вторник, 23 июня 2020 г.

News update 23/06/2020 (2378)

At the end of the ninth century under Yashovarman I, the Angkor state was strengthened, Buddhist monasteries were built, and a new capital was founded on the site of the former Angkor. At the same time, the construction of a grandiose irrigation system began. The whole area was divided into squares of rice fields. Powerful reservoirs provided a regulated supply of water to the fields all year round. Reservoirs for the accumulation of moisture were not dug out, but were created with the help of embankments. The maintenance and development of the irrigation system became the most important duty of the Angkor kings. Many of them went down in history as the builders of not only temples, but also irrigation facilities. Agriculture required well-coordinated work, so it was convenient for the peasants to live and work in communities. Farmers collected three full-fledged crops a year and almost did not depend on weather conditions. They had something to take to the royal palace and temples. Therefore, the Angkor kings also took care of the condition of the roads. But not only in the palace and temples wagons with grain and oil stretched. 938 villages carried a duty that is completely unusual in our eyes - they supplied food to 102 clinics located throughout the country, and several hospitals in the capital. Each clinic had 2 doctors, 7 assistants, 14 nurses, 2 cooks and 6 attendants. The arrangement of hospitals and the list of medicines used by Cambodian doctors suggest that the medicine of Ancient Cambodia was not inferior to the medicine of Europe at that time, and perhaps even surpassed it.

From the 13th century begins the slow extinction of the Angkor state. In the XIV century. Angkor was captured by foreign Siamese tribes. According to legend, after a seven-month unsuccessful siege of the city, the Siamese king ordered silver coins to be fired. The defenders of Angkor rushed to collect nonets, and the Siamese warriors broke into the besieged city.

Almost simultaneously with the Angkor Empire, the state of Pagan rose on the territory of modern Myanmar. In Chinese chronicles, its history dates back to the 2nd century BC. AD In the XI century. the wise and enlightened king Anoratha united all Myanmar lands and made Pagan the capital of the empire. Anoratha tried to establish Buddhism in the country, with which writing came to Myanmar. For the sake of this, he conquered the kingdom south of Pagan, in which sacred manuscripts were kept. The inhabitants of this kingdom were enslaved. With the help of thousands of slaves, Anoratha erected beautiful Buddhist temples (pagodas) in the valley of the Irrawaddy River. Pagan maintained extensive trade relations with India and China. People came here to study sciences from other countries. At the time of its heyday, the capital of the state was buried in the greenery of gardens. The city was decorated with 4 million large and small pagodas. The largest building was Tabinyu Temple, which symbolized the omniscience of the Buddha. The first monument of Myanmar writing that has come down to us is the slab of King Narapatisitu, who lived at the turn of the 11th-12th centuries, reports on the construction of dams, irrigation canals and pagodas, and military campaigns. The Pagan kingdom knew criminal and civil law. There were three judicial instances: the highest court with the participation of the king, the lower court and the court of appeal.
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Legal practice was reduced mainly to the reconciliation of the parties. Court sessions were held with the participation of two or three judges, who alternately persuaded opponents to agree to reconciliation. If this was successful, then as a sign of consent, the plaintiff and the defendant publicly chewed green tea leaves and amicably dispersed. The witness swore to tell only the truth, hoisting over his head the image of the Buddha. Sometimes those who argued were judged "by the whole world", and then the matter was decided by means of physical tests. The winner was the one who could not breathe underwater for longer or eat a portion of rice faster. With an equal outcome, they were forced to rinse their mouths, and the one who was found to have at least one stuck rice was considered guilty. Sometimes the truth was mined in the literal sense of the word with a red-hot iron. It was believed that the right one would have fewer burns on his hands after immersing them in molten lead. No one questioned the justice of the judges, but the majority preferred to avoid such justice. It was easier to go for reconciliation than to subject yourself to terrible and humiliating trials.

The Pagan kingdom left wonderful examples of artistic crafts.

This state existed for almost 300 years until it fell under the onslaught of the Mongol hordes of Kublai Khan, the grandson of Genghis Khan. Marco Polo, a brave Venetian merchant and traveler, witnessed the victory of the Mongol cavalry over the Funan warriors sitting on the backs of clumsy elephants. After the departure of the Mongols, Pagan lay in ruins.

At this time, on the opposite side of the Strait of Malacca, a new maritime power, Srivijaya, rose, occupying the eastern part of the island of Sumatra in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bmodern Palembang. Initially, it was one of the small states of the Malay Archipelago. When the Chinese Han Dynasty fell and the Celestial Empire weakened, Srivijaya stopped sending embassies to the imperial court and tried to gain a dominant position in the South Seas. By the end of the 8th century Srivijaya established its dominance over the Straits of Malacca and Sunda. This gave her control over the routes connecting China, Eastern and Southern Indochina and the Malay Archipelago with India and the Arab countries. Arab authors write that Srivijaya dictated its will not only to the island states, but also to the mainland states. At the end of the 8th century King Chenla boldly demanded that they bring him the head of the Maharaja of Srivijaya. In response, the Maharaja sent a fleet to Chenlu, captured the king of Chenla, cut off his head, embalmed it and sent it to the king's successor in a special urn.

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