,280 This is a very unique place. 322 00:24:24,600 --> 00:24:29,080 These intricate designs were carved to preserve life. 323 00:24:35,120 --> 00:24:38,880 The water running here goes to the Angkor region. 324 00:24:38,880 --> 00:24:44,240 This sacred carving brings a kind of spiritual value to the water 325 00:24:44,240 --> 00:24:47,360 going down to the reservoir and to the rice crops. 326 00:24:47,360 --> 00:24:49,960 The whole idea is quite magical. 327 00:24:53,800 --> 00:24:58,240 Rainwater from the Kulen Hills flows over these carvings 328 00:24:58,240 --> 00:25:00,840 down to the Cambodian plains. 329 00:25:18,760 --> 00:25:25,160 The sanctified water sustained the staple of life for an entire people. 330 00:25:32,480 --> 00:25:37,640 90 years after Jayavarman made Mahendrapravata a capital of his kingdom, 331 00:25:37,640 --> 00:25:41,240 the administration moved here to Angkor. 332 00:25:45,720 --> 00:25:48,480 Landscape archaeologist Scott Hawken 333 00:25:48,480 --> 00:25:52,240 has been studying how rice farming shaped the new capital. 334 00:25:54,320 --> 00:25:57,800 Mostly for the history of research on Angkor, 335 00:25:57,800 --> 00:26:02,440 people have been studying temples, and the magnificent structures 336 00:26:02,440 --> 00:26:04,600 that everybody talks about and notices, 337 00:26:04,600 --> 00:26:08,560 but you can't understand the city until you go to the rice fields. 338 00:26:08,560 --> 00:26:10,880 It's really interesting to start off 339 00:26:10,880 --> 00:26:14,840 with the smallest elements of the archaeological landscape, 340 00:26:14,840 --> 00:26:16,840 the humble rice fields, 341 00:26:16,840 --> 00:26:20,680 and then to build up a picture of this mighty, mighty city 342 00:26:20,680 --> 00:26:24,600 that was over 1,000 square kilometres in size. 343 00:26:29,720 --> 00:26:34,160 The rice harvest here has always depended on a secure water supply. 344 00:26:44,680 --> 00:26:47,920 I use satellite imagery, aerial photography 345 00:26:47,920 --> 00:26:49,440 and map the rice fields 346 00:26:49,440 --> 00:26:53,200 and the particular patterns that they make within the landscape, 347 00:26:53,200 --> 00:26:55,440 then I can understand from these patterns 348 00:26:55,440 --> 00:26:58,280 how the city developed over time. 349 00:27:05,640 --> 00:27:08,200 THEY SPEAKS VIETNAMESE 350 00:27:12,720 --> 00:27:15,920 He's been farming these rice fields here for many years, 351 00:27:15,920 --> 00:27:19,960 and all this water comes from a local reservoir just upstream 352 00:27:19,960 --> 00:27:22,960 which is 1,000 years old. So it's remarkable. 353 00:27:22,960 --> 00:27:25,800 These rice fields have been watered by a reservoir 354 00:27:25,800 --> 00:27:28,240 that his ancestor built 1,000 years ago. 355 00:27:30,840 --> 00:27:35,280 Scott's work shows that the solutions found by Angkorian engineers 356 00:27:35,280 --> 00:27:37,680 are still used today. 357 00:27:37,680 --> 00:27:43,920 A successful harvest still depends on careful management of the monsoon waters. 358 00:27:49,200 --> 00:27:50,720 Rice is a very demanding crop, 359 00:27:50,720 --> 00:27:54,400 you really have to control water in a very precise way, 360 00:27:54,400 --> 00:27:57,120 and this takes a lot of labour and energy, 361 00:27:57,120 --> 00:28:00,320 and if you don't do this then the rice crops will fail. 362 00:28:01,560 --> 00:28:06,400 At first, the people of Angkor tried to reduce the chance of failure 363 00:28:06,400 --> 00:28:10,640 by building their city close to an enormous natural body of water. 364 00:28:12,560 --> 00:28:16,600 Every year, these fields are nourished by the rising waters 365 00:28:16,600 --> 00:28:18,960 of the largest lake in Southeast Asia. 366 00:28:20,680 --> 00:28:23,800 Tonle Sap...the "Great Lake". 367 00:28:30,880 --> 00:28:37,520 Tonle Sap is still critical to the survival of nearly a quarter of all Cambodians today. 368 00:28:37,520 --> 00:28:40,640 It's only when you get down and are on the lake itself 369 00:28:40,640 --> 00:28:43,240 that you really understand how vast it is. 370 00:28:44,880 --> 00:28:47,440 It's just enormous. It's like an inland sea. 371 00:28:56,280 --> 00:28:58,800 Even in the dry season, the lake covers 372 00:28:58,800 --> 00:29:02,560 nearly 2% of the surface area of Cambodia. 373 00:29:02,560 --> 00:29:05,600 During the monsoon it expands to cover 374 00:29:05,600 --> 00:29:09,280 almost 10% of the whole country. 375 00:29:10,640 --> 00:29:14,640 The edge of the Tonle Sap is a tremendously fertile resource 376 00:29:14,640 --> 00:29:16,760 for around a million people. 377 00:29:16,760 --> 00:29:19,840 As the lake swells and then as it shrinks, 378 00:29:19,840 --> 00:29:21,760 it leaves this rich layer of silt. 379 00:29:23,720 --> 00:29:28,040 But the people here had little control over the dramatic extremes 380 00:29:28,040 --> 00:29:30,760 that Tonle Sap imposed on their lives. 