item # K23B40
RARE Pra Nang Phaya Gru Kaai Somdej
Pra Naresuan, Pim Kao Trong, Nua Din. An ancient baked clay triangular Buddha
amulet, the Queen of Buddha Amulet with figure of Mara Vichai Buddha sitting cross-legged
in a horizontal line, discovered at Fort Somdej Phranaresuan Maharaj, Army
barracks in Ban Khlong, Phitsanulok Province, Thailand during its landscape
construction in BE 2551 (CE 2008). This batch of Pra Nang Phaya amulets was
buried in a jar under the ground that used to be Wat Ratchapradit, a temple in
the Chan Royal Palace, or Phra Ratchawang Chan in Thai, an archaeological site
in Fort Somdej Phranaresuan Maharaj that was the birthplace and former residence
of King Naresuan the Great (king of the Ayutthaya Kingdom from BE 2133 to BE 2148
(CE 1590 to CE 1605). This Batch of amulets was given to only military officers
who were stationed there at that time. This Batch of Pra Nang Phaya Gru Kaai
Somdej Pra Naresuan was dated as contemporary period of Pra Nang Phaya Gru Wat
Nang Phaya, Phitsanulok Province, between BE 2090 to BE 2100 (CE 1547 to CE 1557), 470 years ago.
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BEST FOR: Pra Nang Phaya is believed
that it has a highest power of Metta Maha Niyom (it helps bring loving, caring,
and kindness, and compassion from people all around you to you), Mahasanay, and
(Magic Charm) it helps turn you to prince charming in the eyes of others. Pra
Nang Phaya is filled with power of temptation and attraction. It makes persons
around you irresistible to your charm. It has a magic power of hypnosis, it
turns you to a convincer, you could put any people around you under hypnosis,
and take over their minds to do whatever you want. And it signifies continuous
growth and multiplication in wealth, money luck, and good fortune. Wealth
Fetching, Maha Larp (it brings Lucky Wealth / wealth fetching), and Kaa Kaai
Dee (it helps tempt your customers to buy whatever you are selling, and it
helps attract new customers and then keep them coming back. Nang Nieow, a rock-hard
skin that is completely impervious to damage with bludgeoning or piercing
weapons. It has a tendency to draw positive energy. Kongkraphan Chatrie (it
makes you invulnerable to all weapon attack), Klawklad Plodpai (it pushes you
away from all danger), Maha-ut (it helps stop gun from shooting at you).
Ponggan Poot-pee pee-saat Kunsai Mondam Sa-niat jan-rai Sat Meepit (it helps
ward off evil spirit, demon, bad ghost, bad omen, bad spell, curse,
accursedness, black magic, misfortune, doom, and poisonous animals). It helps
protect you from manipulators, backstabbers, and toxic people.
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Pra Nang
Phaya
Pra Nang Phaya
or the Queen of Buddha Amulet refers to a triangular amulet with figure of a
seating Buddha in it. Pra Nang Phaya was firstly discovered inside the ruined
stupa/chedi at Wat Nang Phaya, and this type of Buddha amulet was named Pra
Nang Phaya ever since. Pra Nang Phaya is one of a set of five (Benjapakee) MOST
wanted 5 amulets among Thai colletors. Pra Nang Phaya is believed to have a
high power of Metta Maha Niyom (it helps bring loving, caring, and kindness,
and compassion from people all around you to you), and Klawklad Plodpai (it
brings safety, and pushes you away from all danger).
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Buddha in
Māravijaya or Mara Vichai Gesture
Māravijaya
gesture is an attitude of Buddha in Thai art of which the seated Buddha is
putting his hand in the relax posture towards to the ground, loosely holding
his knee. The other hand is on his lap. His eyes, sometimes closed, look down
to the ground. The gesture of the hand reaching the ground is called
bhumisparshamudra, which also refers to the attitude as well. The gesture
refers to the episode which the Buddha calling the earth to witness.
The attitude
refers to the episode that he was reaching the enlightenment and being
disturbed by maras (demons). Learning that the maras asked him to give up, he
touched the ground and called the Phra Mae Thorani (The Mother Earth) to help
him fight with the maras. Thoranee called tonnes of water and flooded away the
maras. The episode results in the name Mara Vichai which means the
"Victory (vichai) over the Mara". The Māravijaya seated Buddha is
considered the common attitude for principal Buddha in ubosots of Khmer, Lao
and Thai wats and Burmese kyaungs.
