Solved puzzle reveals fabled Cambodian temple
Monday, July 11, 2011 Leave a Comment
3 July 2011, AFP.
It has taken half a century, but archaeologists in Cambodia have finally completed the renovation of an ancient Angkor temple described as the world’s largest three dimensional puzzle.
Built around 1060 by King Udayadityavarman II in honour of the Hindu god Shiva, Baphuon was the country’s largest religious building at the time, 35 metres high (114 feet) and measuring 130 by 104 metres (426 x 340 feet).
In 1995, when the area in northwestern Cambodia was again safe to work in, the French government-funded project was restarted under the leadership of architect Pascal Royere from the Ecole francaise d’Extreme-Orient (EFEO).
“It has been said, probably rightly so, that it is the largest-ever 3D puzzle,” Royere told AFP.
The team carefully measured and weighed each block and then relied on archive photos stored in Paris, drawings and the recollections of Cambodian workers to figure out where each part fits. READ..