381 00:29:32,160 --> 00:29:36,840 During every monsoon the water rises by ten metres. 382 00:29:40,800 --> 00:29:42,400 People living here today 383 00:29:42,400 --> 00:29:45,880 are still forced to adapt to the lake's natural cycle. 384 00:29:51,400 --> 00:29:54,280 So this fascinating village here, Kompong Phluk, 385 00:29:54,280 --> 00:29:58,160 is perched up in the air on these enormous stilts, 386 00:29:58,160 --> 00:30:01,200 ten metres high in the sky. 387 00:30:01,200 --> 00:30:05,560 And this tells us something very interesting about the local environment. 388 00:30:05,560 --> 00:30:08,280 In the wet season the waters here rise up, 389 00:30:08,280 --> 00:30:11,800 so this village in the air becomes a village in amongst the water. 390 00:30:13,200 --> 00:30:16,880 It's a remarkable village, it's really surreal, it's extraordinary. 391 00:30:19,600 --> 00:30:24,000 People in the Angkorian era faced the same challenges. 392 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:26,760 There are two ways that a society can face 393 00:30:26,760 --> 00:30:32,160 these dramatic climatic conditions of rising and falling water levels. 394 00:30:32,160 --> 00:30:35,200 It can adapt like this village has 395 00:30:35,200 --> 00:30:40,160 or it can actually take control and go beyond living on the margins 396 00:30:40,160 --> 00:30:43,960 and really try to change the ecosystems and the environment 397 00:30:43,960 --> 00:30:45,560 to suit the society itself. 398 00:30:47,960 --> 00:30:52,400 The people of medieval Angkor chose to take on the environment 399 00:30:52,400 --> 00:30:57,600 and to move from managed subsistence to a mastery of the landscape. 400 00:30:59,480 --> 00:31:02,520 If you're a subsistence farmer it's a very precarious existence, 401 00:31:02,520 --> 00:31:06,360 so the key really to surviving in this kind of landscape 402 00:31:06,360 --> 00:31:10,800 is to develop technologies to overcome that inherent limitation. 403 00:31:13,880 --> 00:31:18,120 The people of Angkor developed new engineering skills. 404 00:31:19,480 --> 00:31:21,520 And nearly 1,000 years ago, 405 00:31:21,520 --> 00:31:25,600 they built two huge reservoirs known as "barays". 406 00:31:26,880 --> 00:31:32,400 Right now, just below us is the West Baray, the largest of the reservoirs of the Angkor period. 407 00:31:32,400 --> 00:31:34,440 It's an absolutely huge construction, 408 00:31:34,440 --> 00:31:37,440 it's 8km long on its north and south sides, 409 00:31:37,440 --> 00:31:40,200 and 2km long on its east and west sides. 410 00:31:40,200 --> 00:31:43,040 It's an incredibly impressive piece of engineering. 411 00:31:53,760 --> 00:31:59,200 The West Baray is the largest hand-dug reservoir on the planet. 412 00:31:59,200 --> 00:32:03,600 It can hold over 48 million cubic metres of water. 413 00:32:03,600 --> 00:32:07,560 It's estimated that 200,000 people 414 00:32:07,560 --> 00:32:10,600 were needed to construct its high embankments. 415 00:32:17,920 --> 00:32:21,840 It's really remarkable to stand on the edge of the West Baray. 416 00:32:21,840 --> 00:32:24,960 It's just an enormous, beautiful lake 417 00:32:24,960 --> 00:32:27,920 built to precision engineering standards. 418 00:32:27,920 --> 00:32:31,120 But it's not just a functional piece of infrastructure, 419 00:32:31,120 --> 00:32:34,800 it's also really humbling and moving how beautiful it is. 420 00:32:37,800 --> 00:32:41,040 900 years after the baray was completed, 421 00:32:41,040 --> 00:32:47,880 its waters are still used to irrigate the surrounding fields during the dry season. 422 00:32:47,880 --> 00:32:54,600 The West Baray is really the pinnacle of the Khmers' ability to transform their environments 423 00:32:54,600 --> 00:32:58,200 and attempt to neutralise the flux of the monsoon. 424 00:32:59,720 --> 00:33:03,760 If you look at society today, we're all about risk management, climate change. 425 00:33:03,760 --> 00:33:05,880 They were doing the same thing back then, 426 00:33:05,880 --> 00:33:10,160 trying to manage these droughts and to even out the disturbances, 427 00:33:10,160 --> 00:33:13,280 so that the local population wouldn't revolt 428 00:33:13,280 --> 00:33:16,720 and the kings could manage their society. 429 00:33:16,720 --> 00:33:21,000 LIDAR work across Angkor shows how the Khmer people 430 00:33:21,000 --> 00:33:25,320 transformed this area with advanced hydraulic engineering. 431 00:33:30,160 --> 00:33:33,120 The elaborate network of canals and reservoirs 432 00:33:33,120 --> 00:33:39,440 meant that they could now grow crops far away from the area irrigated naturally by Tonle Sap. 433 00:33:41,080 --> 00:33:44,840 From an engineering point of view, what was achieved here is absolutely incredible. 