Spean Praptos

Spean Praptos
The bridge's corbel arches
The bridge's corbel arches
Coordinates 13°07′36″N 104°20′20″E / 13.12667°N 104.33889°E / 13.12667; 104.33889Coordinates: 13°07′36″N 104°20′20″E / 13.12667°N 104.33889°E / 13.12667; 104.33889
Carries Road traffic
Crosses Chickreng River
Locale Siem Reap Province, Cambodia
Characteristics
Design Corbel arch
Material Stone
History
Construction start 12th century

Spean Praptos (Khmer: ស្ពានព្រះទិស, also known as Kampong Kdei Bridge ស្ពានកំពង់ក្ដី) on the road from Angkor to Phnom Chisor,[1] Cambodia, used to be the longest corbeled stone-arch bridge in the world, with more than twenty narrow arches spanning 285 ft (87m). The bridge was built in the 12th century during the reign of King Jayavarman VII. It is one of the few Khmer empire era bridges to have survived to the modern day.

Several other bridges on the same model are visible: in the Angkor site (Spean Memai), Spean Thma on the former path of the Siem Reap river between Angkor Thom and the Eastern Baray, and at several locations of the former empire.

References

  1. Rooney, 2005, pp.391-392

Bibliography

  • Rooney, Dawn F. (2005). Angkor: Cambodia's wondrous khmer temples (5th ed.). Odissey. ISBN 978-962-217-727-7.

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