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PBUOS137R : Very Rare Collection Set of Phra Somdej amulets with golden symbol and casing (Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram (Temple of Emerald Buddha), Bangkok)
Stock Status Out of Stock   
Size 2.4 cm x 3.8 cm




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100% Authentic from temple

Name: Set of Phra Somdej amulets with golden symbol and casing

Name: celebrate 60 years of King Rama IX reign

From: Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram (temple of emerald Buddha), Bangkok

Material:these powerful Phra Somdej amulets created from many holy powders such as powder from Phra Somdej amulet at Wat Rakhang, Phra Somdej amulet at Wat Mai Amataros and Phra Somdej amulet at Wat Ket Chaiyo. Moreover, in each amulet mixed with holy material such as red ruby, topaz and Sapphires.

Year: BE2553 (CE2010)

Size: 2.4 cm x 3.8 cm

Code: 715

Origin: Thailand

Purpose: donate the money to build pagoda at Wat Thammatharo in Australia.

Power: Phra Somdej amulet is one of great five Buddha amulets in Thailand because whoever worship Phra Somdej amulet will get happiness, peaceful, successful and progression.

Ceremony: there were top monks around Thailand joined to bless at Buddhist church of Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram on auspicious day or 17 November CE2010.

Feature: in the back of Phra Somdej amulet was embedded with golden symbol of King Rama IX. Moreover, these amulets was put in real gold casing too.

History of Phra Kaeo Morakot:
According to the legend, the Emerald Buddha was created in India in 43 BC by Nagasena in the city of Pataliputra (today's Patna). The legends state that after remaining in Pataliputra for three hundred years, it was taken to Sri Lanka to save it from a civil war. In 457, King Anuruth of Burma sent a mission to Ceylon to ask for Buddhist scriptures and the Emerald Buddha, in order to support Buddhism in his country. These requests were granted, but the ship lost its way in a storm during the return voyage and landed in Cambodia. When the Thais captured Angkor Wat in 1432 (following the ravage of the bubonic plague), the Emerald Buddha was taken to Ayutthaya, Kamphaeng Phet, Laos and finally Chiang Rai, where the ruler of the city hid it. Cambodian historians recorded capture of the Buddha statue in their famous Preah Ko Preah Keo legend. However, some art historians describe the Emerald Buddha as belonging to the Chiang Saen Style of the 15th Century AD, which would mean it is actually of Lannathai origin.

Historical sources indicate that the statue surfaced in northern Thailand in the Lannathai kingdom in 1434. One account of its discovery tells that lightning struck a pagoda in a temple in Chiang Rai, after which, something became visible beneath the stucco. The Buddha was dug out, and the people believed the figurine to be made of emerald, hence its name. King Sam Fang Kaen of Lannathai wanted it in his capital, Chiang Mai, but the elephant carrying it insisted, on three separate occasions, on going instead to Lampang. This was taken as a divine sign and the Emerald Buddha stayed in Lampang until 1468, when it was finally moved to Chiang Mai, where it was kept at Wat Chedi Luang.
The Emerald Buddha remained in Chiang Mai until 1552, when it was taken to Luang Prabang, then the capital of the Lao kingdom of Lan Xang. Some years earlier, the crown prince of Lan Xang, Setthathirath, had been invited to occupy the vacant throne of Lannathai. However, Prince Setthathirath also became king of Lan Xang when his father, Photisarath, died. He returned home, taking the revered Buddha figure with him. In 1564, King Setthathirath moved it to his new capital at Vientiane
In 1779, the Thai General Chao Phraya Chakri put down an insurrection, captured Vientiane and returned the Emerald Buddha to Siam, taking it with him to Thonburi. After he became King Rama I of Thailand, he moved the Emerald Buddha with great ceremony to its current home in Wat Phra Kaew on March 22, 1784. It is now kept in the main building of the temple, the Ubosoth.

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Amulets by Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram (Temple of Emerald Buddha), Bangkok


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