434 00:33:44,840 --> 00:33:50,760 They moved phenomenal amounts of the landscape from different parts of Angkor to other areas 435 00:33:50,760 --> 00:33:55,760 and, basically, terraformed the entire plane into a completely artificial landscape 436 00:33:55,760 --> 00:34:00,120 in order to release themselves from these limitations 437 00:34:00,120 --> 00:34:03,920 of relying on the rainfall for one crop of rice per year. 438 00:34:07,000 --> 00:34:10,360 A Chinese diplomat writing in the 13th century 439 00:34:10,360 --> 00:34:17,240 marvelled at the Khmers' ability to harvest three or even four crops a year from their irrigated lands. 440 00:34:18,800 --> 00:34:23,200 Once you've solved the problem of water supply, you've solved the problem of food security. 441 00:34:23,200 --> 00:34:28,520 What you've done then is provided an extremely solid economic foundation for the growth of the empire. 442 00:34:29,840 --> 00:34:33,240 The king can turn his attention to things like empire-building, 443 00:34:33,240 --> 00:34:35,600 to warfare, to temple-building and so on, 444 00:34:35,600 --> 00:34:41,160 and so it's a complete transformation, actually, in the way that things are done in Cambodia. 445 00:34:42,320 --> 00:34:45,720 This mastery of the natural environment is one of the reasons 446 00:34:45,720 --> 00:34:49,000 for the rise and the success of the Khmer Empire. 447 00:34:53,360 --> 00:34:55,480 These engineering projects 448 00:34:55,480 --> 00:34:59,480 demanded huge investments of labour and expertise. 449 00:34:59,480 --> 00:35:03,520 The whole society had to contribute time and resources 450 00:35:03,520 --> 00:35:06,600 to build the system of canals and reservoirs. 451 00:35:09,680 --> 00:35:13,600 10km from Angkor Wat is Preah Ko temple. 452 00:35:16,040 --> 00:35:19,440 Inscriptions on the walls of this 9th-century shrine 453 00:35:19,440 --> 00:35:21,440 tell how the Angkorian kings 454 00:35:21,440 --> 00:35:24,640 used the temple system to tax the population. 455 00:35:26,000 --> 00:35:30,640 Archaeologist Julia Esteve has spent the last ten years translating them. 456 00:35:31,720 --> 00:35:35,200 Most people think that temples are only religious entities, 457 00:35:35,200 --> 00:35:38,320 but you have to understand the king, Jayavarman II, 458 00:35:38,320 --> 00:35:41,560 the founder of the Khmer Empire 459 00:35:41,560 --> 00:35:43,480 was at the same time a god 460 00:35:43,480 --> 00:35:48,200 and used the temples to strengthen his economic and political power, 461 00:35:48,200 --> 00:35:51,680 and so these temples are not only religious entities, 462 00:35:51,680 --> 00:35:55,000 but also economical and political tools. 463 00:35:56,720 --> 00:36:00,560 Temples had administrative as well as religious functions. 464 00:36:02,080 --> 00:36:04,560 No coins have been found from this period, 465 00:36:04,560 --> 00:36:08,320 it's thought the economy was run by exchange and barter, 466 00:36:08,320 --> 00:36:11,400 with a duty to make donations to the temples. 467 00:36:11,400 --> 00:36:16,920 There were contributions coming from the lower strata of the society made by rice farmers. 468 00:36:16,920 --> 00:36:19,760 They would donate some of their time to the temple 469 00:36:19,760 --> 00:36:22,720 in order to give some rice to the god. 470 00:36:22,720 --> 00:36:26,760 With these kind of donations, we see another side of the temples, 471 00:36:26,760 --> 00:36:31,760 and through the temples, the king would develop a system of taxation. 472 00:36:44,760 --> 00:36:46,920 Inscriptions from the temple walls 473 00:36:46,920 --> 00:36:50,480 suggest that payments took a surprising variety of forms. 474 00:36:52,080 --> 00:36:54,640 This is one of the inscriptions. 475 00:36:54,640 --> 00:36:59,240 And it's a fascinating text because it gives us the list of goods 476 00:36:59,240 --> 00:37:02,200 donated to this particular shrine. 477 00:37:02,200 --> 00:37:07,040 We have, for example, an umbrella-holder, a spice-grinder. 478 00:37:07,040 --> 00:37:09,600 Also a garland-maker. 479 00:37:09,600 --> 00:37:13,960 And along with this, we also have workers that would give labour. 480 00:37:13,960 --> 00:37:16,200 But Julia's work has revealed 481 00:37:16,200 --> 00:37:19,520 that people would also give up their own children. 482 00:37:20,480 --> 00:37:24,400 We can see children. There is here a baby. 483 00:37:24,400 --> 00:37:28,080 And over here there is a child who is at the age of running. 484 00:37:28,080 --> 00:37:33,480 So children were donated to a temple or were considered as future workers 485 00:37:33,480 --> 00:37:37,560 to help all the people who were here to serve the gods. 486 00:37:37,560 --> 00:37:43,880 The inscriptions reveal a highly hierarchical society built on forced labour. 487 00:37:43,880 --> 00:37:47,560 Julia's studies show how the Angkorian kings 488 00:37:47,560 --> 00:37:52,320 built a network of religious shrines to consolidate their imperial power. 