Wat Phet Samut Worawihaan
(วัดเพชรสมุทรวรวิหาร)
Thai. ‘Temple of the Jewel of
the Ocean’. Name of
a royal Buddhist temple
located along the
Mae Klong
River in
Samut Songkhram
Province, and which was previously known as
Wat Ban Laem and in the past as Wat
Sri Champa (วัดศรีจำปา). It was built in the reign of King Prasat
Thong (ปราสาททอง) of
Ayutthaya, who reigned
from AD 1629 to 1656. The temple was then named Wat Sri Champa.
Legend has it that in AD 1764 villagers from a village near the town
of
Phetchaburi
fled from a Burmese attack and settled down in the district Mae
Klong, to the north of the temple and called their new settlement
Ban Laem (บ้านแหลม), after the name of their original village. When
they later assisted in the restoration of Wat Sri Champa, they
renamed the temple Wat Ban Laem. One day, when fishing on the Mae
Klong River, the villagers of Ban Laem found two Buddha statues in
their nets. One statue was in the
pahng um baat posture, i.e.
standing upright and holding an
alms bowl,
the other statue was seated in the meditation pose, known as
pahng samahti. The standing Buddha
image was named
Luang Pho
Ban Laem and brought to Wat Ban Laem where it was enshrined; the
other, seated Buddha image, was brought back to be enshrined at Wat
Khao Takrao (วัดเขาตะเครา) in Phetchaburi Province. Both statues are
part of the
Legend of the Five Floating Buddha Statues.
See also EXPLORER'S MAP and
WATCH VIDEO.
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