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Prambanan Temple

Prambanan
Prambanan Java245.jpg
Prambanan Temple Compounds
Location Bokoharjo, Prambanan, Sleman Regency, Special Region of Yogyakarta
Coordinates 7°45′8″S 110°29′30″E / 7.75222°S 110.49167°E / -7.75222; 110.49167Coordinates: 7°45′8″S 110°29′30″E / 7.75222°S 110.49167°E / -7.75222; 110.49167
Built Originally built in the 850 CE during the reign of the Hindu Sanjaya Dynasty
Architect Rakai Pikatan
Type Cultural
Criteria i, iv
Designated 1991 (15th session)
Reference no. 642
State Party  Indonesia
Region Southeast Asia
Prambanan is located in Java
Prambanan
Location within Java
Prambanan is located in Indonesia
Prambanan
Prambanan (Indonesia)

Prambanan or Rara Jonggrang (Javanese: ꦫꦫꦗꦺꦴꦁꦒꦿꦁ, translit. Rara Jonggrang) is a 9th-century Hindu temple compound in Central Java, Indonesia, dedicated to the Trimurti, the expression of God as the Creator (Brahma), the Preserver (Vishnu) and the Transformer (Shiva). The temple compound is located approximately 17 kilometres (11 mi) northeast of the city of Yogyakarta on the boundary between Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces.

The temple compound, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is the largest Hindu temple site in Indonesia, and one of the biggest in Southeast Asia. It is characterized by its tall and pointed architecture, typical of Hindu architecture, and by the towering 47-metre-high (154 ft) central building inside a large complex of individual temples. Prambanan attracts many visitors from around the world.

The Prambanan temple is the largest Hindu temple of ancient Java, and the first building was completed in the mid-9th century. It was likely started by Rakai Pikatan as the Hindu Sanjaya Dynasty's answer to the Buddhist Sailendra Dynasty's Borobudur and Sewu temples nearby. Historians suggest that the construction of Prambanan probably was meant to mark the return of the Hindu Sanjaya Dynasty to power in Central Java after almost a century of Buddhist Sailendra Dynasty domination. The construction of this massive Hindu temple signifies that the Medang court had shifted its patronage from Mahayana Buddhism to Shaivite Hinduism.


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