Carvings of apsaras — celestial dancers who entertain the gods —lit by the sun shining through the stone balustered windows of the West entrance gopura of Angkor Wat, Cambodia. The world's largest religious monument and an architectural masterpiece, it is the apogee of classical Khmer style. Built between 1113 and 1150 by King Suryavarman II, it was both city and temple, the capital of the Empire and the State Temple dedicated to the god Vishnu. Surrounded by a broad moat, it covers 200 hectares (1.5 km by 1.3 km) and is a microcosm of the Hindu universe.