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Phra Khun Paen Plad Thawee Prai Khu Pim Yai Nur Din BE2490 Wat Bang Krang (Mass Chanting)

$328.00

Phra Khun Paen Plad Thawee • Prai Khu • Pim Yai

Nur Din (Sacred Clay) • BE2490 • Wat Bang Krang (Suphan Buri) • Mass Chanting Series • Samadhi Mold Line

Overview — Wat Bang Krang’s Khun Paen line is a post-war b

SKU: TAC-182

Description

Phra Khun Paen Plad Thawee • Prai Khu • Pim Yai

Nur Din (Sacred Clay) • BE2490 • Wat Bang Krang (Suphan Buri) • Mass Chanting Series • Samadhi Mold Line

Overview — Wat Bang Krang’s Khun Paen line is a post-war benchmark in Suphan Buri. This Pim Yai (large model) Nur Din piece is tied to a revered cycle of material gathering, ritual timing, and multi-lineage consecration.

Amulet Information
Name: Phra Khun Paen Plad Thawee • Prai Khu (as listed)
Pim: Pim Yai (Large Model) • Samadhi mold line (as described)
Material: Nur Din (Sacred Clay) • with sacred admixtures from older broken / damaged amulets (as described)
Year (BE): 2490 (production period described) • major rites in BE2491–2492 • opened in BE2511
Temple: Wat Bang Krang (Wat Ban Krang), Suphan Buri
Series: Mass Chanting / multi-ceremony cycle 
SKU: TAC-PHRAKHUNPAENPRAIKHU-WATBANGKRANG-002

Price:
SGD 328

Why This Wat Bang Krang Batch Matters

This Khun Paen Samadhi mold series is described as being produced around BE2490 under the direction of Phra Khru Aphat Silakhun (Phra Palat Thawi),
a nephew of Luang Phor Mui of Wat Don Rai. In the tradition recorded for this series, Phra Palat Thawi instructed disciples to gather broken and
damaged amulets from Wat Bang Krang and other old crypts across Suphan Buri to be used as sacred admixtures—giving the clay a lineage-linked “old kru” foundation.

The pressing is described as taking place at Wat Bang Krang, and—following ancient prescriptions—the firing (burning) was carried out only on Saturdays
until the target quantity was achieved. The series is also traditionally noted as especially auspicious for Thursday-born devotees.

Production & Ritual Method (As Recorded)

  • Pressing: at Wat Bang Krang (Wat Ban Krang).
  • Materials: Nur Din base, with sacred admixtures from broken / damaged older amulets sourced locally across Suphan Buri old crypts.
  • Firing: done only on Saturdays, repeated until the planned number was reached.
  • Spiritual note: traditionally regarded as especially auspicious for Thursday-born devotees.

Major Consecration (BE2491 / 1948)

A principal consecration is described as being held in BE2491 with seven revered monks:

  • Luang Por Mui — Wat Don Rai
  • Luang Por Taem — Wat Phra Loi
  • Luang Por Toh — Wat Lat Tan
  • Luang Por Thir — Wat Pa Lelai
  • Luang Por Sai — Wat Ban Krang
  • Luang Por Kham — Wat No Phuttakun
  • Luang Por Pliang — Wat Suwannaphum

Further Blessing & Deposition (BE2492 / 1949)

In BE2492, a further blessing ceremony is described as being conducted before deposition of the batch in the original chedi (pagoda), inviting a wider circle of masters:

  • LP Nam (Ajahn Nam) — Wat Don Sala, Phatthalung
  • LP Pae — Wat Phikun Thong, Singburi
  • LP Pliang — Wat Suwannaphum
  • LP Mui — Wat Don Rai
  • LP Khaek — Wat Hua Khao
  • LP Taem — Wat Phra Loi
  • LP Toh — Wat Lat Tan
  • LP Thir — Wat Pa Lelai
  • LP Kham — Wat No Phuttakun
  • LP Sai — Wat Ban Krang

Chedi Opened & Distribution (BE2511 / 1968 onward)

The record states that in BE2511 the chedi was opened for distribution and devotees came in large numbers.
It further notes that during Field Marshal Thanom Kittikachorn’s period, 4,000 pieces were requested for soldiers in the Vietnam War;
later, Field Marshal Praphas Charusathien requested 5,000 for the Black Panther Division.

Subsequent distributions recorded include:

  • 10,060 presented to His Majesty the King
  • 4,500 to soldiers at Chiraprawat Camp, Nakhon Sawan (by Col. Amnuay Surachet)
  • 1,500 to the Kamphaeng Saen Operations Battalion, Nakhon Pathom
  • 8,900 to soldiers on the Aranyaprathet border in 1980
  • 10,000 to the public for merit-making in 1981

Lineage Anchor: Luang Phor Mui

Across the full cycle—from material gathering and pressing, to Saturday firings, to the BE2491–2492 blessing ceremonies—Luang Phor Mui is recorded as remaining centrally involved.
Within the broader Suphan Buri ecosystem, this continuity is one reason Wat Bang Krang’s Khun Paen became a post-war reference point for devotees.

Collector Notes: Samadhi Mold & “Prai Khu” Naming

Multiple Samadhi molds are described as existing within the series. In the market, “Samadhi” often refers to the calm seated posture and the “meditation-still” facial impression.
The “Prai Khu” naming is commonly used in Khun Paen circles to emphasize the classic Khun Paen tradition—metta, commanding presence, and protective charm—while
the Wat Bang Krang cycle adds weight through old-material sourcing and mass, multi-lineage chanting.

Traditional Spiritual Attributes & Metaphysical Properties

In Thai amulet tradition, Khun Paen is widely associated with metta mahaniyom (attraction), personal confidence, and protective presence.
For Wat Bang Krang devotees, this batch is also spoken of as a “field-tested” line due to the distribution history and the scale of chanting described.
These are traditional beliefs and are experienced differently by each wearer.

  • เมตตามหานิยม (metta mahaniyom) — smoother reception, better social response, negotiation flow.
  • เสริมบารมี (serm barami) — stronger presence, leadership posture, “people listen more.”
  • คุ้มครอง (khum-khrong) — protection framing; steadier movement and fewer disruptions.

Conclusion

Phra Khun Paen Plad Thawee Prai Khu Pim Yai Nur Din (Wat Bang Krang) is best appreciated as a heritage-leaning post-war benchmark from Suphan Buri:
built on old-material admixtures, structured ritual timing (Saturday firings), and reinforced through major multi-monk consecrations in BE2491–2492,
then later opened and distributed in BE2511. For collectors and devotees, it sits at the intersection of lineage, ritual discipline, and real community history.

Front view — Samadhi mold impression, surface grain, and natural ageing checkpoints.

Back view — reverse details and patina consistency.

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For high-demand lines like Wat Bang Krang Khun Paen, independent verification with qualified experts is recommended.

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