In Southeast Asia, an abandoned city sprawls magnificently across the heart of Cambodia. Its hundreds of monuments contain more stone than the Egyptian pyramids, and cover more ground than modern Paris. This is Angkor, the capital of an Empire that once controlled most of Southeast Asia. Its people were called the Khmer, and more than 500 years ago, they fled this grand city. To the outside world, the city existed only in obscure travelers’ tales. Then in 1860, a Frenchnaturalist named Henri Mouhot stumbled across the ruins. He wrote about the city, and drew it, attracting the attention of the wider world. But the questions had only just begun. Who were Angkor’s builders, the Empire called the Khmer? And why had the city been abandoned?
Archeologists and historians have pieced together this story. Angkor’s greatest marvel Angkor Wat served as a shrine and an observatory, and a funerary temple. Research suggests that it took almost 30 years to complete and was finished in time to bury an important king. But Angkor Wat had hardly claimed its place on the horizon when disaster struck. Drawn by its increasing splendor, the Chams, from what is now Vietnam, attacked and burned the city. When the capital was rebuilt, the king built a walled city, Angkor Thom, to protect them in time of war. But the Khmer story came to an end not long afterward. Twenty-two kings over 500 years have worked the land until it began to fail. Rice harvests dropped and stone monuments building ceased. Early in the 15th century, the Kingdom of Siam made profitable raids into Khmer territory. A climatic battle around 1431 brought about the end. All but abandoned, the Khmer capital waslulled into a centuries’ long sleep by the encroaching jungle.
英语听力:自然百科 吴哥窟.doc