Skip to content
Roadside Thailand
🎲
Wat Mahathat (The Buddha Head in the Tree)
📜 History

Wat Mahathat (The Buddha Head in the Tree)

📍 Ayutthaya, Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya

Among the brick ruins of one of Ayutthaya's most important monasteries, a serene stone Buddha head rests cradled in the roots of a banyan tree — Thailand's most haunting image of nature and history grown together.

Wat Mahathat was a spiritual heart of the old capital, founded in the 14th century and sacked when the Burmese destroyed Ayutthaya in 1767. Today its toppled prangs and headless Buddhas make a moving ruin — but one image draws everyone: a sandstone Buddha head, fallen centuries ago, slowly embraced and lifted by the roots of a fig tree.

Why It’s Interesting

Nobody knows exactly how the head came to rest in the roots, which only deepens the spell. By custom, visitors crouch so their own head is never higher than the Buddha’s when taking a photo — a small act of respect that adds to the hush. The wider site, with its rows of seated Buddhas and broken towers, is a powerful introduction to Ayutthaya’s lost grandeur.

Getting There

Wat Mahathat is in the heart of Ayutthaya Historical Park, an hour or so north of Bangkok and easily cycled between the other temples. Come early or late to find the famous head without the tour crush — and remember to crouch.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

Mon-chan visiting Wat Mahathat
Crouched low for the photo, like everyone must. Rules.
Cinnamon at Wat Mahathat
Cinnamon went still. Even he knows when to hush.

Where it is

You might also like

Nearby discoveries

Comments

  • No comments yet — be the first to share a tip.

Leave a comment

Share a tip, a correction, or what you saw. Comments are reviewed before they appear — no account needed.