Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Since then, the quarter where he rested and temporarily enshrined the Phra Kaeo Morakt, hence the name "Phra Kaeo". The result of the division of the new administrative area make Phra Kaeo Railway Station and Wat Phra Kaeo (the place where the Phra Kaeo Morakt was enshrined was later built as a temple) belonging to the neighbouring Krachio. [2]
The abbot removed the stucco and found a Buddha figure carved from a green semi-precious stone, which became known as Phra Kaew Morakot or in English the Emerald Buddha. ("Emerald" refers to its "green colour" in Thai, not its composition.) [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Some art historians describe the Emerald Buddha as belonging to the Chiang Saen Style of the ...
The poem mentions that the Phra Kaeo Morakot, the Emerald Buddha, is resident in Wat Chedi Luang, Chiang Mai, which was true only from 1468 to 1548, and the Phra Sihing Buddha is resident in Wat Phra Singh, Chiang Mai, which was true only from 1407 to 1548. The only year within these ranges that matches the animal year is 1517/8.
Wat Phra Kaew (Thai: วัดพระแก้ว, RTGS: Wat Phra Kaeo, pronounced [wát pʰráʔ kɛ̂ːw] ⓘ), commonly known in English as the Temple of the Emerald Buddha and officially as Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram, [a] is regarded as the most sacred Buddhist temple in Thailand.
Map Phra Chan: มาบพระจันทร์ 1033 78.98 3 บจ. Ban Don Klang: บ้านดอนกลาง 1034 82.31 Halt ลก. Phra Kaeo: พระแก้ว 1035 85.44 3 พก. Ban Phachi Junction: ชุมทางบ้านภาชี 1036 89.95 1 ภช. Final station shared with the Northern Line. Nong Kuai ...
Phra Kaeo railway station is a railway station located in Krachio Subdistrict, Phachi District, Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya. It is a class 3 railway station located 85.445 km (53.1 mi) from Bangkok railway station .
Phra Kaew (Thai: พระแก้ว) may refer to: Wat Phra Kaew, a Buddhist temple in Bangkok, Thailand; Wat Phra Kaew, Chiang Rai, a Buddhist temple in Chiang Rai, Thailand; Haw Phra Kaew, a former Buddhist temple in Vientiane, Laos; Emerald Buddha, the figurine to which the preceding temples' names refer; Phra Kaeo railway station, Bangkok
Preah Keo Morakot temple does not have monks, so King Norodom Sihanouk went to live there during the construction of Preah Phnos for a year (on the 14th day of the second month of the year). On Kor Nopvasak, BE 2490 (July 31, 1947), he was ordained as a monk and took the Temple of Preah Keo Morakot as a place of dharma learning in the practice ...