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			Phrasangkaraat (พระสังฆราช)   
																												
Thai term for the 
Supreme Patriarch of the Buddhist church. The position is formally appointed by 
the King, although the actual selection is made by senior clergymen. It was 
purportedly first established in 1782, at the founding of the
        Chakri
																												Dynasty by King 
            
			Rama I, though some sources mention 
that a Supreme Patriarch was living at
						
						Wat Rakhang 
						in the 
			      
			      
			      Thonburi 
Period. Hence, some sort of similar postion must apparently have existed ‒be it 
perhaps with a different name or in another form‒ 
prior to the 
						
						
						Rattanakosin
						Period. Since 1989 and for the
Theravada Sect, though with legal authority to 
also oversee other Thai Buddhist sects, including the
    
	Mahayana, this post is held by  
			Somdet 
																												
			
																												
			Phra 
Yannasangwon, 
the 19th Supreme Patriarch since the beginning of the
			Rattanakosin 
Period. Born on 3 October 1913 in 
  
																												
	Kanchanaburi 
he became 100 years old in 2013, 
yet passed away just three weeks after his centenary, on 24 October 2013. He was the longest serving Supreme Patriarch 
up-to-date. The designation Somdet Phra means ‘holiness’ and is equal to that of royalty. It is used as a prefix to both his 
name and his title of Supreme Patriarch (Sangkaraat) and points to his high 
status. Yannasangworn, is a  
            Pali
name and could be translated as ‘Mindful Vision’ or ‘Careful Perception’. His 
name is usually followed by the suffix Sagon 
	Maha Sang(ka) Parinayok (สกลมหาสังฆปริณายก), meaning the ‘Universal Great Leader of the
            
			Sangha’. His full name and title is hence Somdet Phra 
Yahnsangwon Somdet Phrasangkaraat Sagon Maha Sangkaparinayok, although 
officially he has many more titles and names, as Thai ecclesiastic titles often 
take the form of additions or alterations to existing monastic names and are 
granted to monks as they rise through the ranks of the Sangha. He is also 
referred to by his religious nickname Suvaddhano (สุวฑฺฒโน) and his birth name 
is Charoen Khotchawat (เจริญ คชวัตร). Sometimes his name is transcribed Somdet 
Phra Nyanasamvara Suvaddhana Mahathera. In 1956, at the age of 43 and under the 
titular name Phra Dhammavarabhorn, he was appointed guardian and advisor to King
			Rama IX during his royal ordination 
and in 1961 he became abbot of
																												Wat Bowonniwet Wihaan 
Rachaworawihaan. In 2005, due to the failing health of the 
aging Patriarch, a representative to act on his behalf was chosen and appointed 
to serve as Acting Supreme Patriarch. He is known as Somdet Phra Phuttacharn (สมเด็จพระพุฒาจารย์) 
the abbot of 
 
 Wat Saket, commonly known as Kiaw Upasenoh (เกี่ยว 
อุปเสโณ) and previously as Kiaw Chokechai (เกี่ยว โชคชัย). Also transcribed Phra 
Sangharaja. It derives from 
                  Pali 
and literally means ‘King 
(Raja) 
of the Buddhist Order (Sangha)’, 
a title that in 
		      Cambodia 
is referred to as 
																												Phreah 
																												Sangkhoreach (សង្ឃរាជ -
fig.). 
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