Book Number: 21 867
This book is a study of symbols of power and legitimacy. King Prasat Thong, a usurper, attempted to justify his claim to the throne of Ayutthaya by reviving at Wat Chaiwatthanaram the Khmer-influenced prang in a form that had not been used for two hundred years.
The author explores the cultural, historical, political and religious context from which Wat Chaiwatthanaram emerged. She describes its functions on both religious and political levels and the interrelationship between Buddhism and kingship and related conceptions of legitimacy.
Prasat Thong followed King Ramathibodhi, the venerated founder of Ayutthaya, who had used the prang in his architecture, and at Wat Chaiwatthanaram the prang, along with other unusual features, such as the eight conical men (meru), the large crowned Buddha images, and the twelve stucco relief panels, together create a unified visual statement designed to proclaim his ultimate right to reign as King.
(Bangkok, 1996) ISBN 974-8496-59-7
152 pp., 20 pp. col. illus., 150 x 210 mm
19.50 US-Dollar
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