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			Wat Saen Fang (วัดแสนฝาง)    
			Thai. ‘Temple of a Hundred Thousand Indian Redwood Trees’. Name of a Buddhist temple 
			
			
			in 
			
		      Chiang Mai. 
			 This monastery, which lays somewhat hidden from street view, can be entered through the main gate, a back gate and a smaller side gate, which consists of a metal fence and a pathway flanked by a balustrade of
			
			  
     nagas 
																												(fig.). Besides the main prayer hall, the compound also has several other buildings, including a library, and a Burmese-style chedi, guarded by mythological lions known as chintha (fig.), and adorned with White Elephants, blue dragon staircases, and golden 
		      
		      																									
              chattra and umbrellas, and a dome with 
			waen fah glass inlay.  
																												The temple's main Lan Na-style  
																												prayer hall houses several 
		      
		      			
              Buddha images, 
			with the 
			principal image depicted sitting in the 
			
			
			maravijaya 
			pose (fig.) 
			with  a 
			
			
			bhumisparsa
			
			
			mudra. The 
			hall previously served as the royal 
		      																									residence of 
		      
																												
			Phra Chao Kawilorot Suriyawong (r. 1856-1870), before becoming the temple's 
			wihaan in 1878 on the orders of his successor, Phra Chao Inthawichayanon (r. 1873-1896). In the back of the compound is a graveyard with smaller 
			
			
			stupas 
			containing the ashes of deceased monks, as well as a tall 
			      		
						ubosot
						with a rooftop 
						decorated with 
						
	Kinnaras. Though this temple was reportedly founded in the 16th century AD, 
			none of the present structures are older than the 19th century AD. 
			
			See also 
			
			
			TRAVEL PICTURES 
			and 
			
					MAP.
			 
			
			
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