| Wat Poh Thong (วัดโพธิ์ทอง)   
			Thai.
			‘Temple of the Golden Knowledge’.   
			Name of a Buddhist temple in
			
    
			
			Bangkok's
			Jomthong (จอมทอง) 
			District.
			Off the beaten track and tucked away in a quiet corner along some small canals in western Bangkok, this charming temple has a great variety of unique statues of Buddhist and Hindu mythology. It also has a 
			 multiple domed hall dedicated to King 
			Rama X with murals depicting scenes from his life and coronation. The main and central image of worship in this hall, i.e. the 
																												
		Phra prathaan, is however a large statue of the Hindu god 
				Ganesha. In addition, it houses a number of life-sized golden statues depicting deities from 
				Hinduism, as well as from 
			Buddhism, from both the 
			Mahayana and 
																												
			Theravada schools of thought. 
			Its  inner 
			 walls, ceiling and domes are adorned with colourful murals. 
			The painting of the ceiling of the lobby is 
			 fashioned 
			 in the form of a 
			 giant 
			
			mandala, 
			while the main dome has a large painting of the legless demon and   
			god of darkness  
 
    																											 
    					
						Rahu swallowing the sun, or alternatively the moon, which is here represented by a rounded window that lets in the natural light. There is also a large mural depicting the 
			Churning of the Ocean of Milk and opposite of it a mural of the god 
				Indra riding his three-headed elephant 
																												Airavata, who was produced during the churning of the Ocean of Milk and whose name means ‘Arisen from the Ocean’. The elephant, known in Thai as Erawan, is painted thrusting towards the viewer. The adoration of the royal family is also expressed in the murals of the temple 
																												
			ubosot, that has a number of depictions from scene in the life of King 
																												
			Rama IX, as well as of the 
																												
				Grand Palace and some famous historical and Buddhist sites in and around the capital, such as the Golden Mount of Wat Saket, the Mahakan Fort (Pom Maha Kaan) and 
		
																												
		Phra Phutta Monthon. 
		The complex also has a small 
																												
			
	mondop or 
																												
			sala-like edifice, known as 
		Wang 
																												Ong 
																												Phaya 
			Muchalin
		Nagaraat (วังองค์พญามุจลินท์นาคราช), i.e. ‘Palace of the Naga-King 
																												Phaya 
			Muchalinda’. On either side of its front entrance is a statue of a hermit (reusi): one standing, the other seated. Inside are a number of rather unique statues, including one of 
			
																												
			Tao Ramathep, 
			Phra Upakhut (Shin U Pagok), Phra Siwalih (Shin Thiwali), 
			
			
			Trimurti,
			
			
			Phra pit tah 
			(Phra 
			Maha Ut)
			
			
			seated on a coiled 
			
			
			snake, 
			and so on. The temple also features a large 
			
																												
			teak building in traditional style which in the front has an outdoor altar with a variety of deities, including statues of several 
		yak (giants), Phaya 
																												Suban (Garuda), 
		
																												
		Phra Sangkatjaai seated on a 
		
																												
			turtle, 
																												
		Phra Siam Thewathiraat, etc. In the back of this wooden building, on the canal side, is a statute of a dancing Ganesha, flanked by two Garudas and facing a golden multi-headed naga that stands with its back to the canal. To the left of this is a wooden sala with a golden statue of King 
																												
			Rama V wearing the 
			Crown of Victory, and a scale model of an ancient three masted sailing ship. Another unique statue is found to the left on the outside of the southern entrance to the temple complex, i.e. a Buddha image in the Pahng nahg prok pose, in which the 
																												
			snake coils its body around the Buddha (fig.), rather than 
  
																												depicted 
			as usual, i.e. with
the Buddha seated in meditation on the 
coiled body of the naga (fig.). This statue on the outside of the temple wall forms the back of a shrine within the temple complex that houses 
			other rare statues, 
			such as that of Muchalinda seated on a multi-headed snake and a multi-headed Shiva. 
			In the centre of the complex, underneath a tree in between the many 
			buildings, is a gilded statue of  
			
			
			Bhumidevi 
			
			(Thoranih), 
			the goddess of the earth, whilst in the tree hang  
			
			traditional Thai 
			dresses in various colours,
			
			clothes typically worn and 
			offered to 
			Mae Soi Manee (แม่สร้อยมณี), 
			i.e. the ‘mothers of the ruby necklace’. Also transliterated Wat Pho Thong. 
			
			
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