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Wat Phra Buddhabat
The Buddha's Footprint is found
at Wat Phra Buddhabat in Saraburi Province, 20 kms. from the town
of Lop Buri on the Saraburi - Lopburi route. It is a very important
shrine for Buddhist people, for the Footprint appears on a natural
rock surface while the Buddha's footprints commonly found in many
temples are imitations executed in various materials ranging from
wood to metal. Wat Phra Buddhabat is a royal temple of the first
class rank, the same as Wat Phra Pathom Chedi in Nakhon Pathom province.
The Footprint
was first discovered in the reign of King Song Tham (1610 - 1628).
A group of monks went on a pilgrimage to Ceylon to worship the
Buddha's Footprint at Mount Sumanakut. They were told by the Ceylonese
monks that one of the Lord Buddha's Footprint might be found in
Thailand. On hearing this, the king ordered his officials in all
parts of the kingdom to look for it for the location of the Footprint
had not been identified.
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Meantime,
in a distant area of Saraburi, a hunter while trailing a wounded
deer to this hilly part found a large, curiously shaped hollow
in a rock with water in the hollow. The shape of the hollow resembles
the footprint of a very large man. The hunter therefore reported
his finding to the town governor who, having verified it, sent
word to the capital. King Song Tham came himself to examine it
and saw the appropriate signs of a Buddha's Footprint. Thus the
site was declared a Buddhist shrine and a mondop was built over
the Footprint while the land around the Footprint was made into
a town named "Parantapa" or "Muang Khied Khin".
The hill on which the Footprint was found was renamed Mount Suwan
Banphot or Mount Satjaphan Khiri.
The Buddha's
Footprint is a natural impression in limestone rock that resembles
a very large footprint. It is 50 cms. wide, 150 cms. long and
30 cms. deep. The present mondop covering the Footprint was built
by King Rama I. It was built to replace the one of the Ayutthaya
time that was destroyed by fire when some Chinese brigands, seizing
the opportunity while Ayutthaya was under siege to rob the temple
of valuable objects, set fire to the mondop in order to melt down
the gold in the canopy over the Footprint.
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