Wat Wongsamoon Wihaan (วัดวงศมูลวิหาร)
Thai. Name of a small
Buddhist temple, located at the
western end of a large dry-dock at
the
Naval Dockyard, within the compound of the
Royal Thai Navy
base,
on the west bank of the
Chao Phraya
River in
Thonburi
(fig.).
This shipyard's temple
was reportedly built around the beginning of the
Rattanakosin
Era by Krommakhun
Thibetbavon (กรมขุน ธิเบศร์บวร), the son of a
high official at the nearby
Phra Rachawang Deum (fig.),
the former palace of
King
Taksin
(fig.).
Wat Wongsamoon Wihaan is built
on land that belonged to
Chao Phraya
Phra Phutta Yotfa Chulalok
(fig.).
Akin to some royal temples, such as
Wat Phra Kaew
(fig.),
it has no
Sanghavasa, i.e.
there are no monks living here, and ‒besides the
wihaan
itself‒ there are no
other temple buildings. Distinctive to this temple and unique in Thailand, the temple's
Phra prathaan
or principal
Buddha image
is placed with its back against the southern wall, i.e. a side wall
of the wihaan, and thus faces north.
The
Buddha image, which is seated in the
bhumisparsa
pose, is therefore not facing
the main entrance, which is on the eastern side, but faces the side
entrance instead. This was allegedly done in order to rectify any bad omen of
building the palace to the east of the temple, which would have blocked
the Buddha image's view (fig.).
The temple is used by the Naval Dockyard Department to organize Buddhist
activities and for the ordination of its employees, who also come here
to pray and meditate whenever they feel like it.
See MAP.
回
|