Cambodian children discover thousand year old Buddhist statues

Date:

Share post:

Archaeologists in Cambodia got some help over the weekend from a group of grimy kids. The children were bathing in a newly dug watering hole when they stumbled across six ancient Buddhist statues that experts are estimating to be more than a thousand years old. 

To protect the statues from looters they will be stored in a museum warehouse like this one which stores the finds from Ankor Wat [Credits: Conservation d’Ankor]

In an early morning press conference Prak Sakhon, an official with the Provincial Culture Department, said the six statues that were found were close to the banks of the newly excavated pond in a small village about fifty miles north of Phnom Penh, the capital city. Prak Sakhom estimated that the statues ranged from the ninth to twelfth centuries. 

The largest of the statues weighs about twenty pounds and stands nearly half a yard tall. It is expected that archaeologists will excavate the area where they were discovered in hopes of unearthing more of the ancient statues and discovering why they were there. At this time the Provincial Culture Department was not releasing photos of the statues. 

The find it notable not just for the age of the statues and their religious significance but for the fact that they were turned over to the authorities in Cambodia at all. Cambodia is full of archaeological sites and artifacts but lately more of them have been falling into the hands of looters and black market dealers than archaeologists and museums. 

In 2004 UNESCO, a specialized agency within the United Nations organization, removed Cambodia’s famous Angkor Wat temple complex from the World Heritage in Danger list but the looting of the countries antiquities has only been increasing over the years. In market stalls across the country antiquities are sold openly, especially to tourists. Ancient bead work sells for as little as one U.S. dollar while ancient tools go for around $15. 

A non-profit group called Heritage Watch has been working to protect all of the ancient treasures of South East Asia by educating rural villagers about the importance of these artifacts and keeping them in context- and out of the hands of black market dealers. 

The group has also established museums in the most threatened areas of Cambodia. The six ancient Buddhist statues found will be traveling to and housed at one of these kinds of provincial museums where they will undergo further testing and research. Many of Cambodia’s ancient artifacts are removed from sites and kept stored in museum warehouses to keep them out of the hands of looters. 

Author: Renee Mallett | Source: Examiner [August 20, 2012]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

‘Magical’ silver scroll virtually unfolded

About 1,300 years ago, a Jewish sorcerer arrived in the Muslim town of Jerash in Jordan. Local Muslims...

Junnar’s ancient brick buildings were granaries

Archaeologists from city-based Deccan College Postgraduate and Research Institute excavating ancient ruins near Junnar have finally cracked the...

America’s Stonehenge: New Hampshire rocks history or hoax?

Using the astronomical chart on a table in the covered tower, visitors aim their gaze along worn arrows...

More on Ancient magic curse tablet from Jerusalem

A rolled-up sheet of lead bearing a Greek inscription was recently discovered in archaeological excavations the Israel Antiquities...

Ancient rock paintings discovered in Indonesia’s Kei islands

Ancient rock paintings have been discovered in the Ohoidertaun village of Kei islands. These include at least 400...

Oldest known figurative cave art discovered in Borneo

Griffith University researchers have dated cave paintings in Borneo to as early as 40,000 years ago, showing that...

Court orders Israel to return ‘Jehoash’s tablet’ to owner

An Israeli antiquities collector on Thursday bested the state in a decade-long wrestling match, regaining possession of Jehoash's...

Dog discovers Bronze Age treasure in the Czech Republic

It was a typical March day under the Orlické Mountains and Mr. Frankota was walking his dog, Monty,...