Wat Chong Nonsi
This article, Wat Chong Nonsi, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
Reviewer tools: Inform author |
This article, Wat Chong Nonsi, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
Reviewer tools: Inform author |
- Comment: WP:FACEBOOK is only acceptable as an page of the subject itself- try fidning on https://www.papaiwat.com itself. WP:YOUTUBE sources and reliable when its version of a separate reliable source like a news broadcast (travel vlog doesn't work). EmeraldRange (talk/contribs) 15:00, 8 January 2024 (UTC)
Wat Chong Nonsi | |
---|---|
Religion | |
Affiliation | Buddhism |
Sect | Theravāda Mahā Nikāya |
Status | Civilian temple |
Location | |
Location | 463 Nonsi rd, Chong Nonsi, Yan Nawa, Bangkok 10120 |
Country | Thailand |
Geographic coordinates | 13°41′35″N 100°32′46″E / 13.693066°N 100.546156°E |
Wat Chong Nonsi (Thai: วัดช่องนนทรี, pronounced [wát t͡ɕʰɔ̂ŋ nōn.sīː]) is a Thai Buddhist temple of the late Ayutthaya period. The temple is adjacent to the edge of Chao Phraya river on the east side of Bangkok in the area known as Chong Nonsi.[1] The front of the temple faces the east likewise because it is the range where the river flows upward, opposite the side of Samut Prakan's Bang Kachao.[2]
The main construction is the ubosot (ordination hall). It is the junk-like bending hall with five rooms, two porches, which looks like Mhaaud Church[a]. The front of the ubosot is made as a second projecting portico, with four pillars supporting the roof timbers. The gable is made as a carved-wooden partition without patterns. The roof is wavy, made of tiles, then plastered with cement adjacent to the eavea. The front of the hall has cetiyas (pagodas) and bai sema (stone boundary makers) stones lined up.[4]
The internal part houses the Buddha statue in subduing Mara posture, enshrined as the principal Buddha image, with the other four Buddha images spectacularly arranged in tiers. They are placed in pairs in an indenting way. At the base of the Buddha image, there is also gorgeous stucco with the lion's legs finely designed as the picture of garuda.[5]
The inside of the ubosot has mural paintings that narrate Jataka Tales, starting from the left wall of the principal Buddha image counterclockwise until completing ten stories. The front wall above the doorway is painted with the picture of Maravijaya. The paintings at Wat Chong Nonsi represent the pictures of the Ayutthaya period.[6]
This temple is one of the places where such paintings are completely extant, which may be contemporary with the paintings at Wat Prasat, Nonthaburi.
Notes
References
- ^ "วัดช่องนนทรี ยานนาวา ที่เที่ยวกรุงเทพ วัดดัง สวยเก่าแก่ แห่ง เมืองกรุง". True ID (in Thai). 9 April 2023.
- ^ เล็กสุขุม, ดร สันติ (2017). วัดเจดีย์ : ในและนอกเกาะกรุงศรีอยุธยา (in Thai). Matichon Public Company Limited. ISBN 978-974-02-1561-5.
- ^ "อุด-มหาอุด". Royal Society of Thailand (in Thai). 2008-05-08. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
- ^ วัดช่องนนทรี. Mư̄ang Bōrān. 1982.
- ^ "วัดช่องนนทรี ศิลปะไทยสมัยกรุงศรีฯ ที่อยู่มาจนถึงราชธานีปัจจุบัน". common: Knowledge, Attitude, make it Simple. becommon.co.
- ^ "ทรุดหนัก! "หลวงพ่อดำ" วัดช่องนนทรี สมัยอยุธยาตอนปลาย ไร้กรมศิลป์ฯดูแล | The Active". The Active (in Thai). 18 April 2022.
- Pending AfC submissions
- Pending AfC submissions in article space
- AfC submissions by date/10 March 2024
- AfC submissions by date/01 January 2024
- Yan Nawa district
- Buddhist temples in Bangkok
- Registered ancient monuments in Bangkok
- Buildings and structures on the Chao Phraya River
- 18th-century Buddhist temples