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					Chedi Khao (เจดีย์ขาว)    
			Thai. ‘White 
					
					Pagoda’.
					Name of a small white
		
					
			stupa 
					located along the 
					
			Ping 
					River in 
			
			
		      Chiang Mai. 
					It is about 8 meter tall, cone-shaped and has a round base. 
					Its origin is unclear, yet according to a legend, a Burmese 
					King surrounded Chiang Mai with his army. To avoid war, the 
					Burmese King agreed with the ruler of Chiang Mai to let 
					their best divers compete in a contest to see whom of the 
					divers could stay under water the longest, and the army of 
					the winning diver would concede to the other party, and thus 
					the Burmeses army would retreat if their diver lost the 
					contest. An old man known as Lung or ‘Uncle’ Piang
			(ลุงเพียง/เปียง) volunteered to 
					compete and the ruler of Chiang Mai accepted him. The two 
					rulers agreed to hold the competition near the area where 
					the chedi now stands. They had two poles posted at a distance 
			in the Ping River. The two army commanders were 
					seated as the divers waited at the post. Then, the generals 
					signaled for the contestants to start diving. A long time 
					passed and the people started to feel uneasy. Finally, one of 
					the divers came up to breath. It was the Burmese 
					delegate. The people of Chiang Mai were relieved and 
					waited for their hero to surface and declare victory. As 
					time passed it became clear that Chiang Mai had won the 
					competition, so its ruler sent his men down to inform Lung Piang. However, when the men returned they 
			reported that the old man had tied himself to the post and had 
					by now drowned, sacrificing himself for the city. As 
					a tribute to Lung Piang's bravery and sacrifice, the ruler 
			thus had the 
					white chedi built at the bank of the Ping River. Nowadays, 
					this landmark memorial serves as a traffic roundabout.
			
					
					
					See MAP.
					
					
			
			
			
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