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					Wat Mahaeyong (วัดมเหยงคณ์)  
			
			Thai-Singhalese. Name of 
			an ancient Buddhist temple in 
			
			Ayutthaya, 
			which was built in 
			1438 AD and commissioned by King Borommarachathiraat II (1424–1448). The 
			temple is located north of the former royal palace and has a walled 
			corridor decorated with 
			
			
			
			lotus motifs, that connected to the arched 
			entrance of the
			
			      
			      ubosot
			and was reserved 
			for the king and members of the royal family (fig.). The temple also 
			features a bell-shaped
			
			
		      chedi 
			with a square base of which the surrounding area is decorated by a 
			row of
			
			      
			      White Elephants, 
			similar to 
Wat Sorasak in 
			
			
			Sukhothai
			
			(map 
			- 
			
			fig.) and 
			
Wat Chang Lom in 
Sri Satchanalai 
			(fig.). 
			 
			Prior to the first fall 
			of Ayutthaya in 1569, this monastery was used by the Burmese King 
			Bayinnaung as his military headquarters, while his armies besieged 
			the city. After the fall, he also received the defeated Ayutthayan 
			King Phra
			Mahinthrathirat 
			in this temple. Eventually, the temple was deserted after the last 
			fall of Ayutthaya in 1767. 
			The elephant terrace of Wat Mahaeyong is depicted on a Thai postage 
			stamp issued in 1994, as part of a set of four stamps to commemorate 
			the annual 
		
		
		Thai Heritage Conservation 
			(fig.). 
			Also transcribed Wat Maheyong. 
			
			
			
			See MAP.
			
			
			
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