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It is a Thai version of the ancient Indian epic Ramayana, and an important part of the Thai literary canon. King Rama VI was the person who shed the light first on the Ramayana studies in Thailand, by tracing the sources of the Ramakien, comparing it with the Sanskrit Valmiki Ramayana.
Ramayana Water Park (Thai: สวนน้ำรามายณะ) is a water park in Pattaya (Sattahip District, Chonburi province, Thailand), which is a 2-hour drive from Bangkok and 15 kilometers south of Pattaya City. It is one of the biggest water theme parks in Southeast Asia. [1]
Suvannamaccha (Thai: ... literally "golden fish") is a daughter of Ravana (Thotsakan) appearing in the Thai and other Southeast Asian versions of Ramayana. [1] ...
Malyavan is known as Thao Mali Warat (ท้าวมาลีวราช) in Ramakien, the version of the Ramayana in Thailand. He is the old brother of Thao Latsadian , the grandfather of Ravana of Lanka , and is considered to have the reputation of Brahma as a paragon of justice.
For instance, the Ramayana has been expressed or interpreted in Lkhaon Khmer dance theatre, in the Ramanattam and Kathakali of Kerala, in the Mappila Songs of the Muslims of Kerala and Lakshadweep, [6] in the Indian operatic tradition of Yakshagana, and in the epic paintings still extant on, for instance, the walls of Thailand's Wat Phra Kaew ...
Khon is based on the tales of the epic Ramakien (Thai adaptation of Indian Hindu epic Ramayana), [6] as Thai literature and drama draws great inspiration from Indian arts and legend. Khon Ramakien originally could be performed by men only. [6] Women performed only as angels and goddesses. Today women perform as monkeys and demons.
Suvarṇabhūmi (Sanskrit: सुवर्णभूमि; Pali: Suvaṇṇabhūmi) [a] is a toponym, that appears in many ancient Indian literary sources and Buddhist texts [1] such as the Mahavamsa, [2] some of the Jataka tales, [3] [4] the Milinda Panha [5] and the Ramayana.
Thailand's national epic is a version of the Ramayana called the Ramakien, received from the Khmer people through the Lavo Kingdom. [10] The importance of the Ramayana epic in Thailand is due to the Thai's adoption of the Hindu religio-political ideology of kingship, as embodied by the Lord Rama.