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Temple in the Middle of the River |
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Written by Richard Barrow
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Thursday, 09 November 2006 |
I like collecting old souvenirs of Thailand. In particular I like to
look out for old guidebooks. Today I was really happy to come across an
old 1 baht bank note dating back to the early years of King Rama IX
when he was a young man. What got my attention was the image of Phra
Samut Chedi. This is a temple in Samut Prakan that has fascinated me
for a long time. It's Thai name is "pagoda in the middle of the river".
However, it is firmly on the West bank of the Chao Phraya River. The
temple was first planned by King Rama II who wanted to show foreigners
entering Siam by ship that this was a Buddhist nation. All contemporary
books that I have read dating back to the 19th Century talked about
this beautiful white temple on a small island.
When people go to temples for festivals they usually walk around the
main building three times in a clockwise direction. As you can see in
the picture above of Phra Samut Chedi, this wasn't easy if there were
lots of people. There wasn't much room. So, what they did was go around
the temple three times in a boat! You can imagine what it would have
been like during the anual temple fair in October. There must have been
hundreds of boats.
During the 19th Century, the ships couldn't enter the river as the
water wasn't deep enough. So, they had to offload at Paknam and
everything was transferred onto barges. These were then taken upriver
to the port at Bangkok. However, in the mid 20th Century, the
government decided to dredge the Chao Phraya River in order to allow
the big ships access to the port. Seemed like a good idea at the time.
However, the invasion of salt water changed the livelihood of local
farmers. Trees in many of the orchards died. Nothing would be the same
again. What was worse was that the river changed direction. The gap
between the small island and the West bank started to silt up until
finally the island became a part of the mainland. You can now no longer
"wien tien" three times around the temple in a boat.
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