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Incredible Ancient Ruins of the World

Megha Dahake
Erected by the Khmer King Jayavarman VII in Cambodia, devoted to the Mahayana Buddhist hermitage, it is a slice of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
Ta Prohm, Cambodia
El Castillo is a pyramid in Mexico, which has four sides, each with 91 stairs and one final footstep on the highest platform, overall making 365 steps, the numeral of days in a year.
El Castillo, Mexico
Bagan is a city situated in the Mandalay Expanse of Myanmar. Bagan is well-known for its large number of timeworn pagodas and stupas extending into the vista.
Bagan, Myanmar
Stonehenge is an ancient cenotaph in Wiltshire, England. There are two kinds of stones at Stonehenge – the bigger 'sarsen stones' and the minor 'bluestones'. The stones that make the inward loop arose from the Preseli Mountains in Wales.
Stonehenge, England
Luxor Temple, positioned on the east bank of the Nile River, was erected to revel Egypt's Opet Fiesta. It is 188 feet (57 m) long, 168 feet (51 m) wide and encircled with 74 papyrus columns.
Luxor Temple, Egypt
Pompeii the most-frequented archaeological site in the world. It has several well-conserved skeletons, left in the shade by a city suppressed in Vesuvius’s rouse in the year 79 A.D.
Pompeii, Italy
Machu Picchu is a sign of the urban Inca Empire of its supremacy and triumph, a citadel of cut stone laid back together without mortar.
Machu Picchu, Peru
Ayutthaya is a city in Thailand, around 80 kilometers north of Bangkok. The citadels, Buddhist shrines, hermitages and statuettes make the place worth a visit.
Ayuthaya
Tulum is a city on the Caribbean shoreline of Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. It encompasses lovely beaches, jungles, Mayan remains, caves, bays and chic nightclubs.
Tulum
A UNESCO World Heritage Site, Hampi is situated in east-central Karnataka, India. The finest period to stopover Hampi is the winter term from October to February.
Hampi