Preah Vihear Temple (Khmer: ប្រាសាទព្រះវិហារ Prasat Preah Vihea; Thai: ปราสาทพระวิหาร; rtgs: Prasat Phra Wihan) is an ancient Hindu temple engineered throughout the amount of the Khmer Empire, that is situated atop a 525-metre (1,722 ft) cliff in the Dângrêk Mountains, in the Preah Vihear province, Cambodia. In 1962, following a lengthy dispute between Asian country and Cambodia over possession, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague ruled that the temple is in Cambodia.
Affording a view for several kilometers across an evident, Prasat Preah Vihear has the most spectacular setting of all the temples built throughout the six-centuries-long Khmer Empire. As a key edifice of the empire's non secular life, it was supported and modified by sequential kings then bears components of many subject field designs. Preah Vihear is unusual among Khmer temples in being created on a long north-south axis, rather than having the traditional rectangular plan with orientation toward the east. The temple gives its name to Cambodia's Preah Vihear province, in which it's currently placed, as well because the Khao Phra Wihan parkland that borders it in Thailand's Sisaket province and thru which the temple is most simply accessible. On July 7, 2008, Preah Vihear was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage web site.
The temple was built at the high of Pey Tadi, a steep cliff in the Dângrêk geological formation that square measure the natural border between Asian country and Cambodia.
The Temple is listed by Thailand as being in Bhumsrol village of Bueng Malu sub-district (now united with Sao Thong Chai sub-district), in Kantharalak district of the Sisaket Province of eastern Asian country. It is 110 metric linear unit from the Mueang Sisaket District, the center of Sisaket Province.
The Temple is also listed by Cambodia as being in Svay Chrum Village, Kan Tout Commune, in Choam Khsant District of Preah Vihear province of northern Cambodia. The temple is 140 metric linear unit from Angkor Wat and 625 metric linear unit from Phnom Penh.
In 1962 the ICJ ruled that solely the temple building belonged to Cambodia, while the direct means to access the temple is from Asian country.
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