| Wat Bang Khae Yai (วัดบางแคใหญ่)  
			Name of an ancient Buddhist 
			temple in 
			
			      Samut Songkhram, 
			which dates from the 
			
		Ayutthaya 
			
			period and was renovated in the reign of
			
			      
			      Rama II.
			
			The 
			temple's 
			      
			      ubosot,
			i.e.
			the main prayer hall, 
			houses a 
			
		Buddha image in 
			the 
			
			maravijaya 
			pose. The temple has 
			several murals, including 
			
		frescoes 
			 painted on the 
			wooden walls of the abbot's 
			
			
	kuti. 
			They are believed to
			
			date from period of the 
					
					Nine Armies War, 
					i.e. the Burmese-Siamese War (1785-1786), when the Thai 
					
					
		Army 
					went to war with 
					
		Burma, 
					passing through villages of the Mon, 
					
			Thawai, 
					
			Tai Yai 
					and 
					
	Karen 
					communities, and hence depicts the lives of people found 
					along the way. One scene, i.e. that of 
			 
					a 
					
	Mon 
					man and a girl, dressed in a skirt that covers her breasts, 
					pounding 
					
			      rice 
					
			is 
			depicted on a Thai postage stamp issued in 2020 to mark the annual 
			
			Thai Heritage Conservation Day. 
			
						
						See also TRAVEL PICTURES 
						(1) 
						and 
						
						(2), 
						
			
						POSTAGE STAMP, 
						and 
						
						
						MAP. 
			
			
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