Temple of Preah Kahn
Preah Khan is a temple at Angkor, Cambodia, built in the 12th century for King Jayavarman VII. It is located northeast of Angkor Thom and just west of the Jayatataka baray, with which it was associated.
It was the centre of a substantial organisation, with almost 100,000 officials and servants. Like the nearby Ta Prohm, Preah Khan has been left largely unrestored, with numerous trees and other vegetation growing among the ruins.
The twenty closest neighbours in the database:
Temple of Neak Pean (2 km), Angkor Thom (3 km), Temple of Ta Prohm (4 km), Temple of Banteay Kdei (5 km), East Mebon Temple (6 km), Angkor Wat (6 km), Temple of Bakong (18 km), Temple of Banteay Srei (18 km), Bangkok (Thailand) (369 km), Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam) (428 km), Mekong Delta (439 km), Hue (Vietnam) (520 km), Temples of My Son (524 km), Hoi An (Vietnam) (550 km), Hanoi (Vietnam) (868 km), Halong Bay (899 km), Hangzhou (China) (2,508 km), Nanjing (China) (2,563 km), Shanghai (China) (2,671 km), Bangalore (India) (2,841 km)