Endless Journey
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I am a world traveler, currently in Thailand. I explore the country and describe what I see and do. I show my daily explorations via video on YouTube, Rumble, Odysee and Subscribe Star. If you want to know anything or see something in Thailand let me know.
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Prasat Sra Kamphaeng Yai - Khmer Temple From 1042 & Modern Buddhist Temple - Si Sa Ket Thailand 2025

Prasat Sra Kamphaeng Yai ปราสาทสระกำแพงใหญ่

The most substantial of Sisaket Province's Khmer sites, Prasat Sra Kamphaeng Yai consists of 4 standing towers and 2 libraries within a walled enclosure featuring 4 gopuras. 3 of the east-facing towers share a laterite terrace while a 4th sits behind the southernmost of the terrace shrines. It is likely that an additional tower was intended to be placed behind the northernmost of the 3. The central tower is a mixture of brick and sandstone elements while the remaining shrines, as well as the 2 libraries, are in brick. The gopuras and enclosing wall are of laterite.

Octagonal colonettes, a damaged pediment and several lintels are still in situ with the latter featuring Khleang-style designs. The central tower appears to be slightly older than the others while decorative elements on the libraries indicate a probably Baphuon period.

The doorjamb of the eastern gopura also features a lengthy inscription in ancient Khmer ...

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Ku Phon Rakhang - Khmer Arogyasala (Hospital Temple) Built in 1186 - Roi Et Thailand 2025

Ku Phon Rakhang กู่โพนระฆัง

Ku Phon Rakhang is a famous Khmer architectural archaeological site located in Roi Et Province, Thailand. It was constructed during the reign of Jayavarman VII of the Khmer Empire and served as a hospital or religious place, showcasing the transition from Hinduism to Buddhism.

It is a textbook arogyasala site, located in the southern section of the province, 500m or so east of Prasat Ku Ka Sing and corresponds to the Bayon-period settlement Muang Boran Ku Ka Sing.

The site today is largely intact, thanks to the restoration work by the fine arts department and consists of an east-facing laterite shrine on a platform, with a porch and cruciform-shaped terrace, enclosing wall, library and eastern gopura, all laterite, and a lined pond to the northeast of the enclosure.

The site is built from laterite bricks and features a main building facing east, with a library situated to the southeast, surrounded by a crystal wall in a rectangular shape. The middle...

Wat Tham Krabok วัดถ้ำกระบอก - Center For Drug Addiction Treatment - Saraburi Thailand 2025

Wat Tham Krabok วัดถ้ำกระบอก, Temple of the Bamboo Cave, is a Buddhist temple (wat) in the Phra Phutthabat District of Saraburi Province, Thailand.

Wat Tham Krabok is a Buddhist temple located in the Phra Phutthabat District of Saraburi Province, Thailand. It was first established as a monastery in 1957 by a Buddhist nun, Mian Parnchand (generally known as Luang Por Yai), and her two nephews, Chamroon and Charoen Parnchand. The temple was granted official 'Wat' status in 2012.

Wat Tham Krabok is known for its heroin and opium drug rehabilitation program, which was started in 1959. Over 100,000 heroin and opium addicts have since gone through the detox program, which consists of Buddhist meditation, induced vomiting, and the consumption of a secret detoxification potion composed of many different herbs.

In addition to its drug rehabilitation program, Wat Tham Krabok has also served as a refuge for Hmong refugees. After the end of the Vietnam War in the late 1970s, the ...

Prasat Ku Ka Sing ปราสาทกู่กาสิงห์ & Museum - 11th Century Khmer Temple - Roi Et Thailand 2025

Prasat Ku Ka Sing ปราสาทกู่กาสิงห์

Substantial-sized, partially intact, temple situated within the grounds of Wat Burapha in Ku Ka Sing Town in the southern reaches of Roi Et province.

The vestiges display a classic, mid-period, Khmer sanctuary layout with a central shrine featuring a pair of adjacent, connecting towers and an east-facing porch, while a surrounding laterite wall includes four, large cruciform gopuras. A pair of libraries sit in the southeast and northeast quadrants. The latter are particularly large, almost equal in size to the main shrine. There are traces of a now dry, probably horse-shoe-shaped, moat.

The structure's base, enclosing wall and libraries use laterite while the central shrine shows sandstone blocks in its lower sections topped with walls of brick. (Most of the upper parts of the towers and roofs are today missing.) Several, additional sandstone elements such as window and door frames as well as colonettes and lintels are on site and the...

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