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																												Chinatown Gate  
		
		Name of a
			Thai-Chinese Cultural Arch built on the Odeon Circle
			in 
			
			Bangkok's
		
			
			Chinatown, 
			which is a roundabout named after 
			the Odeon movie theatre 
			that in the past was located here, which however is nowadays 
			nicknamed 
			
			Dragon 
			Head, as it is considered the proverbial entrance into Chinatown due 
			to its location at the eastern end of 
			
			
			Yaowaraht 
			Road, which is nicknamed Dragon Road. The gate was built in 1999 AD, 
			in order to commemorate 
			
			King 
			
			
			Bhumipon Adunyadet's 
			
			Sixth 
			Birthday Cycle at the age of 72, and of which the anniversary logo (fig.) 
			is placed on the gate's roof, flanked by two dragons, akin to those 
			often seen on Chinese-style rooftops with a 
			
			
			flaming pearl 
			in the centre (fig.). 
			The gate's roof is in the 
			
			
			keng-style,
			i.e. with 
			upward curved corners,
			complete with
			
			
			Chinese Imperial roof decorations 
			(fig.), 
			and supported by
			
			
			dougong 
			(fig.). 
			A large plaque on the front side has a text in Chinese characters 
			that reads from right to left: Shengshou Wujiang (圣寿无疆), which 
			translates King 
			Without Borders, 
			or Sage 
			with Limitless Long Life.  
			In front of the gate stands a marble statue of a 
			
			
			rabbit,
			the fourth 
			animal in the cycle of the traditional 
			
			Chinese Zodiac 
			(fig.), 
			and which corresponds to the year in which this monarch was born.
			
			It was officially 
			unveiled on 5 December 1999, the King's birthday, in a ceremony 
			presided over by Princess 
	
			
			Sirinthon 
			(fig.),
			the 
			second daughter and third child to King   
	Bhumipon and Queen 
	 
	 
	
			
			
			
			
			Sirikit.
			
			
			On its ceiling 
			
			
			is a bronze plaque with the Chinese character 
			
			
			Tian, 
			which stands for 
			Heaven, 
			whilst exactly underneath it on the floor is a similar bronze
			plaque with the Chinese character Di, which means 
			Earth. Visitors to 
			
		Yaowaraht 
			Road 
			
			may come here to pay respect by making a 
			
			
		wai
			gesture to the sky, the earth and towards the four cardinal directions, 
			reminiscent of a northern-style 
		
			
			kreuang thao thang sih 
			ceremony, 
			while standing and rotating on the bronze plaque in order to receive 
				
				Qi. 
			The gate is flanked by two
			
				Imperial Guardian Lions 
			that were donated by 
			
			China on the occasion of the Kings 
			80th anniversary in 2007. In Thai, the gate is known as
			
		Sum Pratu Watthanatham Thai-Jihn. 
		
		
		See TRAVEL PICTURES (1) and 
			
		(2), as well as 
			
			EXPLORER'S MAP. 
			
			
			
			
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