Wat Phah Bong (วัดผาบ่อง)
Thai. ‘Temple of the
Pierced Cliff’. Name of a Buddhist temple in
Chiang Mai
located within the old city moats.
The temple's compound features several interesting objects, such as
statues of King
Naresuan the Great (fig.),
the Burmese monk
Phra Siwalih
(fig.),
a large bust of the demon
Rahu
(fig.),
a giant statue of the Thai historical monk
Luang Poo Thuad
(fig.),
and large scale imitation models of the 12 pagodas in Thailand, i.e.
eleven in the north and one in the northeast, that contain Buddha
relics of various years of the
Chinese zodiac, here
summarized in the order of the
12 Animal Signs of the Zodiac
corresponding to the 12 Earthly Branches,
i.e. 1.
Wat Phrathat Sri Chom Thong Wora
Wihaan (fig.) in Chiang Mai,
Year of the
Rat;
2.
Wat Phrathat Lampang Luang
(fig.) in
Lampang, Year of the
Ox;
3. the
stupa
of
Wat Phrathat Cho Hae
(fig.)
in
Phrae,
Year of the
Tiger;
4.
Wat
Phrathat
Chae Haeng (วัดพระธาตุแช่แห้ง) in
Nan,
Year of the
Rabbit;
5.
Phrathat
Chedi
Wat Phra Singh
(fig.)
in
Chiang Mai,
Year of the
Dragon;
6.
Phrathat
Wat Chedi Jed
Yod (fig.)
in
Chiang Mai,
Year of the
Snake;
7. the
stupa
of Wat Phra
Borommathat (วัดพระบรมธาตุ)
in
Tak,
Year of the
Horse;
8.
Wat Doi Suthep
(fig.) in
Chiang Mai,
Year of
the
Goat;
9.
Wat Phrathat Phanom (fig.)
in
Nakhon Phanom,
Year of
the
Monkey;
10.
Wat
Phrathat Haripunchai
(fig.) in
Lamphun, Year of
the
Cock;
11. the
stupa
of
Wat Ket Karam
(fig.)
in
Chiang Mai,
which
houses the
Phrathat
Ket Kaew
Chulamanie
(พระธาตุเกตุแก้วจุฬามณี)
hair relic,
Year of the
Dog;
and 12.
Wat Phrathat Doi Tung
(fig.)
in
Chiang Rai,
Year of the
Pig.
The temple houses a
Lan Na-style
bronze
Buddha image weighing
680,000
baht. Behind the prayer hall is a
prasat-style
stupa
which has Buddha
statues on all four sides. The temple has a holy well where locals
often come for water to perform religious ceremonies, or to drink it
in order to expel evil from the body. The temple was reportedly
built in the late 15th century AD by
Ngiaw
people, an ethnic tribe
in northern Thailand also known as
Shan,
who migrated from
Mae Hong Son
and named the temple after the village from which they came.
Oddly, at the temple's entrance stands the statue of a cartoon-like
figure of a Buddhist
monk
with four arms, two faces, and wearing two pairs of eyeglasses (fig.). The
temple is also referred to with the appendix Mangkhalaraam (มังคลาราม),
a term that also occurs in the official name of
Wat Poh, i.e.
Wat Phra Chetuphon Wimon Mangkhalaraam,
and roughly translates as ‘Auspicious’.
See also CHINESE CALENDAR,
POSTAGE
STAMPS,
and
WATCH VIDEO (1) and
(2).
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