Wat Bang Kung (วัดบางกุ้ง)
Thai. Name of an ancient temple in
Samut Songkhram,
which dates from the
Ayutthaya
period and was once used as a military
camp for Siamese navy troops during the 1765 war against the
invading Burmese, of which the many historical statues, including
warriors, soldiers practicing traditional Thai martial arts, such as
muay thai,
and canons, scattered around the temple's compound still witness
today.
The temple's
ubosot
is now
overgrown by three, over 200 year old
ton sai,
i.e.
‘banyan
trees’,
that attached their root systems to the
bot's
outer walls, completely
engulfing it. It houses a
Buddha image
known as
Luang Pho
Ninmanih (นิลมณี),
which is in
Sukhothai
style and is seated
in the
maravijaya
pose.
See
also POSTAGE STAMP,
TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
(2) and
(3),
WATCH VIDEO, and
MAP.
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