Wat Nong Nok Chum (วัดหนองนกชุม)
Thai. ‘Swamp Bird Community
Temple’. Name of a quiet Buddhist countryside temple
in the
tambon
Thung Sai (ทุ่งทราย) of Sai Thong Watthana (ทรายทองวัฒนา) district,
in
Kamphaeng Phet
province. The temple's buildings are mostly built out of wood, often
using large trunks of exceptional trees as pillars, whereas some
have been carved into images. In the south, stretching over the
entire length of the compound, is a large water reservoir. The
complex has two main entrance gates, one in the north and one in the
east. The roofed
north gate houses two gilded
Buddha images,
the one on the left standing in a
pahng
tawaai naet
pose, i.e.
with
the arms crossed in front of the waist, the right hand resting on
the left, whilst the one on the right is seated in the
maravijaya
pose. On either side of the gate is a three-headed
naga, coiled on
a wall of which the one on the right
is decorated with
bas-reliefs
of a butterfly, different kinds of birds and flowers, whereas the
one on the left displays mythical creatures, such as
hong
and
kinnari,
also in 3D.
On
either side of the
roofed east gate is a
nagamakara, also
resting on a wall, which is
embossed with aquatic animals, flowers and birds. In addition, on
the left side, is a statue of a
gajasingha,
and on the right side, that of a
singha —both
white and adorned
with gold. East of the north gate is an elongated
sala-style
open pavilion with
three wooden
Buddha images, two
reclining Buddha images and one seated
in the
maravijaya
pose, whereas behind the
east gate is a long corridor that consists of a downward curved
metal roof supported by large tree trunks.
Many of the
tree trunks used as pillars to the support the roofs have multiple
burrs. To the the north of this covered walkway is a plaza with an
open square-shaped pavilion, which houses four Buddha images that
are seated back to back in the
maravijaya pose.
At the other end of the corridor is the temple's
ubosot.
In front of the square-shaped
pavilion are two pillars topped with a golden
nok hadsadi,
i.e. a mythical bird with the head of an
elephant,
as well as three
walking Buddha
images in wood,
and a
green
naga-head
that protrudes from the ground. The temple's
wihaan,
located near the north gate, resembles a wooden chalet of which the
northern staircase is flanked by a green naga on one side and a blue
body of a
snake
or naga with the head of an
elephant
(fig.)
on the other side. The
latter is in Thai referred to as
chang hua
naak, i.e.
‘elephant-headed naga’ (fig.), which is
officially known as
chang patjay naaken
(or
chang patjay naak),
literally
‘elephant [with the] essence of
[a]
naaken (or
‘elephant [with the] essence of
[a] naga’), and which
represents
Vishnuphong, i.e.
the rainmaking
White Elephant
(fig.)
that occurs in the
Wetsandornchadok
or
Vessantara jataka,
for one. On the inside, the wihaan
is also made of wood and the principal
Buddha image
it houses is of a dark chestnut colour
(fig.).
See MAP.
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