kaangkok sawan (คางคกสวรรค์)
Thai. ‘Heavenly toad’. Name of an auspicious animal from
Chinese mythology. Also called
kop sahm kha which means ‘three-legged frog’. It
is often portrayed with red eyes and flared nostrils, sitting on a pile of
traditional Chinese money, often with a string of ancient Chinese coins on each
side of its body. It has the power to attract fortune and richness as well as to
protect property, but needs to be activated by placing a coin in its mouth. It
is said that the heavenly toad lives on the moon and its powers increase visibly
during a lunar eclipse. According to a Chinese legend there once was a lady who
was the wife of one of the
Eight Immortals, who heaven had
bestowed with the
amrita, the elixir of immortality. This lady loved gold and
money but was still a mortal. Thus, she stole the amrita
but got caught and punished for it by heaven. She was cursed and changed
into a toad with only three legs, and banished to, or vanished into, the moon
(leaped into it, and escaped). It is believed that whoever finds the
three-legged frog will also find a pile of silver and gold, as it still is its
nature to treasure these things. Hence the three-legged frog became the
auspicious animal from heaven that drives away evil and assists in bringing
great
wealth to peoples homes. It needs to be placed facing the entrance of a
home or shop to invite money in, but at night it should be turned backwards to
prevent the daytime earnings from disappearing again. It is the traditional pet
of the immortal
Liu Hai (fig.),
an informal
Taoist
god of wealth, whose toad would convey him to any place he
wishes to go, but occasionally it would escape down a well, and he would then
lure it out with a line baited with gold coins. Occasionally, it is portrayed
with
Nakula,
one of the 18
arahats. In Chinese it is called
chanchu,
with
chan also
meaning ‘moon’ in both Chinese and Thai. In English it is also referred to as
Lucky Money Toad, Moon Frog and Three-legged Money Frog. See also
kaangkok
and the story of
Montho.
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