489 00:37:54,640 --> 00:37:58,320 And LIDAR reveals the footprint of these religious buildings 490 00:37:58,320 --> 00:38:00,640 across the medieval city. 491 00:38:00,640 --> 00:38:04,680 LIDAR isn't just useful for areas that are covered by forest, 492 00:38:04,680 --> 00:38:08,600 we also flew the instrument over large areas of open landscape. 493 00:38:08,600 --> 00:38:14,720 And even in those areas, we're getting tremendous new insights into archaeological sites 494 00:38:14,720 --> 00:38:17,560 that lie out in the open rice fields. 495 00:38:17,560 --> 00:38:21,440 There are some things that just jump out of the imagery at you. 496 00:38:21,440 --> 00:38:23,240 There are some classes of temples 497 00:38:23,240 --> 00:38:25,600 that have a very, very distinctive layout. 498 00:38:30,600 --> 00:38:35,480 5km from Angkor Wat, close to the edge of another huge reservoir, 499 00:38:35,480 --> 00:38:37,920 the ghostly footprint of one of these buildings 500 00:38:37,920 --> 00:38:40,600 appears on the LIDAR map. 501 00:38:40,600 --> 00:38:45,880 300 metres in length and clearly broken into three sections, 502 00:38:45,880 --> 00:38:48,000 these were "ashramas", 503 00:38:48,000 --> 00:38:52,200 part monastery, part tax office, part school. 504 00:38:52,200 --> 00:38:54,720 The building behind me is an ashrama, 505 00:38:54,720 --> 00:38:59,760 and we know that there were communities of religious people living in the ashramas, 506 00:38:59,760 --> 00:39:03,840 but we also think that some people, if they could afford it, 507 00:39:03,840 --> 00:39:06,680 could send their kids to get educated, 508 00:39:06,680 --> 00:39:09,760 maybe...to learn how to read. 509 00:39:17,160 --> 00:39:21,680 These ashramas reveal the growing sophistication of Angkor. 510 00:39:21,680 --> 00:39:23,640 Some were now wealthy enough 511 00:39:23,640 --> 00:39:26,760 to invest their time in leisure and learning, 512 00:39:26,760 --> 00:39:31,000 and their religious buildings were taking on a grander scale. 513 00:39:31,000 --> 00:39:34,440 We're able now to say that they all had the same layout, 514 00:39:34,440 --> 00:39:36,760 for those in Angkor at least. 515 00:39:36,760 --> 00:39:40,480 And they were built around a central sacred building 516 00:39:40,480 --> 00:39:43,000 where the religious people would gather. 517 00:39:48,880 --> 00:39:52,960 Many ashramas were built on the edges of Angkorian territory, 518 00:39:52,960 --> 00:39:55,960 a symbol of Khmer power 519 00:39:55,960 --> 00:39:59,200 and a demonstration that the land around 520 00:39:59,200 --> 00:40:02,480 belonged to a strong and unified empire. 521 00:40:02,480 --> 00:40:05,440 We know from writings from the time 522 00:40:05,440 --> 00:40:10,200 that the king needed money and a lot of people to build ashramas. 523 00:40:10,200 --> 00:40:14,920 The building of more than 100 came at a period of great economic growth. 524 00:40:16,560 --> 00:40:19,720 The king who built these ashramas all over the country 525 00:40:19,720 --> 00:40:21,800 wanted to put his stamp on these lands 526 00:40:21,800 --> 00:40:25,080 by saying, "This is my kingdom. I'm a strong king. 527 00:40:25,080 --> 00:40:28,600 "I'm the best of the kings. I'm the king of the kings. 528 00:40:28,600 --> 00:40:30,720 "And now these lands are mine." 529 00:40:30,720 --> 00:40:33,200 By the end of the 11th century, 530 00:40:33,200 --> 00:40:37,240 Khmer lands stretched across the modern-day borders of Vietnam, 531 00:40:37,240 --> 00:40:39,320 Laos and Cambodia. 532 00:40:39,320 --> 00:40:43,600 The Khmer Empire now dominated the region. 533 00:40:46,600 --> 00:40:51,000 Mitch Hendrickson, an archaeologist from the University of Illinois, 534 00:40:51,000 --> 00:40:56,560 has been studying how the Khmer expanded beyond today's borders of Cambodia. 535 00:40:57,800 --> 00:41:01,840 We're actually following along the northwest road, which connects Angkor 536 00:41:01,840 --> 00:41:05,320 to the site of Phimai, which is in modern-day Thailand. 537 00:41:05,320 --> 00:41:08,800 The road extends roughly 280km, 538 00:41:08,800 --> 00:41:13,840 so we're really following in the footsteps of people from 1,000 years ago. 539 00:41:13,840 --> 00:41:19,920 The Khmer were the only people who built roads in Southeast Asia at this time. 540 00:41:21,840 --> 00:41:27,920 By the 11th century, they'd built 1,000km of roads across the region, 541 00:41:27,920 --> 00:41:32,520 a network that stretched to every part of their growing empire. 542 00:41:32,520 --> 00:41:35,080 The ultimate result of this road network 543 00:41:35,080 --> 00:41:38,520 is that it enabled the Khmer to become a regional superpower, 544 00:41:38,520 --> 00:41:41,920 enabling them to branch off into different parts of Southeast Asia 545 00:41:41,920 --> 00:41:46,840 and led to their ultimate control over mainland Southeast Asia for about 200 years. 