Wat Bakong
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| Wat Bakong វត្តបាគង | |
|---|---|
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Theravada Buddhism |
| Location | |
| Location | Bakong, Roluos, Siem Reap |
| Country | Cambodia |
| Coordinates | 13°20′10″N 103°58′30″E / 13.3362°N 103.97507°E |
| Architecture | |
| Completed | 1939 |
Wat Bakong (វត្តបាគង) is a Theravada Buddhist pagoda on the precincts of the Prasat Bakong in the Ruluos archeological area of the Siemreap Province.
In 1890, the French explorer Lucien Fournereau climbed up the Prasat Bakong and witnessed the presence of a Buddhist pagoda which sheltered ancient steles.[1]
In the 1930s, French tourists were surprised by the Brahmanic rites which continued to be celebrated in the Buddhist pagoda on top of an Angkorian temple as in the nearby Preah Ko.[2]
The Wat Bakong was restructured in 1939. The Buddhist pagoda was displaced from the top of Wat Bakong, which was undergoing archaeological excavations and restoration, to the west wall of the temple precinct.
In 1960, more than twenty years after its construction, the presence of this new pagoda in the precinct of the ancient temple was still criticized as an "hideous modern pagoda that disfigures Bakong".[3]
By 2011, the perception of its presence had changed and the paintings of the pagoda, now considered valuable cultural heritage,[4] underwent restoration to restore the decoration of the pagoda as it was in 1946.[5] The restored pagoda was inaugurated on 12 December 2011, in presence of Deputy Prime Minister Sok An.
In 2020, the monks of Wat Bakong collaborated with locals authorities to protect what are considered sacred fishes from the drought that dried up the moat surrounding the temple.[6]