
The Permanent Archaeological Mission to Indochina, founded by the decree of 15 December 1900, was renamed the École française d'Extrême-Orient on 20 January 1900. Cambodia is the Asian nation in which the School has been most continuously present over the years, with a permanent installation from 1905 to 1975, and then again since 1990.
This new
publication, appearing on the eve of the completion of the great
restoration project at the Baphuon temple-mount (1995-2011), was
undertaken under the high patronage of His Majesty Norodom Sihamoni.
King of Cambodia, and François Fillon, the French Prime Minister, and is
intended to commemorate this major historical joint achievement of the
EFEO and the Cambodian nation.
In order to restore, after a
years-long tragic interval, this imposing monument adjacent to the site
of the Royal Palace of Angkor, it was necessary to remove mounds of
crumbled rock face, retrace the location of the walls, identify three
hundred thousand sandstone blocks covering some ten hectares, restore
the platforms, and reconstruct the gopuras and galleries of the upper
levels. The careful restoration process has made clearer the motives
that drove the original builders of Angkor, the construction methods
they used, and the time sequence of the subsequent phases of
rededication and religious restoration of the temple. In this
eleventh-century complex, originally Shivaite, the great reclining
Buddha, whose image has occupied the western side of the second level
since the second half the sixteenth century, constitutes a spectacular
testimony to the transformations that have been at work in the course of
the history of Cambodia.
This publication provides an opportunity
for the EFEO researchers working in Cambodia and the EFEO's Director,
Franciscus Verellen, to sum up the current state of Khmer studies, to
pay homage to all those who came earlier in this fascinating field of
scholarship, and to offer the wider public an idea of the scope of their
ongoing accomplishments.