546 00:41:53,440 --> 00:41:55,680 Ox-drawn carts were used 547 00:41:55,680 --> 00:41:59,760 to carry copper, iron and food to the capital. 548 00:41:59,760 --> 00:42:05,560 As the empire expanded, trade improved the quality of life for the people of Angkor. 549 00:42:05,560 --> 00:42:10,640 Today's travellers would have recognised some of the roadside developments. 550 00:42:13,000 --> 00:42:17,480 40km from the capital - a medieval rest stop, 551 00:42:17,480 --> 00:42:21,760 part temple, part restaurant, part refuge. 552 00:42:21,760 --> 00:42:26,240 This is an excellent example of the type of infrastructure 553 00:42:26,240 --> 00:42:32,200 and the desire to create support for travellers moving in and out of Angkor, 554 00:42:32,200 --> 00:42:34,440 traders, pilgrims. 555 00:42:34,440 --> 00:42:37,480 There would have been many people who would have stayed here, 556 00:42:37,480 --> 00:42:39,040 seeking shelter from bandits 557 00:42:39,040 --> 00:42:42,080 or just to get some water from one of the nearby ponds. 558 00:42:46,400 --> 00:42:50,200 Along this road alone there are 17 rest areas 559 00:42:50,200 --> 00:42:54,480 each spaced a day's walk - about 20km - apart. 560 00:42:54,480 --> 00:42:58,800 Today, there's also an international frontier. 561 00:42:58,800 --> 00:43:03,120 So here we are at the modern-day border between Cambodia and Thailand. 562 00:43:03,120 --> 00:43:06,680 Of course, 1,000 years ago, during the peak of the Khmer Empire, 563 00:43:06,680 --> 00:43:10,320 Angkor's influence actually extended into this region. 564 00:43:11,360 --> 00:43:12,920 If I can find my passport... 565 00:43:17,600 --> 00:43:20,440 Imperial expansion into new territories 566 00:43:20,440 --> 00:43:23,760 also brought conflict and rebellion, 567 00:43:23,760 --> 00:43:28,600 and Khmer kings were capable of mustering huge armies. 568 00:43:30,600 --> 00:43:34,640 Carvings at Angkor Wat show a Khmer army on the march. 569 00:43:36,520 --> 00:43:41,560 Thousands of soldiers able to travel fast to wherever trouble flared. 570 00:43:43,200 --> 00:43:48,480 We're actually off to a temple now that commemorates the actions of one of the local lords 571 00:43:48,480 --> 00:43:51,760 who helped put down a rebellion for one of the Khmer kings. 572 00:44:01,920 --> 00:44:04,200 We're here at Phnom Rung... 573 00:44:04,200 --> 00:44:09,040 one of the most impressive temples on the edge of the Khmer Empire. 574 00:44:09,040 --> 00:44:11,760 Deep in enemy territory, 575 00:44:11,760 --> 00:44:17,400 this temple was extended to mark a Khmer leader's victory over a local rebellion. 576 00:44:22,320 --> 00:44:25,080 The large proportion of this temple that we see today 577 00:44:25,080 --> 00:44:30,400 was actually an embellishment that was made in honour of that particular lord. 578 00:44:30,400 --> 00:44:33,280 So we have this interwoven connection 579 00:44:33,280 --> 00:44:37,280 between the civil conflict and external expansion, 580 00:44:37,280 --> 00:44:40,800 which is interconnected with these road systems. 581 00:44:46,760 --> 00:44:49,160 Beyond Phnom Rung temple 582 00:44:49,160 --> 00:44:53,080 the road continues through what is now northeast Thailand. 583 00:44:54,760 --> 00:44:57,640 The northwest road that we're tracking right now 584 00:44:57,640 --> 00:45:01,320 is a little bit different from all the other of the Angkorian roadways 585 00:45:01,320 --> 00:45:05,400 which brought what we think are more precious commodities such as metals. 586 00:45:05,400 --> 00:45:11,840 The principal cargo passing along this road was a vital commodity. 587 00:45:11,840 --> 00:45:16,680 The Khmer's great northwest road leads to a giant open mine. 588 00:45:18,440 --> 00:45:20,640 It's still in use today. 589 00:45:28,960 --> 00:45:31,720 This is one of the reasons why the Khmer travelled 590 00:45:31,720 --> 00:45:34,200 hundreds of kilometres away from Angkor. 591 00:45:36,320 --> 00:45:38,120 Salt. 592 00:45:41,280 --> 00:45:45,000 What we're standing on now is a salt plain that we think was 593 00:45:45,000 --> 00:45:48,440 probably used back to about 500 BC, during the Iron Age. 594 00:45:50,520 --> 00:45:54,040 The salt would have been extremely important for so many reasons. 595 00:45:54,040 --> 00:45:57,160 We know that without salt the human body can't survive, 596 00:45:57,160 --> 00:46:00,440 and rice is one of the least saline of the cereal crops. 597 00:46:00,440 --> 00:46:03,800 It was very significant from a physiological perspective 598 00:46:03,800 --> 00:46:06,960 but, more significantly, we know that salt tastes good. 599 00:46:06,960 --> 00:46:09,320 So from the peasants to the elite 600 00:46:09,320 --> 00:46:12,320 and even the king, they would have desired this salt. 601 00:46:15,560 --> 00:46:19,520 Then, as now, salt was an important preservative. 