While excavating the Ta Prohm temple in Angkor in 1927, a team of archaeologists discovered the head (and only the head) of a ...
Where and how to display them remain open questions. Visitors to the National Museum of Cambodia in Phnom Penh in January.Credit...Thomas Cristofoletti for The New York Times Supported by By Mike ...
Archaeologists in Cambodia are celebrating an unexpected find at the country’s centuries-old Angkor temple complex: the torso ...
Archaeologists unearth centuries-old statue in Cambodia’s Angkor temple - The torso remarkably matches a head discovered at ...
Archaeologists at Ta Prohm temple in Cambodia have discovered a 800-year-old Buddha torso that matches a statue head found in ...
Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum was originally a high school, but it became Security Prison 21 (S-21) during the Khmer Rouge regime. Today, the museum stands as a reminder of Cambodia's painful history and ...
In the decree issued on February 25, Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni ordered the establishment of three sites where genocide ...
According to archaeologists, the head of the same statue was dug up in 1927 and is now in Cambodia's National museum in the ...
The statue’s presumed head was discovered at the same temple in 1927 during the French colonial era, and is currently kept at Cambodia’s main National Museum in the capital Phnom Penh.
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