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Daeng was born in 1894. He was briefly interested in becoming a monk in his 20s, but decided that he would rather be married instead. He raised six children with his only wife. [3]
Luang Pho Daeng, a Thai Buddhist monk who died while meditating in 1973. Buddhist mummies , also called flesh body bodhisattvas , full body sariras , or living buddhas ( Sokushinbutsu ) refer to the bodies of Buddhist monks and nuns that remain incorrupt, without any traces of deliberate mummification by another party.
He was a student of Luang Por Daeng from Wat Ban Nong Phoe. He was a bhikku who strictly practiced Dhamma, and was respected by many people. Later, he became a student of Luang Phor Khong Bhuddhasaro. Understanding the Dhamma he then went Dhamma travel in Nakhon Ratchasima province, then further Dhamma travel to Laos and Cambodia.
Luang Pho Dam. Another highlight is the adjacent cave, which is Tham Luang Pho Dam, the place where Luang Pho Dam is enshrined. A holy Buddha statue that was carved from a piece of stone that attached to the cave's wall, which is created according to the wisdom of people in the past. That is the entire Buddha statue is supported by the cave's wall.
Luangpho Ajahn Tala Uttama ( Thai: หลวงพ่ออุตตมะ, Burmese: ဦးဥတ္တမ [ú oʊʔtəma̰]; Chinese: 龙婆乌达玛, alternatively spelt Luongphaw Ajar Tala Uttama, March 1910 in Mawkanin, Myanmar – 18 October 2006 in Bangkok, Thailand), was a Mon Buddhist monk.
Loung Pordaeng is the name of the monk who died in 1973, in the first citation. Luang Pho Yai is the one who had died in recent years and had gained viral attention. 2600:1700:9770:AE10:40C3:F0E6:5BFD:D491 18:59, 8 December 2023 (UTC) I'm not seeing references to Luang Pho Yai in the article. Were you maybe looking at a different page?
Luangpho Yai (Thai: หลวงพ่อใหญ่, pronounced [lǔa̯ŋ pʰɔ̂ː jàj]), also known as Phra Phutta Rattana Mongkhol Maha Munee (Thai: พระพุทธรัตนมงคลมหามุนี, RTGS: Phra Phuttharattanamongkhon Maha Muni), and The Great Buddha of Roi Et, is the fourth-tallest statue in Thailand.
The Yant was allegedly revealed to Luang Por Phan in a dream, which led him to its discovery on a metal template hidden within a Chedi. Luang Por Phan was also reputed to have received the ability to make powder based amulets of Buddha images sitting on animals from a spirit that appeared as a mayfly (ชีปะขาว). These amulets are ...