Phra Somdej Song Hanuman Nur Phomi BE2514 Luang Pu Tim Wat Lahanrai Luang Phor Sakorn Wat Nong Grub, Rayong
| Type | Phra Somdej |
| Monk | Luang Phor Sakorn Wat Nong Krub |
| Temple | Wat Nong Grub |
| B.E. Year | 2514 |
| Material | Phomi |
| SKU | TAC-0627 |
Phra Somdej Song Hanuman • Nur Phomi • BE2514 Luang Pu Tim (LP Tim) • Wat Lahanrai, Rayong | Luang Phor Sakorn • Wat Nong Krab, Rayong With Samakorn certificate Reference p
Phra Somdej Song Hanuman • Nur Phomi • BE2514
Luang Pu Tim (LP Tim) • Wat Lahanrai, Rayong | Luang Phor Sakorn • Wat Nong Krab, Rayong
With Samakorn certificate
Reference photo — the amulet together with Samakorn certificate (ภาพอ้างอิงพร้อมใบรับรองสมาคม).
Phra Somdej Song Hanuman Nur Phomi BE2514 • Luang Pu Tim (LP Tim) Wat Lahanrai • Luang Phor Sakorn (LP Sakorn) Wat Nong Krab, Rayong
Amulet Information
Name: Phra Somdej Song Hanuman (พระสมเด็จทรงหนุมาน) • Nur Phomi (เนื้อผง/เนื้อดินผสมผง) • BE2514
Monks: Luang Pu Tim (Wat Lahanrai) & Luang Phor Sakorn (Wat Nong Krab), Rayong
Certificate: Samakorn certificate included (ใบรับรองสมาคม)
SKU: TAC-LPTIM-LPSAKORN-SOMDEJ-HANUMAN-2514-NPHOMI-001
Price:
SGD 588
History of the Making (Collector-Grade Summary)
The Phra Somdej Song Hanuman Nur Phomi, BE2514 is remembered as a collaboration anchored by
Luang Pu Tim of Wat Lahanrai and his respected disciple
Luang Phor Sakorn of Wat Nong Krab. Collectors prize it for two reasons: the Somdej-format foundation (devotional authority)
and the Hanuman form (warrior spirit and protective symbolism) — a combination that stands out within the Rayong lineage.
In circulation notes, this creation is commonly described as serving multiple temple purposes: supporting religious activities, sustaining restoration work, and creating a meaningful sacred object for devotees who wanted both
protection and commanding presence. Its reputation grew over time because it sits at the intersection of two revered lines:
LP Tim’s firm, classic consecration discipline, and LP Sakorn’s continuation of that lineage with his own mastery and community following.
Hanuman Symbolism in Thai Belief
In Thai culture, Hanuman is not simply a mythic figure — he is the archetype of fearless loyalty, sharp intelligence, and unstoppable action.
Within amulet belief, “Hanuman energy” is often linked to the kind of courage that keeps you steady when pressure rises, and the kind of confidence that helps you lead instead of react.
That is why this Somdej-format Hanuman is frequently sought by devotees in roles that demand decision-making, influence, and resilience.
Sacred Materials (Nur Phomi Tradition)
This edition is described as being made in Nur Phomi tradition — sacred earth/clay blended with empowered powders.
Collector write-ups commonly mention mixtures that include: venerable Somdej-related powders, sacred earth gathered from meaningful locations, auspicious herbal ingredients (ว่าน), and “muan sarn” (มวลสาร) associated with LP Tim’s established powder practice.
The result is a material profile that devotees value for both its spiritual lineage and its “Somdej-family” devotional character.
Consecration & Lineage
The consecration is described in collector narratives as a serious, temple-led empowerment involving extended chanting, meditation, and protective mantras — with a strong emphasis on
kongkraphan (invulnerability belief), klaew klad (safe passage belief), and maha amnaj (authority/commanding presence belief).
For many collectors, the key point is not dramatic claims, but the lineage: LP Tim’s name as the cornerstone, and LP Sakorn as the living continuation of that Rayong spiritual heritage.
Traditional Spiritual Attributes (Devotee Intentions)
In Thai amulet culture, this Somdej-Hanuman format is traditionally kept for “strong outcomes” — protection, courage, and leadership under pressure — paired with the steady, respectful devotional tone of Somdej tradition.
These are cultural beliefs and practices rather than guaranteed outcomes.
- คุ้มครอง (Khum Khrong): protective belief for travel, work risk, and daily safety.
- แคล้วคลาด (Klaew Klad): “escape from danger” belief — safe passage and avoiding misfortune.
- มหาอำนาจ (Maha Amnaj): authority, influence, and commanding presence.
- เมตตา (Metta): steadier relationships and respect, especially in leadership or client-facing roles.
Rarity & Collectibility
Demand is driven by three collector anchors: (1) the dual-monk collaboration (LP Tim + LP Sakorn),
(2) the Hanuman symbolism inside a Somdej-format framework, and (3) the added confidence of third-party documentation such as the
Samakorn certificate. Well-preserved pieces with clear surface definition and clean provenance references tend to be the most desirable.
Additional Photo References (Retained)
Additional reference photo — retained from listing.
Additional reference photo — retained from listing.
Certificate reference image — retained from listing.
Attributes reflect Thai Buddhist devotional tradition and are not measurable claims.