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Wat Suan Dok วัดสวนดอก , Chiang Mai

Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiWat Suan Dok, Chiang Mai (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok (GPS: 18.78823, 98.96776; Thai: วัดสวนดอก ) is a major Thai temple in Chiang Mai, Thailand. It is due to this temple that the famous Wat Doi Suthep was built. It was built by King Ku Na in 1371 for the famous monk Sumana. The name translates as "Monastery of the Flower Garden". Suan Dok means "flower garden". It was a wiang, or fortified settlement. It got its name because it was built on the site of a former royal flower garden.

The monk Sumana had received a vision about a relic in Sri Lanka. So he went there to get it and brought it back to Chiang Mai, to be enshrined in Wat Suan Dok. However, just as the relic was about to be enshrined, it broke into two. It is regarded as inauspicious to keep both pieces in the same temple. Therefore, another piece of the relic was placed on a white elephant, and the elephant was sent out to locate a new place to enshrine the relic. This was how the location of Wat Doi Suthep was determined.

The original compound of Wat Suan Dok covers an area across the present-day Suthep Road, that if you look to the other side of the road from Wat Suan Dok, you can still see the earthen ramparts which was part of the earlier fortification of the temple.

Wat Suan Dok has a distinctive chedi. This chedi dates from the 14th century when Wat Suan Dok was built, and houses the relic brought back by the monk Sumana.

Another distinguishing feature of Wat Suan Dok is the numerous royal tombs in its compound. These tombs hold the remains of several generations of the Chiang Mai royal family. They were collected from different places in Chiang Mai and brought here to be buried collectively by Princess Dararatsami in 1909.

To the east of the chedi is a large building which is a sala gan parian, or preaching hall. It was built in 1932 by Khru Ba Srivichai, the famous monk who built the road to Doi Suthep and left his mark in many temples in Chiang Mai. Built in the central Thai size, and not the Lanna style of Chiang Mai, two Buddha statues back to back, one standing, another seated in the bhumisparsa position.

Getting there

Wat Suan Dok is located on Suthep Road, which leads west out of the old city of Chiang Mai. It is approximately 1 kilometer from Suan Dok Gate at the old city wall.

Address

Wat Suan Dok
139 Suthep Road,
Tambon Su Thep,
Amphoe Muang Chiang Mai,
Chang Wat Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand.

Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiOne of the entrance arches of Wat Suan Dok, Chiang Mai (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiThis is the sala gan parian or preaching hall of Wat Suan Dok, Chiang Mai (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiCorner view of the sala gan parian of Wat Suan Dok (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiSide view of the sala gan parian of Wat Suan Dok, with the chedi at the rear (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiOne of the entrance arches to Wat Suan Dok, Chiang Mai (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiOne of the gates of Wat Suan Dok, Chiang Mai (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiTombs to Chiang Mai royalty at Wat Suan Dok (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiTombs to Chiang Mai royalty at Wat Suan Dok (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiThe chedi of Wat Suan Dok (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok, Chiang MaiThe chedi of Wat Suan Dok (26 October, 2006)


Wat Suan Dok on Google Street View

Wat Suan Dok (Mar 2018)

Wat Suan Dok is on the map of Chiang Mai

List of Wats in Chiang Mai and Wats in Thailand

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Dear visitor, thank you so much for reading this page. My name is Timothy Tye and my hobby is to find out about places, write about them and share the information with you on this website. I have been writing this site since 5 January 2003. Originally (from 2003 until 2009, the site was called AsiaExplorers. I changed the name to Penang Travel Tips in 2009, even though I describe more than just Penang but everywhere I go (I often need to tell people that "Penang Travel Tips" is not just information about Penang, but information written in Penang), especially places in Malaysia and Singapore, and in all the years since 2003, I have described over 20,000 places.

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