TA PROHM
History
Construction on Ta Prohm began in 1186 AD. Originally known as Rajavihara (Monastery of the King), Ta Prohm was a Buddhist temple dedicated to the mother of King Jayavarman VII.
I just watched a documentary on this temple and the Khmer Empire: interestingly, their version was that this temple was originally a temple to Vishnu, and that the great abundance of the carvings are Hindu. Later, as Buddhism took over in Cambodia, Buddha-statues were added (and more temples were built.)
The Khmer Empire had an astonishing level of technological advancement, for societies pre-Industrial era. It was all founded on their techniques of water-delivery. Rivers were diverted to fill reservoirs, and the population is speculated to have been over a million. What happened to the Khmer Empire, per this documentary, was over-deforestation, which accelerated erosion: the rivers began to deliver silt and not water, undoing the system which had been built. In light of this possible reason, it seems fitting somehow that the forest took over these temples, eh?
Where the river begins, the carvings of Shiva and linga still survive: the river flows over the carvings, as a waterfall.
(What wasn't addressed was that carving of a dinosaur shown a few posts back, something I find very intriguing.)