GREAT FROM
India
GREAT FOR
Ruin-hopping
GO NOW
For an epic monsoon escape.
TURN OVER FOR ALL YOU NEED TO GET THERE
- The Wat Chai
Wattanaram
makes for an
impressive sight - Pay your respects
(and pose for the
camera) at Wat
Phanan Choeng - The riverfront
restaurant at
Sala Ayutthaya
offers a stunning
view of the Wat
Phutthaisawan - Cool or just
plain weird?
The Wat Niwet
Thammaprawat
is a Buddhist temple
designed to look
like a church
Ayutthaya-style temple which
surprisingly wasnât destroyed in the
18th-century siege (8am â 6pm; ` 40).
It survived because the Burmese used
it as a base from which to attack the
nearby Royal Palace. Today the towering
structure continues to stand strong
as if expressing its worth.
The city may no longer be as illustrious
as it once was but it still calls out
to people from far and wide. Pervading
its ruins are memories dreams and stories
of a fallen realm stories that want
to be told. Soak it all in.
words shraddha uchil
photographs hashim badani
the boat ride glimpsing ruins silhouetted
in the evening light rows of stilt houses
and villagers out fishing. Your final
destination is the Wat Chai Wattanaram
with its 35m-tall central structure (8am â
5pm; ` 95). Built in the Khmer style
by King Prasat Thong in 1630 this templeâs
architecture is vaguely reminiscent
of Cambodiaâs Angkor Wat.
Take a break from all the temple-
hopping and head to Roti Street
to be treated to an interesting Thai
dessert â roti sai mai â which is a reflection
of Ayutthayaâs very old Muslim community
and as much a part of its history as its
monuments (near Ayutthaya Hospital
U Thong Rd; from ` 70). Youâll find men
at work stretching and pulling at a pliable
glob of melted palm sugar until it
resembles strands of hair. This resultant
candy floss is rolled up inside savoury
crêpe-like rotis.
When youâve had your fill move
on to Wat Na Phra Men a rare early
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