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Wat Chaiwatthanaram
📜 History

Wat Chaiwatthanaram

📍 Ayutthaya, Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya

The most majestic temple ruin in Ayutthaya — a Khmer-inspired complex of a tall central prang ringed by smaller towers on the riverbank, breathtaking at sunset and a favourite backdrop for traditional Thai-dress photos.

Built in 1630 by King Prasat Thong, Wat Chaiwatthanaram was modelled on the Khmer temple-mountain — a soaring central prang surrounded by four smaller towers and a gallery of seated Buddhas, all raised on the bank of the Chao Phraya just west of the old island city.

Why It’s Interesting

Of all Ayutthaya’s ruins it is perhaps the most photogenic and best-restored, its grey towers glowing amber at sunset. In recent years it’s become hugely popular with Thai visitors who rent traditional court dress for photos among the spires — a joyful, living use of a 400-year-old monument. Come late in the day and the atmosphere is hard to beat.

Getting There

It sits across the river on the western edge of Ayutthaya, a short drive or cycle from the central temples. Sunset is the moment; arrive with time to walk the galleries before the light turns.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

Mon-chan visiting Wat Chaiwatthanaram
Sunset hit the prang and even I went quiet. Briefly.
Cinnamon at Wat Chaiwatthanaram
Cinnamon posed in imaginary royal dress. Committed bit.

Where it is

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