Situated about 10 km north of the Cobra Bridge are the ruins of Ek
Phnom. It was built during the Bayon period and unfortunately is much
worse for the wear than Phnom Banan.It?s an interesting place, however,
because there is a freshly constructed working temple right in front of
the ruins. This temple, along with the temple ruins, is the center of
holiday festivities for the people of the nearby village. They dress up
in their Sunday best and have a celebration between the old and the new
temples and climb all around the ruins with their families.
The
ruins are on a very small hill so there is no workout involved in
viewing them much of the temple is in shambles and was heavily looted.
There are still some sitting Buddha images intact higher up on the
walls. On the inside is a carving of a tug-of-war with participants
tugging away on a serpent. The participants on the left have lost their
heads to looters (they lost face), with the guys on the right still
having their heads intact.
Ek Phnom is also easy to get to-just
head north on the River Road (Road 1) a bit over 10 km (the road north
of the Cobra Bridge snakes around a bit, but goes back to the river). As
you are getting close to the temple, you will pass over a small
concrete bridge. The road beyond will veer off to the right, but the
modern temple is there to the left. Enter the new temple grounds and the
ruins are located to the rear. Again, a round-trip moto-taxi is about
120 baht from Battambang.
Wat Ek Phnom is 11km from Battambang?s
ferry landing by the shortest route and 21km if you go via the Pepsi
plant and Pheam Ek. Combining both makes for a nice 32km circuit.
Wat
Ek Phnom an atmospheric, partly collapsed, 11th-century temple situated
11km north of Battambang, measures 52m by 49m and is surrounded by the
remains of a laterite wall and an ancient baray (reservoir). A lintel
showing the Churning of the Ocean of Milk can be seen above the east
entrance to the central temple, whose upper flanks hold some fine
bas-reliefs.
Construction of the giant Buddha statue next door
has been stopped by the government because, they say, it mars the site's
timeless beauty. This is a very popular picnic and pilgrimage
destination for Khmers at festival times.
13km north of
Battambang is Wat Ek Phnom, an impressive but extremely dilapidated
temple situated next to a large pond and is behind a contemporary 28m
high Buddha statue. Built during the 11th century, supposedly in 1029
under the reign of King Sorayak Varman II (1002-1050), today it has been
mostly reduced to ruins and visitors have to climb over fallen masonry
and huge blocks of stone in order to traverse the grounds. Because of
this, and its tranquil setting, Wat Ek Phnom is a must for anyone
visiting the Battambang area as it actually gives you the impression
that you are discovering a forgotten temple.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
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