Chedi Chang Lom (เจดีย์ช้างล้อม)
Thai.
‘Elephants
Surrounded
Pagoda’.
Name of a Buddhist
pagoda,
located within the
temple complex of
Wat Chiang Man (fig.),
the first and oldest temple of
Chiang Mai,
constructed in 1297 AD. Thought the present edifice is
a replacement of the original structure, it is
still the oldest building within the temple complex. The original
chedi
from was destroyed in reign of Phaya
Thilokarat (1441-1487 AD), the twelfth
ruler of the
Lan Na
Kingdom, who ordered a new one
built in 1471 AD, made with
sila daeng.
The present pagoda consists of a square
base with a terrace -of fifteen life-sized
stucco
elephants that surround and support the
pagoda,
of which the upper part is gilded.
Initially, the animals were all white in collour, and are thus in
fact
Chang Pheuak, i.e.
White Elephants,
which are deemed auspicious creatures in Thai culture and
Buddhism.
Directly underneath the pinnacle, the chedi contains a bell shaped
relic chamber. The name Chang Lom is also used for similar
structures elsewhere, such as Wat
Chang
Lom in
Sri Satchanalai
Historical Park,
Wat Sorasak
in
Sukhothai
Historical Park, which is also referred
to as Wat
Chang
Lom (fig.),
and
the
chedi
of
Wat Mahaeyong in
Ayutthaya,
which is equally
surrounded by an elephant terrace
(fig.).
See MAP.
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