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																												Lohaprasat (โลหะปราสาท)   
Thai-Sanskrit-Khmer. Structure with a spire in metal. There were initially only three Lohaprasat buildings in the world. The original one was built in India in honour of the  
   
Buddha, and had a spire of gold, 
which gave it its name, as     
loha
is a word derived from 
Sanskrit which means ‘metal’, whereas     
prasat 
is a Khmer word  for an
‘ornamental structure with a needle-like spire’. The first Lohaprasat had only two 
storeys but around a thousand rooms to house monks. The second was built in Sri Lanka in 161 BC, to commemorate the victory over the Tamil, and had nine 
storeys and a brass spire. Built in wood, it was destroyed by lightning and rebuilt as a five storied structure however it no longer exists today. The third Lohaprasat was commissioned by  
  Rama III, to commemorate his granddaughter princess 
Sohmanat 
	Watana Wadih, who later became the first queen of  
  Rama IV. The Thai version has  
seven storeys with  
thirty-seven spires  
surrounding  
 the outside, 
one on the top, twenty-four on the second floor, and twelve on the fourth, and 
which represent the  seven sets of thirty-seven qualities that must be observed in order 
 
																												 
																												 to attain  
              Enlightenment as described in the 
Bodhi Pakkhiyah Dhamma (โพธิปักขิยธรรม) discourse given by the Buddha. The Thai Lohaprasat of
 
Wat Ratchanaddah  
 
is the only one of its kind still intact today. On the 
inside it has labyrinth-like hallways (fig.) and a staircase that leads to the top, 
where  
is a 
busabok 
that houses a relic of the  
																												Buddha 
(fig.) 
and offers a bird's-eye view of   
			      
Rattanakosin (fig.) 
and the temple's adjacent 
			wihaan (fig.).  
						The 
maze of corridors on the inside has many corners and 
	niches, 
several of which have pedestals with 
		
		Buddha images 
in different poses. Though   
																												commissioned in the reign of King Rama III, the Loha Prasat remained unfinished until the reign of King  
			      																								
			      Rama IX, with final construction taking place in several phases, from 1963 to 1977, with the enshrinement of the relic being completed on 27 February 1995 in a ceremony presided over by King  
Bhumipon Adunyadet, to mark the start of the Golden Jubilee  
of the King's Accession to the Throne, in 1996. In 2003, the building was renovated (fig.) on the 
occasions of the APEC-meeting held in  
 
			
			Bangkok, in which many heads of state visited 
  the capital 
and in 2016, its peaks were eventually gilded, thus completing construction up to the state in which it currently remains (fig.). 
 
					
																												See MAP, 
						
						
						TRAVEL PICTURES (1) 
						and 
						
						
						
						(2),
						
						
						
						
						POSTAGE STAMPS (1) 
						and
						
						(2), as well as
						
						QUADCOPTER PICTURES (1) 
						and
	
	(2), and 
						
						WATCH VIDEO. 
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