School of Geosciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
School of Culture, History and Language, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 10;13(10):e0203962. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203962. eCollection 2018.
Throughout the Angkor period (9th to 15th centuries CE), the Khmer kingdom maintained a series of interconnected cities and smaller settlements across its territory on mainland Southeast Asia. One such city was Koh Ker, which for a brief period in the 10th century CE even served as a royal capital. The complexity of the political landscape meant the Khmer kings and the elite were particularly mobile through the Angkor period, and rupture in royal houses was common. However, while the historical record chronicles the 10th century migration of the royal seat from Koh Ker back to Angkor, the fate of Koh Ker's domestic population has remained unknown. In this article, we reconstruct the settlement history of Koh Ker, using palaeoecological and geoarchaeological techniques, and show that human activity and land use persisted in the city for several centuries beyond the city's abandonment by the royal court. These results highlight the utility of multi-proxy environmental reconstructions of Khmer urban settlements for re-evaluating prevailing assumptions regarding the use and occupation of Angkor-period cities.
在整个吴哥时期(公元 9 世纪至 15 世纪),高棉王国在其位于东南亚大陆的领土上维持了一系列相互关联的城市和较小的定居点。其中一个城市是高棉遗址,它在公元 10 世纪的短暂时期甚至曾作为皇家首都。复杂的政治格局意味着高棉国王和精英阶层在吴哥时期特别具有流动性,王室的破裂很常见。然而,尽管历史记录记载了 10 世纪王室所在地从高棉遗址迁移回吴哥,但高棉遗址的国内人口的命运仍然未知。在本文中,我们使用古生态学和地质考古技术重建了高棉遗址的定居历史,结果表明,在皇家宫廷放弃该城市之后,人类活动和土地利用在该城市持续了几个世纪。这些结果突出了对高棉城市定居点进行多代理环境重建对于重新评估吴哥时期城市的使用和居住的普遍假设的实用性。