Wat Lahm Chang (วัดล่ามช้าง)
Thai. ‘Temple of the
Thetered
Elephants’. Name of a
Lan Na-style
Buddhist temple
in
Chiang Mai,
located within the walls of the old city.
It is a royal temple that dates from 1296 AD and was founded during
the time that King
Mengrai
(fig.)
came to built the city. During the construction of the city, the
King temporarily resided at what is now the site of
Wat Chiang Man
(fig.),
earlier referred to as
Wiang
Lek (เวียงเล็ก) or Wiang Chiang Man (เวียงเชียงมั่น). To its
east was at that time a
wooded area with a large swamp which became the feeding grounds of
the elephants that were used as the royal vehicles of
the Three Kings
of the
Lan Na
Empire (fig.),
i.e. King
Ngam
Muang of
Phayao,
King
Mengrai of Chiang Mai, and King
Ramkamhaeng
of
Sukhothai,
and their courtiers, and
thus the area where the
elephants were held and fed
obtained the
name Wiang Chiang Chang (เวียงเชียงช้าง), i.e. the
‘Walled
City of
Elephants’.
Hence, when the
temple was built in this vicinity, it was consequently named Wat
Lahm Chang and it today has a statue of an elephant chained in on a
platform as a symbol of the temple and the history this place. The
present-day brick and mortar
wihaan
is a new building with a gable that is adorned with golden floral
patterns. According to Lan Na
tradition,
there is a protruding porch and staircase on the side of the wihaan,
that is used for monks to enter and leave. Behind the wihaan is the
principal
phra chedi.
It is a compact round
pagoda
decorated at the base with statues of elephants in the four cardinal
directions. Around the round base supporting the bell-shaped
pinnacle of the chedi are gilded stucco decorations of
thepanom (fig.).
The gilded bell-shaped part, all the way up to the pinnacle, is
adorned with glass, whilst the base of the dome is decorated with
gilded
lotus
petals. Adjacent to it are the remains of an ancient pagoda in brick
with a rectangular base and arches on all four sides, but the top of
it lays in ruins.
Poochaniyawathu, i.e.
‘sacred objects’, in the wihaan include
the
Muk
Dokmai
(มุกดอกไม้)
Buddha image
that was made from between 1,500-2,000 kilograms of
various dried
flowers,
i.e.
dokmai,
that were collected from holy places both in Thailand and from
around the world, and mixed
with lime and
glutinous
rice to create this
Chiang Saen-style statue,
with a height of 90 centimeters,
in order to celebrate
Chiang Mai's 720th anniversary in 2016.
Also transliterated
Wat Lam Chang.
See also EXPLORER'S MAP and
WATCH VIDEO.
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