Prang Sam Yod, Lop Buri พระปรางค์สามยอด ลพบุรี
One more view to the Phra Kaew Pavilion หอพระแก้ว
The Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ in Mueang Boran
The restaurant at the Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ
The Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ in Mueang Boran
The view into the old Thai noble mansion
House yard and balcony
Inside decoration in a noble Thai house
Open shops at the Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ
Archaic style of a meditation center in Mueang Bor…
A walk through a old Thai noble mansion
The Thai-Songdam Village บ้านโซ่ง
Inside an historic chemist shop 100 years ago
Inside the catholic church
Souvenir shop at the Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ
Inside a photo studio 60 years ago
A tugboat pules the barges to the Floating Market
View to the Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ
Scenery at the Floating Market ตลาดน้ำ
The Wihan at Sa-Moeng วิหารเมืองสะเมิง
The Thai-Songdam Village บ้านโซ่ง
The Thai-Songdam Village" บ้านโซ่ง
Thai barges on the Khlong ขบวนเสด็จพยุหยาตรา
Inside the Sanphet Prasat Palace in Ayutthaya
Buddha room inside a Thai house
Dusit Maha Prasat Palace in the Grand Palace, Bang…
Khun Phaen House in the park of Mueang Boran
Chinese sculptures at Palace Garden in Mueang Bora…
Lotus leafs at the water surface
Wat Thung Si Muang from Ubon Ratchathani วัดทุ่งศร…
Walking through the ancient Thai village
Thai puppetry in Ancient Siam
A Thai village rebuilt in Mueang Boran
Spirit house in the old market town ศาลพระภูมิ
Stupa of Phra Maha That, Chaiya, Surat Thani
Prasat Phra Wihan (Preah Vihear) south entrance in…
Prasat Phra Wihan (Preah Vihear) Relief of catchin…
Prasat Phra Wihan (Preah Vihear) Second pillered c…
Prasat Phra Wihan (Preah Vihear) Second pillered c…
The feminin Buddha Kwan Im เจ้าแม่กวนอิม
Thai Junk เรือสำเภาไทย
Thai barge bows Anantanakkharat ขบวนเสด็จพยุหยาตรา
The re-creation part of Mueang Boran
Thai Junk เรือสำเภาไทย
Thai vendor woman selling Mangos มะม่วง
See also...
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
Treppen und andere Auf- und Abgänge - Stairs and moving staircases etc.
Treppen und andere Auf- und Abgänge - Stairs and moving staircases etc.
Keywords
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- Photo replaced on 17 Feb 2011
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930 visits
The Footprint of the Lord Buddha, Saraburi


The mondop housing the Footprint of the Lord Buddha, one of the most sacred places of Thailand, is an architectural style of Ayutthaya art. It is established on the top of a hill in Saraburi Province.
According to a Saraburi folk tale, a hunter named Phran Boon followed a deer that he had shot to the ridge of a low hill. There, he saw the wounded deer drinking water from a small pond. Astonishingly, the wounds on the creatures body suddenly disappeared. When the deer fled, the hunter came to look at the pond and found that in fact the pond was the footprint of the Buddha. Being reported and investigating the site himself, Phra Chao Song Tham (1620-1628 A.D.) found the an cient Buddha foot print of which its appearance in Siam was foretold by Ceylonese monks in a Ceylonese scripture.
Muang Boran rebuilt Mondop of Footprint in accordance with two distinctive accounts from Thai literature: Nirat Phra Bat written by Sunthorn Phu, the eminent poet of the Rattanakosin era; and Punnowat Kham Chan by Phra Maha Nak of Wat Tha Sai. Both stories had been written before the reconstruction of the mondop took place in the 19th century A.D. The interior was rebuilt from an earlier Thai document by Khun Khlon. The footprint housed in the mondop at Muang Boran was a gift from an Indian president.
According to a Saraburi folk tale, a hunter named Phran Boon followed a deer that he had shot to the ridge of a low hill. There, he saw the wounded deer drinking water from a small pond. Astonishingly, the wounds on the creatures body suddenly disappeared. When the deer fled, the hunter came to look at the pond and found that in fact the pond was the footprint of the Buddha. Being reported and investigating the site himself, Phra Chao Song Tham (1620-1628 A.D.) found the an cient Buddha foot print of which its appearance in Siam was foretold by Ceylonese monks in a Ceylonese scripture.
Muang Boran rebuilt Mondop of Footprint in accordance with two distinctive accounts from Thai literature: Nirat Phra Bat written by Sunthorn Phu, the eminent poet of the Rattanakosin era; and Punnowat Kham Chan by Phra Maha Nak of Wat Tha Sai. Both stories had been written before the reconstruction of the mondop took place in the 19th century A.D. The interior was rebuilt from an earlier Thai document by Khun Khlon. The footprint housed in the mondop at Muang Boran was a gift from an Indian president.
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