( Travel by Tuk Tuk $40 )
Phnom Chisor is a historical site located in Sia village, Rovieng
commune, Samrong district, about 62 kilometers south of Phnom Penh or 27
kilometers north of Takeo provincial town. To reach the site, take
National Road 2 to Bati district and Neang Khmao temple. Turn right at
the sign for the site and head down the dirt trial for 5 more
kilometers. Phnom Chisor is 13O-meter-high mountain. Phnom Chisor temple was built in the early
11th century by King Suryavarman I (AD 1002-1050), who practiced
Brahmanism. Constructed of sandstone and other stones, it is 60 meters
long and 50 meters wide and sits atop a mountain. The temple is
surrounded by two galleries. The first gallery is 60 meters long on each
side. The second, smaller gallery, is in the middle, where there is the
main worship place with two doors and a wooden statue. There are
beautiful sculptures on the lintel and the pillars.
Phnom Chisor
Pagoda was built in 1917, destroyed by war during the 1970s and rebuilt
in 1979. Behind it is a hall called Thammasaphea, kof and a worship
place. There is an ancient water tank made of concrete. People usually
climb the staircase on the west side of the mountain, which has 390
steps and descend by the south side staircase, which has 408 steps.
Another set of stairs in front of the temple links the temple to Sen
Chhmos temple, Sen Phouvang temple and Tonie Om, a lake considered
sacred by Brahmans and used for washing away sins. A large rock yard
nearby about 100 meters long and 80 meters was once the site of several
other temples, but only parts of these temples remain standing.
In
addition, there is a mountain cave, Vimean Chan, located about 150
meters south of the temple. It is a quiet place for Brahmans or ascetics
to meditate. During the Americans' war with Vietnam, the site was
bombed, dislodging several large rocks that block the entrance to the
cave today.
Hun Sen Phnom Chisor Agricultural and Tourist site is
located in Samrong, Bati and Prey Kabas districts. It includes a 513
hectare paddy rice field of dry rice, a 1,386 hectares field of wet rice
and three water basins - Thnos Ta Kong, Tuol Lork and Sen Pea Ream.
Phnom
Chisor is very popular with visitors, especially during festivals, when
it is very crowded. The top of the mountain affords visitors a panoramic
view of Takeo Province rice paddies stretching for kilometers.



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