Wat Pathum Wanaraam Rachaworawihaan (วัดปทุมวนารามราชวรวิหาร)
Thai. ‘Royal
Lotus
Hall Abode Temple’. Name of a
third class royal temple of the category
Phra Araam Luang
in
Bangkok's
Pathum
Wan district, located in between Siam
Paragon and Central World. It
was commissioned in
1857 by King
Mongkut
(fig.)
who dedicated it to his consort, Queen Debsirindra/Thepsirinthra
(เทพศิรินทรา).
Somdet
Chao Phraya
Borom
Maha
Phichaiyaht
(fig.),
also known as
Tat Bunnag,
was put in charge of the
project and Phraya Samphop Pai (สามภพพ่าย), also called Noo
Hongsakun (หนู หงสกุลl), was appointed construction supervisor.
King Mongkut invited the Laotian monk
Phra Kruh
Pathum Tham Thada
(fig.),
who dwelled at
Wat Bowonniwet Wihaan Rachaworawihaan
(fig.),
i.e. the temple where
King
Rama IV
between
1836 and 1851, then
still a
prince,
had been a monk and abbot himself, to become the new temple's first abbot. Construction was
completed in 1861, but that same year Queen Debsirindra passed away
and the inaugural celebration was postponed.
The
temple's
ubosot,
i.e.
the main prayer hall,
houses a
Buddha image in
the
maravijaya
pose and is known as Phra Sai (พระไส/พระสายน์), whereas
the
wihaan has
two main Buddha images,
i.e. the larger
Phra Serm (พระเสริม) and the smaller Phra Saen (พระแสน). All the
principal Buddha images are in the
Lan Chang-Vientiane
style.
Both
buildings
have mural paintings, that besides a
procession of the
Royal Barges
(fig.)
in the past, also have
scenes from
the Thai-Laotian folk tale of the
Lan Chang
era known as
Sri Thanonchai
and also referred to as
Chiang Miang, and one of
them
is
depicted on a Thai postage stamp issued to mark the 2020
Thai Heritage Conservation Day. The temple compound is
home to
Anuson Sathaan Racha Sakun
Mahidon,
i.e. the ‘Mahidon
Family Memorial Hall’ (map
-
fig.),
a memorial dedicated to members of the Royal Family of
Mahidon Adunyadet (fig.),
the Prince Father of Thailand, whereas the royal ashes of several
members of the
Chakri
dynasty have been enshrined in
the
temple's
main
chedi,
including those of
Queen
Sawang Watthana
(fig.),
a consort of King
Chulalongkorn (Rama
V -
fig.);
Valaya Alongkorn (วไลยอลงกรณ์ -
fig.),
a daughter of Rama V and Sawang
Watthana; King
Ananda
Mahidol (Rama
VIII -
fig.);
and Princess
Sri Nagarindra
(fig.),
the Princess Mother of Thailand. A pavilion to the northeast of the
ubosot houses gilded statues of all the temple's abbots and other
important monks
throughout time, starting with its first abbot, i.e. the Laotian monk. The temple's compound also includes
park with a large trees and a
meditation
hall, known as suan pah sala phra racha
(สวนป่าศาลาพระราชศรัทธา), i.e.
‘Royal
Faith Pavilion Forest Park’,
which is used to practice meditation and for listening to the
dharma. The
park doubles as a botanical garden and also has an
Asoka pillar
carved from stone.
On 19 May 2010, during the
crackdown on anti-government protesters of the United Front for
Democracy Against Dictatorship, i.e. the so-called Red Shirts (fig.),
six people caught up in the temple during heavy crossfire, were shot
and killed here, despite the fact that Wat Pathum Wanaraam had been
declared a safe zone for the injured. It was later determined by the
Southern Bangkok Criminal Court that according to eyewitnesses and
autopsy results, all six people who were killed were shot by
high-speed guns from soldiers stationed on the
BTS Sky Train tracks in front of the temple. Also transliterated Wat Pathum Wanaram Ratchaworawihan, or similar.
See also
POSTAGE STAMP,
TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
(2),
(3),
(4),
(5),
(6),
(7),
(8)
and
(9),
PANORAMA PICTURE, and
MAP.
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