The Trai Bhet (Khmer: ត្រៃ្យភេត) is a treatise on Khmer cosmogony composed at the latest at the end of the 17th century.[1] As one of Cambodia's national epics, it is another Khmer version of the Hindu epic Ramayana, different again from the Khmer Reamker. The Trai Bhet is an important part of the Khmer literary canon, though it has largely been forgotten.[2]
^de Bernon, Olivier (2001). "Note sur le manuscrit illustré S. 28 de l'EFEO: son rapport avec l'iconographie du Wat Suthat Dhepwararam à Bangkok". Arts Asiatiques. 56: 140–146. doi:10.3406/arasi.2001.1471. ISSN 0004-3958. JSTOR 43485573.
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The TraiBhet (Khmer: ត្រៃ្យភេត) is a treatise on Khmer cosmogony composed at the latest at the end of the 17th century. As one of Cambodia's national...
national epic of Cambodia, along with the less famous version of the TraiBhet. The earliest mention of this epic's manuscript in Cambodia dates back...
culture". Some stories included in the Gatilok have allowed stories from the TraiBhet, an outdated Khmer cosmogony, to survive in mainstream classic literature...