Wat Saket (วัดสระเกศ)
Thai. Temple in Bangkok on the artificial mount Phu Khao Thong or
‘Golden Mount’ (fig.). The
hill was created after a large
chedi,
still under construction by
Rama III, collapsed due to the soft soil beneath. The hill of sand and brick that arose
was left until
Rama IV had a small chedi built on its
peak. Later
Rama
V made restorations and added to the structure by placing a relic of the Buddha from India, given to him by the British government, in the
chedi. To prevent erosion the hill was cast with a surrounding concrete covering
during WW II. The temple mount is 77 meters tall (fig.) and was in the
Rattanakosin
Period the highest place in the city and considered the navel of the
capital. Even today, it still offers a good view over the
area with its low-rise buildings (fig.)
that are now dwarfed by the many skyscrapers in the distant.
In 1820,
during the reign of King
Rama II
(fig.),
cholera had spread from Penang (fig.)
to
Bangkok, and claimed around 30,000 lives. At the time, it was
common practice to transport the bodies of the dead outside the old
city for cremation and the gate used for this purpose was located
close to the spot where Wat Saket was later built. Unable to cope
with the large number of dead, some bodies had to be left in the
open as they could not be cremated or buried in time. This
attracted vultures who came to devour the dead bodies
(fig.). The epidemic
lasted for six decades and returned annually with every dry season.
There was another severe outbreak in 1849, during the reign of King
Rama III,
when one out of ten of all citizens of Bangkok and the surrounding
areas died of the disease, and it
wasn't contained until after
yet another major outbreak in 1881,
during the reign of King
Rama
V. With
hundreds of people dying every day and corpses piling up, Wat Saket
was full of vultures, perching on tree branches, the temple walls
and even on the monk's
kutis. The
vultures would open their wings and compete with each other for
meals, creating a gruesome scene, akin to
Tibetan sky burials in which
corpses are chopped up and left to be picked clean by vultures, who
in this way are believed to take the dead to Heaven. Since monks often meditate on death, the
highly revered monk
Luang Poo Toh
Phrommaramsih (fig.),
i.e.
Somdet
Phra
Phutthajaan (fig.)
of
Wat Rakhang
(fig.), came to
this sky burial ground
to
observe the sight in order to meditate
on the impermanent nature of existence. The
history of the
Vultures of Wat Saket
is today remembered with
a
display at the base of the temple
(map
-
fig.),
adjacent to a small
mondop
that contains
a
Buddhapada
(map
- fig.).
The temple is
one of the few throughout Thailand conferred with the highest royal title
of
Rajavora
Maha Vihaan. Its
full name is Wat Saket Rajavora
Maha Vihaan and it is depicted on
two
baht
coins, initially issued in 2005 (fig.).
In addition, it is portrayed on several
postage stamps, including
a 2004
joint
issue with Italy (fig.).
See MAP.
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