Prasat Bei
| Prasat Bei | |
|---|---|
Three towers of the temple  | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Hinduism | 
| Province | Siem Reap | 
| Location | |
| Location | Angkor | 
| Country | Cambodia | 
![]() Location within Cambodia  | |
| Geographic coordinates | 13°25′34″N 103°51′23″E / 13.42611°N 103.85639°E | 
| Architecture | |
| Type | Khmer (Bakheng style) | 
| Creator | Yasovarman I | 
| Completed | 10th century AD | 
| Temple(s) | 3 towers | 
Prasat Bei (Khmer: ប្រាសាទបី, "three temples") is a temple with three brick towers in a north-south row, facing to the east, and standing on a laterite platform. The central tower contained a linga; the flanking towers reach no higher than the doorways. Only the lintels of the central and south towers were carved, both showing Indra on the elephant Airavata.[1]
References
- ^ Ancient Angkor, Michael Freeman and Claude Jacques, p.73, 2003.
 
