Nai Meuang (นายเมือง)
Thai. ‘Mr. City’. Name of one
of the eleven heroic leaders who in 1767,
at the end of the
Ayutthaya period,
fought the invading
Burmese in defence of the
Bang Rajan
fort in
Singburi
(fig.).
He lived in
Sri Bua Thong (ศรีบัวทอง) village in Singburi
and joined the battle with the
villagers of Bang Rachan. He, together with
Nai Choht (นายโชติ),
Nai In,
Nai Thaen and a number of
villagers set up ambushes to kill Burmese soldiers and he went
to invite Phra Ajaan Thammachot (พระอาจารย์ธรรมโชติ), a Buddhist
monk from the province of
Suphanburi of whom it was believed
that he possessed special magic knowledge attained by the
practice of
kasin,
to come and stay at Bang Rajan Camp. The monk accepted the
invitation and after arriving at the fort he distributed
pah prachiad
(fig.)
and
takrut (fig.)
amulets to the warriors of
Bang Rajan in order
to
make them invulnerable.
Nai Meuang died on the battlefield.
In
iconography, he is usually
depicted seated while holding a sword, and one arm held up. 回
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