Wat Ket Karam (วัดเกตการาม)
Thai. Name of a Buddhist temple in
Chiang Mai,
of which the main
stupa
houses a hair relic of the
Buddha,
which is known as
Phrathat
Ket Kaew
Chulamanie.
The temple is dedicated to people who were born in the
Year of the
Dog,
according to the
Chinese zodiac.
Thus, at the base of the
chedi
are some
statues of dogs and local people born
in this
zodiac
year are
expected to visit this temple at least once in their lifetime
in order to make merit. In 2018, i.e. a Year of the Dog,
this temple was publicized on a set of Thai postage stamps to
celebrate
Visakha Bucha,
together with three other temples in northern Thailand that house
Buddha
relics and
relate to other years of
the
zodiac.
Besides this, the main stupa has four staircases, one
for each of the cardinal points and flanked with a pair of
nagamakara (fig.),
whose elongated bodies meet at each of the
main corners of the stupa, where the end of their tails is held by a
Garuda
(fig.).
It is unknown when this temple was built but records show that
ordination ceremonies were already held here in the reign of
Phaya
Meuang Ket Klao (AD 1526-1538
and 1543-1545), while the
stupa was renovated
after it had collapsed in 1578. According to legend, ancient
ceremonies were performed at this temple to protect Chiang Mai's
ruling princes from harm. The temple is located on the east bank of
the
Ping
River, in the centre of
the Chinese community in Chiang Mai.
See also
POSTAGE STAMP
and
MAP.
回
|