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− | It covers the ancient city of '''Si Thep''', a site inhabited from around the third to fifth century CE until the thirteenth century, spanning [[List of time periods|cultural periods]] from late prehistory, through | + | It covers the ancient city of '''Si Thep''', a site inhabited from around the third to fifth century CE until the thirteenth century, spanning [[List of time periods|cultural periods]] from late prehistory, through [[Dvaravati]]. |
Wranyu ( talk) 10:43, 22 September 2023 (UTC)
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I request to edit back the original and correct information regarding Si Tep National Park and its architecture which has been evidently and intentionally edited not long ago on the 22nd September 2023 to mislead readers with false information on the architectural style of Si Tep which has been accepted, acknowledged, and officially considered by UNESCO as a world heritage site of Hmon ethnicity and culture of Dvaravati period in which the beginning periods has no connection or correllation to Khmer whatsoever.
In the columm with the picture of Prang Si Tep 'Prang Si Tep, built in Khmer architectural style in the late Dvaravati period around 12th century' -Delete 'built in Khmer architectural style'
Under 'Architectural Style' Dvaravati,Khmer -change to= Dvaravati Kent Anderson2547 ( talk) 06:04, 25 September 2023 (UTC)
p.32:Around the 10th – 11th Century AD, the Dvaravati culture1 began to decline in Si Thep as the Khmer political power became influential in the area of the lower North-eastern and Central Thailand. During this time, the Khmer culture was accepted and adopted as seen from a number of large Hindu monasteries found at Si Thep.
p.60:Some original buildings in this area were demolished to construct new monasteries in the Khmer culture, including Prang Si Thep, the wall and the Gopura.
p.139:The Dvaravati culture eventually deteriorated and ended during the 11th Century AD as a result of a growing influence of the ancient Khmer culture across the region at that time. Between the 7th and 13th Century AD, the Khmer culture was also adopted at Si Thep as evidenced in large Hindu monasteries built, notably Prang Si Thep and Prang Song Phi Nong.
You're clearly following the Khmer denialism based in mid-20th century Thai history writing, which is unfortunately still being spun by ultranationalist groups. This has no place in current academic circles. -- Paul_012 ( talk) 16:30, 25 September 2023 (UTC)Prang Si Thep was influenced by the Khmer architectural form.
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
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edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. |
− | It covers the ancient city of '''Si Thep''', a site inhabited from around the third to fifth century CE until the thirteenth century, spanning [[List of time periods|cultural periods]] from late prehistory, through | + | It covers the ancient city of '''Si Thep''', a site inhabited from around the third to fifth century CE until the thirteenth century, spanning [[List of time periods|cultural periods]] from late prehistory, through [[Dvaravati]]. |
Wranyu ( talk) 10:43, 22 September 2023 (UTC)
![]() | This
edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. |
I request to edit back the original and correct information regarding Si Tep National Park and its architecture which has been evidently and intentionally edited not long ago on the 22nd September 2023 to mislead readers with false information on the architectural style of Si Tep which has been accepted, acknowledged, and officially considered by UNESCO as a world heritage site of Hmon ethnicity and culture of Dvaravati period in which the beginning periods has no connection or correllation to Khmer whatsoever.
In the columm with the picture of Prang Si Tep 'Prang Si Tep, built in Khmer architectural style in the late Dvaravati period around 12th century' -Delete 'built in Khmer architectural style'
Under 'Architectural Style' Dvaravati,Khmer -change to= Dvaravati Kent Anderson2547 ( talk) 06:04, 25 September 2023 (UTC)
p.32:Around the 10th – 11th Century AD, the Dvaravati culture1 began to decline in Si Thep as the Khmer political power became influential in the area of the lower North-eastern and Central Thailand. During this time, the Khmer culture was accepted and adopted as seen from a number of large Hindu monasteries found at Si Thep.
p.60:Some original buildings in this area were demolished to construct new monasteries in the Khmer culture, including Prang Si Thep, the wall and the Gopura.
p.139:The Dvaravati culture eventually deteriorated and ended during the 11th Century AD as a result of a growing influence of the ancient Khmer culture across the region at that time. Between the 7th and 13th Century AD, the Khmer culture was also adopted at Si Thep as evidenced in large Hindu monasteries built, notably Prang Si Thep and Prang Song Phi Nong.
You're clearly following the Khmer denialism based in mid-20th century Thai history writing, which is unfortunately still being spun by ultranationalist groups. This has no place in current academic circles. -- Paul_012 ( talk) 16:30, 25 September 2023 (UTC)Prang Si Thep was influenced by the Khmer architectural form.