Renovations Uncover Empty Jars at Thailand’s Wat Daeng Temple

News May 1, 2017

SHARE:

AYUTTHAYA, THAILAND—Archaeologists renovating the chapel of Wat Daeng temple in the Tha Rua district of Ayutthaya found 32 jars buried beneath the chapel’s main Buddha statue, according to a report in The Bangkok Post. The empty jars, buried bottom up in rows, were spotted when a brick was removed from a wall in the statue’s base. Archaeologist Chaiyos Charoensantipong of the Third Fine Arts Office explained that the jars were probably added as a structural support for the 300-year-old statue, and will help researchers understand how the chapel was constructed. The heads of four of the six Buddha statues in the chapel were stolen in 2009. For more, go to “The Buddha of the Lake.”

  • Features March/April 2017

    Kings of Cooperation

    The Olmec city of Tres Zapotes may have owed its longevity to a new form of government

    Read Article
    (De Agostini Picture Library/Getty Images)
  • Features March/April 2017

    The Road Almost Taken

    An ancient city in Germany tells a different story of the Roman conquest

    Read Article
    (© Courtesy Gabriele Rasbach, DAI)
  • Letter from Philadelphia March/April 2017

    Empire of Glass

    An unusual industrial history emerges from some of the city’s hippest neighborhoods

    Read Article
    (Courtesy AECOM, Digging I-95)
  • Artifacts March/April 2017

    Middle Bronze Age Jug

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Clara Amit)