
New Books Network Stephen Murphy, "Buddhist Landscapes: Art and Archaeology of the Khorat Plateau, 7th to 11th Centuries (NUS Press, 2024)
Dec 1, 2025
Stephen Murphy, Pratapaditya Pal Senior Lecturer in Curating and Museology of Asian Art, delves into the rich Buddhist heritage of the Khorat Plateau. He discusses landscape archaeology and how Buddhism transformed the terrain through monumental architecture and community centers. Murphy highlights the connection between archaeological sites like Mung Fa De and the spread of Buddhist art and practices. He also explores ongoing issues of looting and restitution, emphasizing the need to reintegrate cultural artifacts into their historical context.
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Khorat Plateau As Distinct Region
- The Khorat Plateau is a distinct historical region with its own Buddhist culture between central Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.
- Murphy frames its history using landscape archaeology and historical ecology to read Buddhism into and against terrain.
Let Data Shape Theory
- Start with field data and let patterns guide theoretical choices rather than forcing theory onto evidence.
- Use multi-scalar mapping (rivers, clusters, sites, objects) to reveal cultural distributions across landscapes.
Sema Stones Map Buddhist Presence
- Sema stones (boundary markers) indicate locations of ordination halls and thus active Buddhist communities.
- Mapping seima distribution provides a proxy for tracing Buddhism's spread across the plateau.

