MEANING
OF NAME : |
"Temple
of excellent abode" |
ALSO
SPELLED : |
Wat
Bovoranives, Wat Bovorn, Wat Bowonniwet, Wat Bowon. |
ADDRESS
: |
248
Phra Sumen Rd., Banglampoo, Bangkok 10200 |
DIRECTIONS
: |
On Phra Sumen in Banglampoo
district, 2 blocks north of the DemocracyMonument. Many city buses
pass through the area. |
TELEPHONE
: |
0-2280-0869
0-2281-2831-3
|
MEDITATION
SYSTEM : |
No formal teachings
or meditation instructions are currently offered. The teacher is
very busy with duties. This temple is mentioned because it's an
important center for Thai Buddhism. Usually a few foreign monks
are in residence who can answer questions.
|
TEACHERS
: |
His
Holiness Somdet Phra Nyansam vara, the Supreme Patriarch (sangharaja)
of Thailand (Thai; age 78). |
DESCRIPTION
: |
Thirty-one rai (12.5
acres) in an urban setting with some trees and a few open spaces.
Small canals criss-cross the grounds. Some of the buildings have
notable Thai or European architecture.
The Great Chedi, glittering with gold-colored tiles, towers more
than 50 meters; relics of the Buddha lie inside within a small metal
chedi. If you're here on a Sunday afternoon, you can visit the Dhamma
Museum in the tall building near the street; exhibits include Buddha
images, temple paraphernalia, skeletons and other meditation objects,
and
"cremation books" (given out oncremation occasions). Resident
monks engage primarily in Dhamma studies; Mahamakut Rajavidyalaya
Buddhist University is
|
SIZE
: |
monks
100-160
novices 20-25
nuns 0
laypeople (just schoolboys and workmen) |
ACCOMMODATIONS
: |
Not
generally available or recommended for meditators. |
ORDINATION
: |
Foreigners
occasionally ordain here but few stay;contact the secretary for details. |
OTHER
INFORMATION : |
A small English library
is available at Gana Soong (International Section). Mahamakut Bookstore,
on Phra Sumen across from the wat, has many Buddhist books in English;
publishers represented include Buddhist Publication Society, Pali
Text Society, and Mahamakut Rajavidyalaya Press; closed Sunday.
The temple has had a long and glorious history. In 1836, King Rama
III, in a boat procession, invited Prince Bhikku Mongkut to become
abbot of Wat Bovornives Vihara. Prince Mongkut was a scholar of
Pali Buddhism and the first Asian king to speak English fluently.
On the death of Prince Mongkut's half brother King RamaIII, he left
the Order to become king, being known in the West as King Rama IV.
In 1956, King Mongkut's great grandson, H.M. King Bhumibol Adulyadej,
the present king of Thailand, was ordained and resided at Wat Bovornives
for a period. The royal history continues with the ordination of
Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn and several of his children who, after
ordination, resided here.
|