The Buddhist monument of Borobudur was built in the eighth and ninth centuries on the island of Java. It is one of the most famous and studied religious buildings in the world, but it is also one of the most enigmatic. Since it was rediscovered by the West at the start of the nineteenth century, its ruins ? swallowed up by the tropical jungle, suggestive of an ancient civilisation with a glorious past ? have constantly been a source of fascination. Its unusual structure in the form of a tiered pyramid, its huge size, and the delicacy of its low reliefs, which include some 1,300 carved narrative panels, have ensured that Borobudur has taken its rightful place among the masterpieces of the world's architectural heritage. However, given the absence of reliable historical documentation, a wide variety of hypotheses have been advanced to shed light on the secrets of its form, iconographic repertoire, and symbolism. Text in French. AUTHORS: Helen Loveday studied Chinese at Oxford University, where she was awarded a doctorate for a thesis on ancient Chinese archaeology. She is a curator at the Baur Foundation, Museum of Far Eastern Art, and teaches Asian art at Geneva University. For 5 Continents Editions she published Japanese Buddhist Textiles in 2014. Hughes Dubois is a photographer of objets d'art and in the advertising business who works for institutions and collectors in Europe and elsewhere in the world. 87 colour illustrations