Last Updated on May 20, 2021

From the South Gate Tower, we drove towards the state temple of Jayavarman VII, the Bayon temple, popularly known as the Face Tower that stands at the exact centre of the city of Angkor Thom.

Bayon from a distance
Bayon from a distance

Bayon and the mysterious smiling faces

From a distance, Bayon looked like a massive pile of grey stones. But as we drew closer, a few faces started to appear amidst the stone towers. A few!!! Well, more than 200 of them.

Naga bridge at Bayon
Naga bridge at Bayon

As we walked towards the temple, we realised that the Bayon temple was not just about the mysterious smiling faces. We climbed a few steps to reach a large terrace that was adorned by guardian lions and Naga (snake) balustrades. All the Khmer temples in Cambodia and Thailand have Naga bridges and guardian lions.

Read more: The Khmer temples in Thailand –  Phanom RungPhimai and Muang Tam.

Can you count the faces?
Can you count the faces?

The Naga balustrades at the approach to all temples were believed to link the outer material world to the inner spiritual world. Another theory was that the Nagas along with the stone lions were the guardians of the royal wealth.

Happy faces, everywhere
Happy faces, everywhere

Bas-reliefs at Bayon

Walking up the steps we realised that the temple had three levels. The first and second levels had square galleries featuring bas-reliefs.

Group of men cooking a pig
Group of men cooking a pig
Group of Khmer men prepare for a boar-fight
Group of Khmer men prepare for a boar-fight

The bas-reliefs on both the galleries contained scenes from everyday life and depictions from the battlefields, mainly King Jayavarman’s military victories.

Groups of Chinese and Khmer prepare for a cockfight
Groups of Chinese and Khmer prepare for a cockfight
A hunter waiting with a bow and arrow. A woman giving birth
A hunter waiting with a bow and arrow. A woman giving birth

Scenes from busy markets, fishing, cockfights and jugglers alternated with scenes from Khmer battles with Chinese and Chams and battle processions.

A mother playing with her children. A woman checking for lice. Two men haggling
A mother playing with her children. A woman checking for lice. Two men haggling
Cham warriors in a boat. Crocodiles eat sailors during a naval battle
Cham warriors in a boat. Crocodiles eat sailors during a naval battle
A military procession including both Khmers and Chams holding weapons
A military procession including both Khmers and Chams holding weapons

Most of the scenes appeared in more than one horizontal panels.

A naval battle between Khmer and Cham forces
A naval battle between Khmer and Cham forces
Khmer soldiers fighting
Khmer soldiers fighting

It was amazing to see the detailing of the 13th-century Cambodians at work, rest, and play.

Crocodiles eating fish. Tiger pouncing on a man

The connecting chambers had smaller shrines, a few of them had beautiful statues of Buddha and Vishnu. In another gallery we found a linga. The explanation – different Kings venerated different Gods at different times.

Bayon was built as a Buddhist temple. We found a statue of a seated Buddha sheltered under the hoods of a snake in a shrine.

A seated Buddha image sheltered under the hoods of a snake
A seated Buddha image sheltered under the hoods of a snake

Close-encounter with the faces

Bayon came across as a complex maze of galleries and claustrophobic passages on the first two levels. As we climbed onto the third level everything became so open, clear, serene and crowded.

Posing with the faces
Posing with the faces

Bayon is one temple that is always busy. There are visitors pouting and kissing and patting into the air in all imaginable angles, and taking selfies with the faces. Well, we tried our luck too.

It's just an illusion
It’s just an illusion

Same as the faces on the gate towers at Angkor Thom, these faces are also believed to be images of the Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara.

The smiling faces at Bayon
The smiling faces at Bayon

Originally the Bayon had 54 towers, each of which had four faces looking into the four cardinal points. Today, 49 towers remain and all the faces on the existing towers look almost the same with slightly curved lips, half-closed eyes, and flat noses.

The faces on the towers look towards the four cardinal directions
The faces on the towers look towards the four cardinal directions

Some historians claim that the faces are representations of Cambodia’s most celebrated king – Jayavarman VII. Or maybe the king considered himself as a representation of God and wanted his face to be adorning all the towers of Bayon.

One of the towering faces
One of the towering faces

Now, most of the towers contain four faces, some have three, we even spotted a tower with only one face.

Guarding the faces
Guarding the faces

Tip: Bayon falls on the main temple circuit, and so is always crowded during the day. In the mornings, while everyone is at Angkor Wat, catching the sunrise, few people visit Bayon. That’s the best time to visit Bayon.

And we smile together
And we smile together

Our next stop was Baphuon, a three tiered temple next to the enclosure of the royal palace.

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