
 WAT RATCHAPRADIT SATHITMAHASIMARAM RATCHAWORAWIHAN
WAT RATCHAPRADIT SATHITMAHASIMARAM RATCHAWORAWIHANThe site of this temple was originally a coffee plantation. King Rama IV believed that traditional Royal ceremonies in the city required three temples, Wat Ratchaburana, Wat Mahathat and Wat Ratchapradit. As Bangkok had neither a Wat Ratchapradit nor a Thammayut Nikai temple near the Grand Palace, the king bought the land to give to the Thammayut sect to build the temple. S
 Inscriptions of King Rama IV: There are two on stone slabs behind the wihan. The first, dated 1864, announces the building of the temple, the second, the laying of the foundation stone in 1865.
Inscriptions of King Rama IV: There are two on stone slabs behind the wihan. The first, dated 1864, announces the building of the temple, the second, the laying of the foundation stone in 1865.Wihan: Decorated with marble, mother-of-pearl and carved wood. Gateways and windows are decorated with stucco crowns, door and window frames with Chinese pearl. There are murals of Royal ceremonies and pictures of a solar eclipse.
Phra Puttasihingkhapatimakorn: A copy of Phra Putthasihing seated on Phra Putta-asana where the ashes of King Rama IV are kept.
Prasat Yod Prang: Two of these are in Khmer style and the front of the arch is decorated in stucco.
Khmer Prang: Contains the ashes of the Supreme Patriarch (Sa) and two later abbots.
Belfry: Decorated with Chinese tiles and coloured pottery.
 























 Ogre Statues:
Ogre Statues:





















