Portal:Thailand/Selected picture
Appearance
(Redirected from Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/Archive)
Selected picture 1
Selected picture 2
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/2
Credit: User:Markalexander100
A view inside a songthaew (Thai สองแถว, literally "two rows"), a kind of passenger vehicle in Thailand. It takes its name from the two bench seats fixed along either side of the back of the truck.
Selected picture 3
Selected picture 4
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/4
Credit: User:Alter
Bangkok at night; view from State Tower.
Selected picture 5
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/5
Credit: Photo by User:Tevaprapas
Buddhist monks at Phutthamonthon.
Selected picture 6
Selected picture 7
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/7
Credit:User:Hdamm
The roof of Wat Makut Kasat (วัดมกุฎกษัตริยาราม), Bangkok, shows the victory crown as the royal emblem of King Mongkut (Rama IV), flanked by two five-tiered umbrellas.
Selected picture 8
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/8
Credit:ooboyoo (uploaded by Manop)
The interior of the new Suvarnabhumi Airport, also known as (New) Bangkok International Airport (Thai: ท่าอากาศยานสุวรรณภูมิ).
Selected picture 9
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/9
Credit: Photo by Steve Evans, Upload by User:Sandstein
A Kayan (Padaung) woman in Thailand displaying her neck rings.
Selected picture 10
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/10
Credit:User:Diliff
A spectacular sunset in Bangkok, showing the skytrain and modern skyline, taken from the corner of Thanon Silom. Taken on the 4th of June, 2004.
Selected picture 11
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/11
Credit:Oliver Spalt (uploaded by Spolloman)
A Buddha image in Ayutthaya historical park. Taken on January, 2002.
Selected picture 12
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/12
Photograph credit: BerryJ
Wat Arun is a Buddhist temple in Bangkok, Thailand. The temple derives its name from the Hindu god Aruna. This photograph shows the sculptures of two mythical giant demons, Thotsakan (green-skinned) and Sahatsadecha (white-skinned), guarding the eastern gate of the temple's ordination hall, a building designated for the performance of upasampadā, the Buddhist ordination ritual, and other ritual ceremonies. The entrance of the ordination hall has a roof with a central spire, decorated in coloured ceramic and stucco and sheathed in coloured china.
Selected picture 13
Portal:Thailand/Selected picture/13
Photograph credit: Janepop Atirattanachai
Khao Sam Roi Yot National Park, the first coastal national park of Thailand, was established in 1966 and covers 98 square kilometres (38 sq mi) of Prachuap Khiri Khan Province. It includes a limestone sub-range of the Tenasserim Hills, freshwater marshes, mangrove forests and sandy beaches. The large Phraya Nakhon Cave, pictured here, has an opening in its roof through which sunlight streams. The historic Khuha Kharuehat Pavilion within the cave was built for a visit by King Chulalongkorn in 1890 and is directly illuminated for a short period each day during certain months of the year. Later kings, including Vajiravudh and Bhumibol Adulyadej, have also visited the site.