| 
			      																								
																												Tamnak Phra Mae Kwan Im (ตำหนักพระแม่กวนอิม)   
																												
			Thai. ‘Residence hall of the goddess of mercy’. Name of a Chinese temple in
			
		      Bangkok's Laht Phraw (Lad Phrao) district, dedicated to 
			the 
		      
		      																									
		      bodhisattva 
																												
																												Phra Mae Kwan Im, 
			i.e. 
    
    		
    Kuan Yin. It was built in 
			1983 by the venerable Guang Seng (กวงเซง - fig.), the head monk of the
			
			
    
	Mahayana Order. The temple consists of two sections, divided by the street in which it is located. The southern section has a large
			
			
            
			pagoda, while the northern 
																												section (fig.) has a three-tiered square pagoda-like edifice with
			
			
			Chinese dragon pillars, which on one side has a crescent-shaped ridge with life-sized statues of the 
              	Eighteen Arahats. The temple has  countless statues of the goddess of mercy, with the courtyard and garden surrounding the main pagoda feature several corners with marble statues of this goddess in her many different manifestations, grouped in 32, 84, and 108 variations respectively. The hall of the northern section contains large statues of various figures from Chinese-Taoist religion and mythology carved from wood, as well as 12 large golden-brown statues of the 
		      
		      																									
		      bodhisattva Kuan Yin,  each 
          																										
    																											
    																											seated  on one of the animals of the 
          
      																											
      																											Chinese zodiac, while in the northeasternmost corner there is a pool with this deity standing on a giant golden 
              
		      dragon. Beside this, the temple also has plenty of other, often 
			life-sized, marble sculptures with themes from 
			
			Taoism,  
			Buddhism, Chinese traditional life and Chinese mythology (fig.) on display, 
			such as the animals of the
			
			
			Chinese zodiac, prince Ang Hai Yi, Lang Tai Su, Master Hui Neng (慧能/惠能 - fig.), the monk Tang Sam Chang Lang, the main characters of 
                
			      																								
			      Journey to the West, as well as of the
			
			      																								
			      Ramakien, etc. The temple observes very strict rules. Monks ordained here have to be vegetarian and are not allowed to disrobe. They must meditate and abandon worldly life in order to devote themselves to the
			
			
        
		dharma completely. The top of the pagoda features a golden globe, which contains a relic. The pagoda is accessible and besides a panoramic view from its pinnacle, it on the inside displays many colourful murals on Buddhism and Thai history (fig.). 
    																											See 
	
	QUADCOPTER PICTURES (1) and (2), as well as
TRAVEL PHOTO, 
																												MAP,  
																												and WATCH VIDEO.  
			回      
			 
          	 
          	 
          _small.jpg)       
         |