602 00:46:21,160 --> 00:46:25,080 For a good chunk of the year you can get fresh fish, but in the rest 603 00:46:25,080 --> 00:46:28,800 of the year you need to maintain your source of protein, and the way 604 00:46:28,800 --> 00:46:30,760 that the Cambodians did it was 605 00:46:30,760 --> 00:46:33,840 to create this lovely dish called prahok. 606 00:46:33,840 --> 00:46:36,400 And prahok is essentially the salt from here, 607 00:46:36,400 --> 00:46:41,120 taken down there to ferment this lovely and extremely appetising 608 00:46:41,120 --> 00:46:43,320 fishy paste 609 00:46:43,320 --> 00:46:48,000 that doesn't look good but I'm going to give it a little taste, 610 00:46:48,000 --> 00:46:50,960 just to see how it goes, so let's try and find a bit. 611 00:46:50,960 --> 00:46:52,120 Give it a whirl. 612 00:46:55,840 --> 00:46:57,440 Whoof! 613 00:46:57,440 --> 00:46:58,640 Ho! 614 00:47:04,560 --> 00:47:06,080 Aw, man! 615 00:47:13,240 --> 00:47:16,400 By the late 12th century, 300 years after 616 00:47:16,400 --> 00:47:19,240 Jayavarman united the kingdom, 617 00:47:19,240 --> 00:47:25,040 the Khmer had built the biggest empire ever seen in Southeast Asia, 618 00:47:25,040 --> 00:47:31,360 and then a new king came to the throne, Suryavarman II. 619 00:47:34,080 --> 00:47:37,040 His story is one of the best-known in Khmer history, 620 00:47:37,040 --> 00:47:42,720 partly because of the reliefs carved into the walls of Angkor Wat. 621 00:47:42,720 --> 00:47:46,520 Here we have Suryavarman II in all his glory, 622 00:47:46,520 --> 00:47:51,720 probably the first time a Khmer king had been depicted in life. 623 00:47:51,720 --> 00:47:54,320 He's surrounded here by his court. 624 00:47:54,320 --> 00:47:59,040 We have the nobles, the Brahmin advisors, 625 00:47:59,040 --> 00:48:01,680 and all around there's a scene which takes place in a forest. 626 00:48:01,680 --> 00:48:05,360 There are animals cavorting around. 627 00:48:05,360 --> 00:48:08,440 There are processions of people. Women carried in palanquins. 628 00:48:08,440 --> 00:48:13,960 Soldiers... A scene of utter prosperity. 629 00:48:16,120 --> 00:48:18,920 It looks fantastic, it's beautiful. 630 00:48:26,480 --> 00:48:30,360 But this peaceful scene contrasts with the legend of how 631 00:48:30,360 --> 00:48:34,640 Suryavarman II became king. 632 00:48:34,640 --> 00:48:38,240 It's said that he stole the throne by raising an army against his 633 00:48:38,240 --> 00:48:43,560 aged uncle, the Khmer king, and killing him with his own hands. 634 00:48:47,320 --> 00:48:51,920 This section of Suryavarman's army has a quite a unique 635 00:48:51,920 --> 00:48:56,040 body of men, and they're wearing very distinct uniforms. 636 00:48:56,040 --> 00:49:00,360 An inscription actually identified them as being Siamese. 637 00:49:00,360 --> 00:49:05,120 So this is one of the first depictions of the Thai people. 638 00:49:05,120 --> 00:49:08,640 What it actually shows us is that Suryavarman was drawing 639 00:49:08,640 --> 00:49:13,160 mercenaries from the extent of his empire to fight for him. 640 00:49:18,240 --> 00:49:21,840 After the battle, Suryavarman brought his men back to 641 00:49:21,840 --> 00:49:27,400 Angkor to work on the most important building project of his reign, 642 00:49:27,400 --> 00:49:31,560 the biggest religious monument the world has ever seen. 643 00:49:31,560 --> 00:49:34,520 It would draw on everything the Khmer people had 644 00:49:34,520 --> 00:49:37,240 learned about architecture and temple-building. 645 00:49:39,760 --> 00:49:44,000 Former UNESCO regional advisor Richard Engelhardt has spent 646 00:49:44,000 --> 00:49:46,480 decades studying Angkor Wat. 647 00:49:53,320 --> 00:49:58,320 Once he became the king, Suryavarman II imposed a great 648 00:49:58,320 --> 00:50:01,280 peace over the entire empire, 649 00:50:01,280 --> 00:50:05,960 so he built this temple as a way of saying, "This is 650 00:50:05,960 --> 00:50:11,640 "the stability that I wish to impose upon our land, 651 00:50:11,640 --> 00:50:15,360 "and this stability is going to continue and continue for ever." 652 00:50:15,360 --> 00:50:20,400 It's the real pinnacle of the achievement of Khmer art. 653 00:50:22,680 --> 00:50:26,640 Suryavarman wanted his Angkor Wat to eclipse everything that had 654 00:50:26,640 --> 00:50:28,720 gone before. 655 00:50:28,720 --> 00:50:31,520 We have to remember that this is a temple to the god, 656 00:50:31,520 --> 00:50:34,000 and the god needs a universe populated with 657 00:50:34,000 --> 00:50:37,720 beautiful things, with beautiful women, beautiful goddesses, 658 00:50:37,720 --> 00:50:40,760 beautiful animals, and so they needed a 659 00:50:40,760 --> 00:50:44,640 vast canvas on which to sculpt all of these magical creatures. 660 00:50:44,640 --> 00:50:47,440 They did this by bringing these huge blocks of sandstone 661 00:50:47,440 --> 00:50:50,800 here on site, fitting them together almost flawlessly. 662 00:50:50,800 --> 00:50:54,280 There is no mortar, there's no mortar anywhere at Angkor. 