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King
Naresuan the Great
Naresuan (born
1555, Phitsanulok, Siam [now Thailand]—died April 25, 1605, on the Salween
River) was the king of Siam (1590–1605), regarded as a national hero by the
Thai people for having liberated the country from the Myanmar (Burmese).
In 1569 the
Myanmar king Bayinnaung (reigned 1551–81) conquered Siam and placed Naresuan’s
father, Maha Thammaracha, on the throne as his vassal. The capital, Ayutthaya,
was pillaged, thousands of Siamese were deported to Myanmar (Burma) as slaves,
and Siam then suffered numerous invasions from Cambodia. At the age of 16
Naresuan was also made a vassal of Myanmar and appointed governor of the
northern province of Phitsanulok. After campaigning with the Myanmar armies in
the Shan states, he renounced his allegiance to Myanmar in 1584. In a series of
brilliant military operations, he defeated three Myanmar armies that had
invaded Siam, frustrated repeated attempts of the Myanmar to capture the
capital, and simultaneously defeated Cambodian invasions. Becoming king on the
death of his father in 1590, Naresuan then took the initiative: he captured the
Cambodian capital of Lovek, made Cambodia a vassal of Siam, and established
suzerainty over the northern kingdom of Chiang Mai. When the Myanmar sent a
huge army to curb his ambitions, Naresuan defeated and killed the Myanmar crown
prince in personal combat early in 1593. Thereafter, Myanmar ceased to be a
threat to Siam when civil wars broke out among contenders for the Myanmar
throne, and Naresuan was able to seize the Myanmar peninsular provinces of
Tavoy and Tenasserim, giving Siam a commercial outlet on the Indian Ocean.
In addition
to winning a Siamese independence that was to endure almost two centuries,
Naresuan laid the foundation for the military power and stability that enabled
the kingdom to expand and prosper in the 17th century. He died on a military
campaign in the Shan states in 1605 and was succeeded by his brother
Ekathotsarot.
Battle of
Nong Sa Rai
Battle of
Nong Sa Rai, (1593), in Southeast Asian history, military encounter between the
Tai (Thai) kingdom of Ayutthaya and the Toungoo dynasty of Myanmar (Burma)
which put an end to the aggression that had been waged intermittently by
Myanmar.
In 1569 the
Toungoo conquered Ayutthaya and reduced it to a vassal state. After the great
Toungoo conqueror King Bayinnaung was succeeded by his son Nanda Bayin (reigned
1581–99), it soon became apparent that the Toungoo Empire was in less able
hands. Although then-prince Naresuen, the actual ruler of Ayutthaya, performed
vassal military service to Nanda Bayin against the rebel king of Ava in late
1583, he recognized that the time was ripe to pursue Tai independence. His
renunciation of vassalage to Myanmar in 1584 was followed in the next two years
by four unsuccessful Toungoo invasions of Ayutthaya.
Despite the
bloodshed, misery, and resources exhausted by continual warfare, Nanda Bayin
continued to attempt to crush Tai independence, launching further offensives in
1586 and 1587. Again, Naresuen was able to withstand the Myanmar onslaught. From
1587 to 1590, the kingdom of Ayutthaya experienced three years of relative
peace. War had devastated the countryside, however, and earthquakes and famine
created additional hardships.
At the end
of 1592, the last Toungoo invasion was launched by Nanda Bayin in a final
effort to subjugate Ayutthaya. A huge army commanded by the inept Crown Prince
Minkyi-zwa invaded the Tai kingdom. The decisive battle took place at Nong Sa
Rai, where Naresuen (who had become king in 1590) commanded the superior field
position. After Naresuen slew the Toungoo crown prince in a man-to-man combat,
the Toungoo forces, confused and demoralized, abandoned the expedition. The
Battle of Nong Sa Rai marked the end of years of warfare and misery for both
kingdoms. Myanmar did not pose a threat to Tai independence for the next 150
years.
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DIMENSION: 3.10 cm high / 2.10 cm wide / 1.30
cm thick
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item # K23B40
Price: price upon request, pls PM and/or
email us hadesamulet@outlook.com
100% GENUINE
WITH 365 DAYS FULL REFUND WARRANTY
Item
location: Hong Kong,
SAR
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