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San Chaopho Suea (Sao Chingcha)

Coordinates: 13°45′14.04″N 100°29′49.56″E / 13.7539000°N 100.4971000°E / 13.7539000; 100.4971000
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San Chaopho Suea (Sao Chingcha)
San Chaopho Suea Phra Nakhon, San Chaopho Suea
In front of the shrine
Religion
AffiliationTaoist, Buddhist
DeityXuantian Shangdi
Location
Location468 Tanao Road, San Chaopho Suea Sub-district, Phra Nakhon District, Bangkok
CountryThailand
San Chaopho Suea (Sao Chingcha) is located in Thailand
San Chaopho Suea (Sao Chingcha)
Shown within Thailand
Geographic coordinates13°45′14.04″N 100°29′49.56″E / 13.7539000°N 100.4971000°E / 13.7539000; 100.4971000
Architecture
FounderTeochew
Completed1834

San Chaopho Suea (Sao Chingcha) (Thai: ศาลเจ้าพ่อเสือ (เสาชิงช้า)) or San Chaopho Suea Phra Nakhon (ศาลเจ้าพ่อเสือพระนคร), usually shortened to San Chaopho Suea (ศาลเจ้าพ่อเสือ; simplified Chinese: 打恼路玄天上帝庙; traditional Chinese: 打惱路玄天上帝廟; pinyin: Dǎ nǎo lù xuán tiān shàngdì miào; commonly known in English as Tiger God Shrine)[1] is a Chinese joss house located at 468 Tanao Road, San Chaopho Suea Sub-district, Phra Nakhon District in the old town Bangkok (Rattanakosin Island) near Sao Chingcha (Giant Swing) and Wat Mahannapharam with features the Southern Chinese architectural style. It is the shrine of Chaopho Suea (เจ้าพ่อเสือ; lit: Tiger God), according to the ancient Chinese belief and it is one of the most respected Chinese shrines in Bangkok and Thailand alike Wat Mangkon Kamalawat in Chinatown, especially during the Chinese New Year.[2]

This shrine was built in 1834 in the reign of King Nang Klao (Rama III). In the past, it was located on Bamrung Mueang Road but was relocated by the command of King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) to the Tanao Road, the present location. The shrine enshrined statues of Chinese Supreme Being, including the Tiger God (Xuan Tian Shang Di[3]), Lord Guan (God of Honesty), Caishen (God of Fortune), Dai Seng Ya (Monkey God)[2] and Mazu (Goddess of the Sea), which are highly venerated among both Thai and Chinese people.[1]

At present, it has been promoted as one of the nine temples under the project "Respect to the Nine Temples" (ไหว้พระ 9 วัด) of Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) along with other temples viz (Phra Nakhon side): Wat Phra Kaew, Wat Pho, Wat Chana Songkhram, Wat Suthat, City Pillar Shrine (Thonburi side): Wat Arun, Wat Rakhangkhositraram and Wat Kalayanamitr.[4] It is now a recognised ancient monument of Bangkok since 1988.[5]

See more

[edit]

other Chinese temples in Bangkok

References

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  1. ^ a b "TIGER GOD SHRINE". TAT.
  2. ^ a b "8 สถานที่ไหว้ตรุษจีน เสริมดวง ขอพร แก้ชง เฮงๆ รวยๆ ต้อนรับปีหมาทอง". Channel 7 (in Thai). 2018-02-06.
  3. ^ "เทพเจ้าตั่วเหล่าเอี๊ย หรือองค์เทพ เฮี่ยงเทียนเสี่ยงตี่". alternativecomplete (in Thai).
  4. ^ Finance, Rabbit (2018-02-03). "ไหว้พระ 9 วัด เสริมสิริมงคลเริ่มต้นปีจอ 2561". LINE TODAY (in Thai).
  5. ^ "โบราณสถานทีขึ้นทะเบียนในกรุงเทพมหานคร ปี พ.ศ. ๒๕๕๔" (PDF). BMA (in Thai).