In spite of such economical restrictions, his work was surely impressive and involved many buildings, not only at Ankgor. Sometimes his intervention was limited and consisted in excavation and consolidation, as for
East Mebon (1937-1939),
Phnom Krom (1938) and
Phnom Bok (1939). For other buildings he used partially
anastylosis, as in
Neak Pean (1938-1939),
Preah Khan,
Bayon (between 1939 and 1946) and the North Gate of
Angkor Thom, but in particular cases he opted for deeper or larger interventions, as in
Preah Palilay (1938-1938),
Bakong (1936-1944),
Banteay Samré (1936-1946) and
West Mebon (1943-1944). The extent of his work led
George Coedès to assert that Maurice Glaize's name will remain bound to the resurrection of the
Khmer capital city of Angkor. He also made several notable findings, like sculptures and foundation steles (e.g. the stele of Preah Khan), and some critical analysis of methodologies of restoration of Khmer monuments (see Glaize, 1941 and 1946). In 1944 he was the third conservator of Angkor (after
Henri Parmentier and
Henri Marchal) who published a guide of Angkor, entitled ''Les Monuments du groupe d'Angkor'', which is still now a reference text for visitors and is available freely in English on The Angokor Guide. ==Last years==