663 00:50:54,280 --> 00:50:57,560 They fit the blocks together very, very precisely. 664 00:50:57,560 --> 00:51:00,160 Look, here's the sandstone blocks. 665 00:51:00,160 --> 00:51:01,920 You can almost not see the join, 666 00:51:01,920 --> 00:51:04,720 you certainly cannot even put your fingernail between it. 667 00:51:04,720 --> 00:51:08,080 All the technical expertise and wealth of the empire was 668 00:51:08,080 --> 00:51:11,120 channelled into this spectacular building. 669 00:51:14,240 --> 00:51:17,960 Most striking of all was the scale of the construction. 670 00:51:18,880 --> 00:51:21,480 Angkor Wat covers an area more than 671 00:51:21,480 --> 00:51:24,400 four times larger than the Vatican City. 672 00:51:26,800 --> 00:51:32,960 And this created huge challenges for Suryavarman's engineers. 673 00:51:32,960 --> 00:51:35,880 During the monsoon, the land becomes saturated 674 00:51:35,880 --> 00:51:38,760 and expands. 675 00:51:38,760 --> 00:51:42,600 After the monsoon, it dries out and contracts. 676 00:51:44,120 --> 00:51:48,360 How do you build high with such heavy material as this sandstone? 677 00:51:48,360 --> 00:51:52,240 Well, look behind the facade and what do you see? 678 00:51:52,240 --> 00:51:55,840 You see that it's filled with this very lightweight, porous 679 00:51:55,840 --> 00:51:57,760 material called laterite. 680 00:51:57,760 --> 00:52:00,840 It's a kind of ancient breeze block. 681 00:52:02,320 --> 00:52:06,240 Laterite was a core building material of all Khmer temples, 682 00:52:06,240 --> 00:52:10,320 stretching right back to the Kulen Hills. 683 00:52:11,440 --> 00:52:15,080 Now it was used to help solve the Khmer's greatest engineering 684 00:52:15,080 --> 00:52:16,840 challenge. 685 00:52:16,840 --> 00:52:18,720 This building is much, 686 00:52:18,720 --> 00:52:21,800 much lighter than you might think it is. The weight of the building 687 00:52:21,800 --> 00:52:25,640 is not pushing, pushing down and pressing out on the earth, 688 00:52:25,640 --> 00:52:29,080 but instead is rising up and you can build and build 689 00:52:29,080 --> 00:52:32,120 and build almost as high as your imagination lets you build. 690 00:52:32,120 --> 00:52:35,760 But Richard Engelhardt thinks that the use of laterite was only 691 00:52:35,760 --> 00:52:38,120 part of the solution. 692 00:52:38,120 --> 00:52:41,960 He believes that Angkor Wat is still standing today 693 00:52:41,960 --> 00:52:45,920 because of the water surrounding the great temple. 694 00:52:45,920 --> 00:52:48,440 In the ideal Khmer structure, you cannot separate 695 00:52:48,440 --> 00:52:50,600 the building from the moat. 696 00:52:50,600 --> 00:52:52,400 They are inextricable. 697 00:52:52,400 --> 00:52:55,080 They are symbiotic and you cannot have one without the other, 698 00:52:55,080 --> 00:52:58,320 both in the terms of the design and the conception 699 00:52:58,320 --> 00:53:01,640 of what we are building and the civil engineering features of it. 700 00:53:01,640 --> 00:53:05,680 Now, the Khmer were great artists, they never did anything that wasn't 701 00:53:05,680 --> 00:53:09,680 beautiful, but the real purpose of the moat is not for decoration. 702 00:53:11,560 --> 00:53:14,920 The construction of the moat surrounding Angkor Wat was 703 00:53:14,920 --> 00:53:20,160 a huge operation. It's estimated labourers removed enough silt 704 00:53:20,160 --> 00:53:24,400 and sand to fill St Paul's Cathedral ten times over. 705 00:53:26,360 --> 00:53:33,160 Its perimeter stretches nearly 6 kilometres and is 200 metres wide. 706 00:53:34,680 --> 00:53:36,560 Then the moat fills with water. 707 00:53:36,560 --> 00:53:40,880 Water is heavier, it's more dense than laterite and earth, 708 00:53:40,880 --> 00:53:44,000 so the weight of the water is actually heavier than 709 00:53:44,000 --> 00:53:46,920 the weight of the materials you've taken out. 710 00:53:49,240 --> 00:53:52,720 Richard believes the weight of the water in the moat pushes 711 00:53:52,720 --> 00:53:55,960 back against the downward force of the stone temple. 712 00:53:57,640 --> 00:54:01,120 The moat is essential to the success of the entire structure. 713 00:54:01,120 --> 00:54:05,320 Without the moat, the structure could not stand. 714 00:54:05,320 --> 00:54:11,400 The two are completely part of one holistic engineering system. 715 00:54:13,440 --> 00:54:17,520 The Khmer had become masters of the monsoon. 716 00:54:19,600 --> 00:54:23,600 Angkor Wat was an engineering masterpiece. 717 00:54:25,000 --> 00:54:28,120 Everything the Khmer had learned over hundreds of years 718 00:54:28,120 --> 00:54:31,480 of temple-building and engineering great water projects 719 00:54:31,480 --> 00:54:36,080 came together in the construction of the jewel of their civilisation. 