Warning landmark and monument for Cambodians bad m…
Chinggis Khaan Airport Ulaanbaatar
In front of the Gandan Monastery
Golden Chituokhan Buddhist Temple at Gandan Monast…
Inside the Gandan Monastery
Stupa and other buildings at Gandan Monastery
On the way to Kherlen Gol and Khar Nuur (Lake) in…
Memorial at the Khar Nuur (Lake) in Khan Khentii
Deer stone site near Mörön
Stone with Mongolian Script
Batsheeret Ovoo
Road junction at the Ovoo
Gandantegchinlen Monastery
Downtown in Ulaanbaatar
Opera House in Ulaanbaatar
Mongolian Morin Khuur player and a vocalist
Mongolian ballet dancers
Performance from Tibetan mythology
Mongolian contortionist girl in her show
Grand Orchestra of Mongolia
Mongolian Yatga player
Our group starting the tour
Equestrian statue of Genghis Khan
Walking through the jungle ...
Sunset view from Phnom Bakheng
Sunset at the Tonlé Sap
Residents bringing home the fishing ...
Discarded express boat by the riverside
Floating home of Vietnamese fisher
Evening mood during a river tour
Housing on the water surface of the Tonlé Sap
The causeway to the Tonlé Sap
People welcome the travelers ...
Passing big fishing boats
Fisher men and woman watching to tourists
Tonlé Sap the lifeline for millions people
Fishing boats at the Tonlé Sap river
Along the Tonlé Sap
Cambodian kids
The instrument for beheading victims
One of the mass graves of 166 victims without head…
Sculls warn for an inhuman history
Inside the Memorial of Choeung Ek
Choeung Ek Memorial
Highway condition on the way to Phnom Penh
See also...
See more...Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 06 Mar 2012
-
2 106 visits
Holy Riverbed Carvings at Phnom Kulen


Outside Banteay Srei, a two hours walk through the jungle, there is Phnom Kulen.
There are numerous of lingas (phalluses) in the waterbed, though not found in as much quantity as in Kbal Spean, the River of 1,000 Lingas. In the Hindu tradition, water flowing over the lingas is sacred and holy, and many Cambodians bottle the water from the downriver waterfalls. In ancient times, these waters, potent with fertility, filled the barays and irrigated the rice fields.
Phnom Kulen was used as the final stronghold of the Khmer Rouge regime and before the construction of a private toll road, was relatively inaccessible or slow going, depending on weather conditions. Even now, tourists are warned not to wander off beaten tracks for fear of hidden mines. Some question that the locals are protecting the sanctity of this spot as thousands of Cambodians visit every year without incident.
There are numerous of lingas (phalluses) in the waterbed, though not found in as much quantity as in Kbal Spean, the River of 1,000 Lingas. In the Hindu tradition, water flowing over the lingas is sacred and holy, and many Cambodians bottle the water from the downriver waterfalls. In ancient times, these waters, potent with fertility, filled the barays and irrigated the rice fields.
Phnom Kulen was used as the final stronghold of the Khmer Rouge regime and before the construction of a private toll road, was relatively inaccessible or slow going, depending on weather conditions. Even now, tourists are warned not to wander off beaten tracks for fear of hidden mines. Some question that the locals are protecting the sanctity of this spot as thousands of Cambodians visit every year without incident.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.