Lopburi is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Thailand. It was a Mon-Dvaravati outpost in the 7th century, a Khmer provincial capital in the 11th, and the second royal capital of Ayutthaya in the 17th. Every layer is still standing, often in the same temple compound. Here's what each site is, why it matters, and what to look for when you visit.
Lopburi (Lavo in older texts) was founded according to chronicle in 648 CE during the Dvaravati period, when Mon Buddhists ruled central Thailand. Marco Polo even mentioned it as "Locach" in his 13th century travels.
In the 11th century the Khmer Empire under Suryavarman I absorbed Lopburi as a provincial seat, building temples in the Bayon style you'll see all over town. When the Khmer faded and Ayutthaya rose in the 14th century, Lopburi remained important. King Narai the Great (1656–1688) made it the kingdom's second capital and lived here eight months a year, hosting French, Persian and Portuguese ambassadors.
After Narai's death the city was abandoned and the jungle returned. The macaques, who had always lived around San Phra Kan and Phra Prang Sam Yot, took over the empty stones. They've been there ever since.
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The biggest temple complex in Lopburi, sitting directly across the road from the railway station. The grounds measure 200m east-to-west and 180m north-to-south, with a walled inner sanctum.
The central prang is laterite and mortar, almost 30 metres tall, and the gable still shows traces of Lavo art reflecting Mahayana Buddhist beliefs. King Narai used this temple for state religious ceremonies in the 17th century, but its core is several hundred years older. The complex shows three architectural languages stacked on top of each other: Khmer, Lavo, and late Ayutthaya.
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The cosmopolitan heart of 17th century Thailand. King Narai the Great commissioned the palace in 1666 over the foundations of an older 14th century palace, on a 16-acre plot, to serve as his second residence. He spent eight to nine months a year here, hunting, doing astronomy, receiving foreign diplomats. When he died in 1688 the palace was abandoned and stayed empty for 170 years until King Mongkut restored it in the 1850s.
What makes Narai's reign legendary is the international court he ran. Persian, French, Dutch, and Portuguese envoys all stayed in this compound. The architecture reflects that exchange: Thai bases with European-style pointed arches and Persian-influenced water pavilions.
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The icon of Lopburi. Three laterite towers connected by a covered passage, built around the year 1200 by King Jayavarman VII of the Khmer Empire (the same king who built Angkor Thom and the Bayon). It was originally Mahayana Buddhist, not Hindu, despite the trinity look. Each tower honoured a specific deity:
The temple was Jayavarman's way of marking Lopburi as Khmer territory and inserting himself into the local royal cult. When Theravada Buddhism replaced Mahayana in the 14th century, the towers were rededicated and a prayer hall was added during King Narai's reign in the 1680s.
The crab-eating macaques (Macaca fascicularis) have lived around these stones for centuries, but the population exploded after Lopburi launched the annual Monkey Buffet Festival in 1989, where 4,000 kg of fruit is laid out for them. Local belief says they are disciples of Jao Paw Phra Kan, the spirit who protects the city. They are not captive, not fed for tourist photos, not part of any show.
One of the oldest structures in Lopburi. The base is a mound of laterite blocks dating to the 11th century Khmer period, when the site was a Theravada Buddhist temple. Stone tablets in Pallava and Khmer script have been recovered here.
During King Narai's reign in the 17th century a brick shrine in Thai-Persian-Western style was built on top of the laterite base. Inside is a reclining Vishnu image and a black stone deity that locals named Chao Pho Phra Kan, the city's protector spirit. The macaques are believed to be his disciples, which is why no one shoos them away.
The sleeper hit of Lopburi. Three civilisations rubbing shoulders in one ruined compound, a few minutes' walk from the station and almost always empty.
The oldest monument is a Mon-Dvaravati chedi from the first millennium CE, possibly as early as the 7th century. There are very few extant Dvaravati monuments anywhere in Thailand, which makes this one quietly important. Then comes a small Khmer-era prang from the 11th–13th centuries, when the area sat under the suzerainty of the Khmer Empire. Finally, a 16th–17th century Ayutthaya viharn was added during King Narai's restoration push.
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