720 00:54:37,760 --> 00:54:40,520 Through hundreds of years of experimentation 721 00:54:40,520 --> 00:54:44,840 and gradual augmentation, we find that moving from a very, 722 00:54:44,840 --> 00:54:49,920 very simple rice paddy to this extraordinary expression 723 00:54:49,920 --> 00:54:55,560 of both civil engineering genius and an ability to communicate 724 00:54:55,560 --> 00:54:58,640 through the symbolic meaning of Angkor, 725 00:54:58,640 --> 00:55:03,560 this is what is so extraordinary about this particular monument. 726 00:55:05,080 --> 00:55:07,160 Absolutely a stroke of genius. 727 00:55:08,280 --> 00:55:11,240 The LIDAR project is enhancing our understanding of 728 00:55:11,240 --> 00:55:14,680 the Angkorian empire and shedding new light on 729 00:55:14,680 --> 00:55:17,520 the great civilisation that built it. 730 00:55:17,520 --> 00:55:21,360 But it has also uncovered new mysteries. 731 00:55:22,600 --> 00:55:26,760 Even though LIDAR has in, in some senses, transformed our vision 732 00:55:26,760 --> 00:55:30,200 of Angkor by giving us new insights into the cities, 733 00:55:30,200 --> 00:55:33,640 there are a couple of things which really took us completely by surprise. 734 00:55:36,280 --> 00:55:41,000 Emerging from the LIDAR data by the side of Angkor Wat's moat, 735 00:55:41,000 --> 00:55:44,600 the outline of eight huge coiled shapes, 736 00:55:44,600 --> 00:55:47,680 partly obscured by the remains of a canal, 737 00:55:47,680 --> 00:55:52,320 each one more than 700 metres in length. 738 00:55:52,320 --> 00:55:55,800 Nothing like them has ever been seen before. 739 00:55:57,640 --> 00:56:00,600 In terms of the features that we can see in the LIDAR, 740 00:56:00,600 --> 00:56:03,560 those are definitely the most striking. 741 00:56:03,560 --> 00:56:05,640 You wouldn't know it just to look down there, 742 00:56:05,640 --> 00:56:09,000 you basically can't see anything from above except forest 743 00:56:09,000 --> 00:56:11,760 right next to the moat of Angkor Wat right there. 744 00:56:16,240 --> 00:56:19,840 These shapes have remained hidden for hundreds of years, 745 00:56:19,840 --> 00:56:24,320 right next to one of the area's busiest roads. 746 00:56:24,320 --> 00:56:26,640 We've launched a campaign of excavation 747 00:56:26,640 --> 00:56:28,920 and closer study onto these features 748 00:56:28,920 --> 00:56:31,560 to try and really come to terms with what they might be. 749 00:56:31,560 --> 00:56:34,720 A team of Cambodian archaeologists is excavating 750 00:56:34,720 --> 00:56:39,480 a section of one of these coils. They're looking for any physical 751 00:56:39,480 --> 00:56:44,880 evidence - tools or pottery - that might suggest why they were built. 752 00:56:44,880 --> 00:56:47,840 Some people have speculated that they're gardens, 753 00:56:47,840 --> 00:56:50,240 that they're used for agriculture, 754 00:56:50,240 --> 00:56:54,200 perhaps that they have some sort of ritual or symbolic dimension. 755 00:56:54,200 --> 00:56:59,000 All the excavations so far have proved inconclusive. 756 00:56:59,000 --> 00:57:03,640 No clues about their meaning or function have been found. 757 00:57:03,640 --> 00:57:06,400 It's the nature of the game that there's not much 758 00:57:06,400 --> 00:57:08,040 certainty here. 759 00:57:08,040 --> 00:57:10,760 We might never understand fully what these things are. 760 00:57:10,760 --> 00:57:13,680 And I guess, as archaeologists, sometimes we just have to 761 00:57:13,680 --> 00:57:15,680 resign ourselves to that reality. 762 00:57:19,280 --> 00:57:23,000 Angkor Wat marked the high point of the Khmer's artistic, 763 00:57:23,000 --> 00:57:26,480 architectural and engineering skill. 764 00:57:29,280 --> 00:57:32,000 It's a great symbol of a civilisation that grew from 765 00:57:32,000 --> 00:57:36,800 the rice paddies of the Kulen Hills and came to dominate the region. 766 00:57:39,280 --> 00:57:42,840 Angkor Wat is a peak of Khmer society. 767 00:57:42,840 --> 00:57:45,440 It was a statement of where they'd come from 768 00:57:45,440 --> 00:57:47,600 and where they were heading to. 769 00:57:47,600 --> 00:57:49,920 LIDAR is revealing the epic scale 770 00:57:49,920 --> 00:57:52,680 and sophistication of the Khmer capital 771 00:57:52,680 --> 00:57:56,480 and helps to explain how the Khmer people 772 00:57:56,480 --> 00:58:00,640 transformed their landscape and turned rice into gold. 773 00:58:00,640 --> 00:58:05,440 Angkor is totally unique, and the things that were achieved here were 774 00:58:05,440 --> 00:58:10,920 unparalleled throughout all of human history. 775 00:58:10,920 --> 00:58:15,800 In the next programme, a vast new temple-building project, 776 00:58:15,800 --> 00:58:21,200 the Khmer Empire's great metropolis faces destruction 777 00:58:21,200 --> 00:58:24,640 and LIDAR helps explain why the Khmer people 778 00:58:24,640 --> 00:58:27,880 allowed their capital to be devoured by the jungle. 66488

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