Angkor Wat: The Ancient Mystery Of Cambodia’s Lost Capital | The City Of God Kings | Timeline

Published 2017-07-15
Lost Worlds investigates the very latest archaeological finds at three remote and hugely significant sites - Angkor Wat, Troy and Persepolis.

Lost Worlds travels to each site and through high-end computer graphics, lavish re-enactment and the latest archaeological evidence brings them to stunning televisual life. From the 900-year-old remains of Angkor Wat in the Cambodian jungle the staggering City of the God Kings is recreated. From Project Troia, in North West Turkey, the location of the biggest archaeological expedition ever mounted the lost city is stunningly visualised and finally from Persepolis the city and the great Persian Empire are brought to life.

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All Comments (21)
  • @TimelineChannel
    "It's like Netflix, but for history documentaries" -----> Sign up to History Hit with code 'timeline' for a huge discount! bit.ly/3rs2w3k
  • Angkor Wat is truly an architectural marvel. It may even a decade to understand its details.
  • @tuanjim799
    Man, imagine being that dude in 1860, chopping through dense jungle and suddenly stumbling upon that vast, long-forgotten temple complex. How surreal that must've been for him! It would feel like you were in a dream or something.
  • Truly mind boggling how civilizations back then were capable of creating such a marvelous and complex creation
  • This Hindu temple is really astonishing and great example of architecture and spirituality.
  • @lindadobson9854
    Does nobody suppose that it wasn't built in the middle of a jungle, but that the jungle grew up around it.
  • @mariej6962
    I disagree that the Frenchman discovered it. I think he was the first foreigner to see it but locals knew about the place . I think we need to change statements about discovery of places.
  • I don't know why I'm so fascinated with ancient cultures but the architecture they left behind gives the chills
  • I'm khmer 🇰🇭 thank for sharing our great temple to the world
  • India and Cambodia have the most detailed amazing stone carving ever.These detailed works look like they would take hundreds of years to construct by hand.True mysteries.
  • @traderrohan
    Angkor vat the largest hindu temple in the world , i hope to see this beautiful temple at least once in my life , combodia is a beautiful country too , love from India.
  • @marjieyoung9570
    I would have loved to know what the connection is between India and Angkor Wat. The moment I saw the temples I was instantly reminded of the Hindu temples in India and then they not only said they were Hindu temples, they also showed Sanskrit. The distance between India and Cambodia is such that the Hindu temples and practice of that religion along with the Sanskrit inscriptions are quite impressive to me and I would have loved to have known what the connection is there. (I lived in India for a 6 month span of time and was shocked to see their architecture and even root language in Angkor Wat...or vice versa. It definitely peeked my interest.)
  • Visited Siem Reap in 2014. Rediscovered its immortal splendor, explored the temples of myth, rumor and legend. Angkor Wat is the ultimate expression of Khmer genius and matched by only a few spots on Earth such as Machu Picchu or Petra. Truly the Kingdom of Wonder. Kind-hearted Cambodians was the bonus of my trip.
  • @larsrons7937
    I visited Angkor Wat (and all the other surrounding temples) in 2018. Words like "amazing" and "impressive" are not enough to describe it. Whatever you can come up with that a building needs to have to be a true "wonder", Angkor Wat has it. BONUS TIP: I really recommend to visit Cambodia. Friendly people, beautyful interesting country, good food, very pleasant to be in.
  • @birdeye2921
    “He had no evidence of a sophisticated society” literally looking at one of the most sophisticated and detailed buildings ever made
  • Makes you really sit back and realize that huge massive cities that have lived longer than our current civiliations and have died and have been forgotten. It's scary to think we will be next to have been forgotten..... it's also scary the gap in history on how we have forgotten these huge civilizations due to history being destroyed. Makes you wonder how we could have lost the history of these forgotten civiliations.
  • @jcdenton1635
    I don't understand why so many Tamils in the comments think this civilization was built by Tamils. This was a Khmer civilization. Have you seen their statues of kings and Hindu/Buddhist deities? They have Asian faces because the civilization that made them was Asian, specifically Khmer. Just google their statues of Jayavarman, Indradevi, Agastya, apsaras/devatas at Angkor Wat, and Brahma at the Bayon temple. They were Khmer.
  • @khonjel_singh
    For those wondering, this documentary aired on TV in November, 2002. So even though it was uploaded in 2017, for my friends watching it with me in October 2020, this is almost 18 year old content.
  • We do not use the term Indo China, but this great Hindu architecture went all the way down to Sumatra - which is part of Indonesia. But here in Cambodia the paneling is written in Sanskrit, Khmer, and Thai. It is stunning to visit.
  • I actually really appreciate this level of detail for a free video. Just visited Angkor Wat today and used this to answer all our questions!