Wat Phra Si Rattanasatsadaram or Wat Phra Kaeo
(Temple of the Emerald Buddha)

Plan of the Temple of the Emerald Buddha


His Majesty replaces the Emerald Buddha's summer costume with that for the rainy season"


Wat Phra Si Rattanasatsadaram from the northeast


Mural painting of the Gallery or Phra Rabiang inside an entrance to the Grand Palace
Wat Phra Si Rattanasatsadaram, commonly called the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, was built early in the reign of King Rama I, founder of the Chakri Dynasty, who established Rattanakosin (Bangkok) as the capital of Kingdom in A.D. 1782. The new temple was completed in A.D. 1784. This royal chapel occupies its own compound within the Grand Palace as Wat Phra Si Sanphet in the former capital, Ayutthaya. It is the most revered temple in the city, but being the Royal Chapel no monks reside there. It serves as the centre for all religious rites pertaining to the State and Monarchy, such as ordina tions under royal patronage, special ecclesiatical rites, and the swearing of fealty.
King Rama I brought the image of the Emerald Buddha, which is regarded by the Thai people as the palladium of the Kingdom, from the palace in Thon Buri the former capital on the west bend of the Chao Phraya River, to the Main Assembly Hall of the newly-built Royal Chapel where it has remained ever since.
During its two hundred years's history, the Chapel has undergone several renovations, restorations and additions to its edifices. Extensive restoration and additional construction were carried out in the reigns of King Rama III (A.D. 1824-1851) and King Rama IV A.D. 1851-1868). in time for the Bangkok Centennial celebrations in 1882. The Royal Chapel thus incorporates no less than two centuries of Rattanakosin craftsmanship and artistic ingenuity which are, in themselves, an expression of the essential entity of the Thai people
The renovation of the entire temple was undertaken in the present reign of Rama IX, His Majesty the King Bhumibol Adulyadej, to commemorate the Rattanakosin Bicentenary in the year 1982. His Majesty conferred the responsibility on "Somdej Phra Debratanarajasuda Sayamboromrajakumari" the Chairman of the Restoration Commmittee.
Important Edifices in the Temple

  • The Assembly or Ordination Hall
  • Phra Rabiang (The cloister or Galleriy)
  • Sala Rai (Pavillons around the Assembly Hall)
  • Ho Phra Ratchaphongsanuson (Rattanakosin)
  • Ho Phra Ratchakoramanuson (Ayutthaya & Thon Buri)
  • Photithat phiman
  • Ho Phra Khanthararat
  • Ho Rakhang (The Belfry)
  • Phra Mondop
  • Prasat Phra Thep Bidon (The Royal Pantheon)
  • Ho Phra Monthian Tham
  • Phra Si Ratana Chedi (The Main Stupa)
  • Ho Phra Nak
  • Model of Angkor Wat
  • Phra Wihan Yot (The Spired Chapel)
  • Phra Chedi Thong The Twin Golden Stupas
  • The Terrace and Its Decorative Objects
  • Mondop Yot Prang
  • The Emblems of Each King Above the Bronze Figures of Elephants
  • Phra Prang Paed Ong (The Eight Coloured Prangs)
  • The Guardian Demons


  • On the marble terrace stand the symbolic offerings in cone shape called "Phanom Mak" situated on the double-tiered trays


    A mural painting at the Temple of the Emerald Buddha has the epic Ramakian as its theme

    Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaeo, located in the same compound in the very heart of Bangkok, are most frequently visited by foreign tourists and local people alike. The Grand Palace is famous for its impressive building. Wat Phra Kaeo is renowned as the most beautiful and important Buddhist temple in Thailand. It enshrines Phra Kaeo Morakot, the highly revered Buddha image carved from a single block of emerald. It is so richly and and intricately decorated that, once entering the temple, visitors fell as if they were in the "city of angels", as Bangkok is known to Thais.
    Open daily from 08.30 a.m. to 15.30 p.m. Admission is 125 baht.
    Plan of the Temple of the Emerald Buddha


    Information
    : Tourism Authority of Thailand, 4 Ratchadamnoen Nok Avenue, Bangkok 10100, THAILAND.
    Tel. : (66 2) 281-0422 (20 Lines), E-mail : tat@cs.ait.ac.th
    : Tourist Service Center (TAT and Tourist Police), Tel. 1155
    : Tourism Authority of Thailand Tourist Service Center
    : The Sights of Rattanakosin, The Committee for the Rattanakosin Bicentennial Celebration Published on the Occasion of the Bicentenary of Bangkok, 1982, P. 85-126