Wat Mahathat Wora Maha Wihaan
(วัดมหาธาตุวรมหาวิหาร)
Thai. Name of a temple in
Nakhon Sri Thammarat
which is over a thousand
years old, dating back to the
Srivijaya period.
According to legend the grand
stupa
or
chedi
of the temple (fig.)
was originally built in the 6th century by King Sri Dhammasokaraja
I, the first ruler of Nakhon Sri Thammarat, in order to house a
tooth relic of the
Buddha.
In the early 13th century, King Sri Dhammasokaraja V rebuilt the
stupa in the present Sri Lankan style. The main
chedi,
which is known as Phra Borommathat Chedi, is surrounded by 158 smaller chedis.
The
plong shanai,
i.e. the
top part of the spire (fig.),
is plated with pure
gold,
known in Thai as
thong nopphakhun, and has a total
weight of 197.85 kilogram. This gold was obtained from local
citizens, who donated their old jewelry which was melted and made
into gold plates (fig.).
The upper part of the spire is currently leaning at about 1.5
degrees towards the southeast and research has revealed that it can
withstand a maximum lean of 5 degrees before it would collapse. The
stupa has many spiritual aspects incorporated in its dimensions and
arrangements. The height and the width of the stupa, for one, are 28
wah
and 14 wah, i.e. ca. 56 meter high and 28 meter wide, measurements
that in spiritual context refer to the 28 corporeality and 14
functions of consciousness in Buddhist philosophy. In addition, the
stack of rings
on the spire
that decrease in size
towards the top number
52 in
total
and represent the 52
Cetasika;
the 22
elephants
surrounding the base of the stupa symbolize the 22 phenomenological
faculties of the
Indriya; and
the 8
thepanom-like
figures (fig.)
placed around the balcony-like
chan atsadong
(fig.),
akin to
thepchumnum (fig.),
stand for the
Eightfold Path.
The temple claims to be the
largest
in the South of Thailand and the oldest sight in the city. The
ubosot
used to house one of Thailand's three identical
Phra Phutta Sihing,
i.e.
Phra Singh
Buddha images, of which the original
comes from Sri Lanka. It was first imported to
Sukhothai via Nakhon Sri Thammarat, and was later moved to
Chiang Mai and
Ayutthaya.
The other two images are in the National Museum in
Bangkok (map
-
fig.)
and at
Wat Phra Singh in Chiang Mai
(map
-
fig.), all
claiming to have the original one. The Nakhon Sri Thammarat Phra
Singh Buddha image now stands in the Ho Phra Singh in the city's
centre. The temple's main chedi is portrayed on the copper coins of
25
satang
(fig.).
The temple is related to the
Jatukam-Ramathep
amulet, as the name for this charm comes from
Tao
Jatukam
and
Tao
Ramathep, the
guardian gods of the holy relics of the Buddha who stand guard at the doorways
at the top of the stairway leading up to the sacred relics of the
stupa, inside this
temple's main prayer hall,
which is located in the
base of the stupa and known as
Wihaan
Phra
Songmah,
after a
bas-relief
of the Buddha riding his
horse
Kanthaka.
See also MAP,
TRAVEL PHOTOS (1),
(2)
and
(3), and
POSTAGE STAMPS (1) and
(2).
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