Phra Khanth Rach Nur Din BE2499 Mae Chee Boonruen Wat Awutwikasitaram

Phra Khanth Rach (Nur Din) • BE2499

Wat Awutwikasitaram, Bangkok • Attributed to Mae Chee Boonruen • Sacred clay tablet (เนื้อดิน / Nur Din)

Phra Khanth Rach Mae Chee Boonruen Nur Din BE2499 — primary specimen
Primary view — Phra Khanth Rach (Nur Din) BE2499

What This Piece Represents (Collector Lens)

In Thai amulet culture, Nur Din (เนื้อดิน / sacred clay) tablets are often valued for their quiet, grounded presence — practical to enshrine, simple to wear, and closely tied to the “hands-on” devotional craft of their era. This Phra Khanth Rach (พระคันธราช) is attributed to Mae Chee Boonruen and dated to BE2499, placing it within a mid-20th-century Bangkok context where clay, ash, and devotional remnants are treated as a vessel for metta (เมตตา / goodwill) and composure. Collectors typically look for coherent iconography, believable clay aging, and consistent field texture rather than dramatic ornamentation.

Amulet Information
Name: Phra Khanth Rach (Nur Din)
Material: Nur Din (sacred clay) — earth/ash-based devotional matrix
Year (BE): 2499
Temple: Wat Awutwikasitaram, Bangkok
Monk: Mae Chee Boonruen (attributed)
Lineage Note: Lay-renunciant devotional craft context (รายละเอียดพิธี/จำนวนจัดสร้าง: Not specified in the listing.)
SKU: Not specified in the listing.
Price: SGD 88

History & Lineage Context

The provided content identifies this as a BE2499 Phra Khanth Rach (Nur Din) associated with Mae Chee Boonruen at Wat Awutwikasitaram (Bangkok). The listing does not specify the commissioning group, distribution method, production quantity, or a named ceremony roster. In collector practice, that absence matters — it means authenticity confidence should be built through physical evidence (clay matrix behavior, edge compaction, surface age) plus provenance documents and independent expert comparison.

Where Mae Chee pieces are concerned, collectors also pay attention to the tone of the work: restrained modeling, practical tablet form, and a “daily enshrinement” character rather than a showpiece aesthetic. That aligns with how devotees often describe Nur Din tablets — supportive, steady, and suitable for regular practice reminders.

About Material (Nur Din)

The material notes provided describe a hand-prepared Nur Din matrix. In Thai amulet culture, these ingredients are often framed as “devotional remnants” — meaningful due to ritual use and intention, not because of modern standardized manufacturing.

  • Matrix: Nur Din blended from sacred earths, incense ash, script fragments (ใบลาน / bai lan), and herbal binders; hand-pressed in small lots.
  • Surface: Matte particulate with age-toned micro-pits; avoid synthetic gloss or heavy resin that can occlude the structure.
  • Morphology: Modest tablet profile optimized for daily use; coherent edge compression suggests manual compaction.
Phra Khanth Rach BE2499 — obverse macro-friendly angle
Obverse — devotional modeling and field texture

Design / Pim / Variant Notes

The obverse presents a seated Buddha within a restrained niche — a calm, “no-excess” style that collectors often associate with practical Nur Din issues. Look for low-relief transitions that feel human (ไม่แข็ง / not overly mechanical), and a consistent field texture that matches the clay matrix rather than a surface coating. The listing does not specify sub-pim naming or lot codes.

Phra Khanth Rach BE2499 — reverse/side documentation
Reverse/edge — field development and compaction

Traditional Spiritual Attributes & Metaphysical Properties

Devotees often describe Nur Din tablets as “quiet support” — protection that feels like steadiness and fewer avoidable troubles, paired with metta (เมตตา) that smooths daily interactions. These are belief-based attributions in Thai Buddhist culture; outcomes vary with faith, ethics, and consistent practice.

  • Protective framing: steady conduct, reduced obstacles, and safer passage through difficulties.
  • Metta (mahaniyom) (เมตตามหานิยม): social harmony and goodwill.
  • Composure support: a reminder for daily mindfulness and calm discipline.

Rarity Assessment & Collector Significance

Rarity for Nur Din issues is typically evaluated through documentation and physical cues rather than shine or perfect surfaces. The listing does not specify production totals or issue purpose; therefore, collector assessment should focus on (1) believable clay aging (matte particulate, micro-pits), (2) coherent hand-compacted edges, (3) consistent low-relief modeling, and (4) provenance support (photos, notes, and independent expert review).

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Disclaimer: This article is for education and collector appreciation. Where details are not provided, we state “Not specified in the listing.” Traditional attributes are presented within Thai Buddhist cultural belief and are not guarantees of outcomes.