Wat Asokaraam (วัดอโศการาม)
Thai. Name of a Buddhist
temple in
Samut Prakan,
named after
the Indian-Mauryan Emperor
Asoka,
who ruled India from 273
to 232 BC and during
whose reign
Buddhism
was adopted as the state religion and promoted throughout his empire.
The temple
features an Asoka the Great Monument
(fig.),
as well as an
Asoka Pillar
in the form of a tall sandstone column with a
single
statue of
a
lion
(fig.),
similar to the pillars this
ruler had
erected throughout his
vast empire after his
conversion to
Buddhism,
in order to propagate the teachings of the
Buddha.
The temple was completed in 1954 AD and
named after the Indian-Mauryan
ruler by the founder
Luang Pho Lih
(fig.),
after he had spent a
Buddhist Lent
in
Sarnath
(fig.),
and whose coffin is kept in a side room of the main prayer hall
after his demise in 1961.
The
temple's
wihaan, i.e.
the main prayer hall,
houses a replica of the
Phraphutta Chinnarat
Buddha image
(fig.)
in
Phitsanulok.
The
temple's compound is also home to the
Phra Thutangkha Chedi
(map
-
fig.).
This white edifice
has a square floor plan and is topped with 13 bell-shaped
stupas.
There is
a large stupa in the centre, surrounded by 12 smaller ones arranged
diagonally in 4 rows of 3, in descending order from the central peak.
Usually transliterated Wat Asokaram and the
pagoda-hall
is also spelled Phra Dhutanga Chedi.
See also TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
(2),
(3),
(4)
and
(5),
as well as
MAP.
回
|