Knowledge (XXG)

The Twelve Sisters

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KongRei learned her husband had departed, she followed him, sobbing and begging him to return, but he had to reject since he valued filial piety over personal romantic passion. She was unable to keep up with the flying horse, Mony Keo and fell. Puthisen arrived at the Kingdom of Injakbat Borey. Santheama realized what had occurred and transformed into her true Yakk form, aiming to murder Puthisen, but Puthisen was prepared and struck on the divine drum, causing the magical weapon to fly out and instantly pierced Neang Santhamea. Neang Santhamea's body turned to stone and was abandoned in the depths of the forest. As Puthisen took medicine to cure the eyes of his mother and royal aunts, King Rothtasith realized his mistakes and allowed his 12 wives back to the palace. Puthisen said his farewell to his parents and returned to his wife and children after fulfilling his duties. Unfortunately, Puthisen discovered his wife's corpse, as she wept till death and became a mountain (
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affection and sympathy, Santhamea pretended to be ill with a fatal ailment that no doctor or medicine could heal. Neang Santhamea took advantage of Rothtasith's rising desperation and told him that only a concoction made from the eyes of her 12 pregnant co-wives could save her life. Rothtasith, enthralled by Santhamea's act, ordered his soldiers to gouge out the eyes of 11 of the 12 concubines, with Neang Pov allowed to preserve one of her eyes. Following their ritual mutilation, the now blind or almost blind women were imprisoned in a cave. Forced by the circumstance and hunger, they devoured their newborn infants, sharing pieces among the sisters to satiate their hunger. Neang Pov kept the meat of her nieces and nephews, giving it to her sisters instead of her newborn. She raised Puthisen (ពុទ្ធិសែន) through many hardships in the darkness of the cave, surrounded by his blind, grief-stricken aunts.
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Phra Rothasen's mother and aunts’ eyes. Then he made a plan to get Meri to sleep by making her drink wine and take the eyes for his mother and aunts. Thus one night, after Meri was sleeping, Phra Rothasen stole many medicines and the eyes from the locked room. Meri woke up and looked for her husband but she saw him far away riding his flying horse. She suddenly grew into a giant and followed Phra Rothasen crying and calling him with a loud voice. To stop her, Phra Rothasen threw a magic branch that turned the space between them into a deep lake and a high mountain. Seeing her husband escape from her Meri wailed in despair, asking him to stop. Phra Rothasen was moved by her sad screams and replied that he will back after he finished his urgent mission. Then Phra Rothasen flew away and left Meri with a broken heart crying bitterly at the shore of the lake.
483:, although, in a note, she remarked the number of sisters may be seven. In this tale, many years ago, a man tries to teach twelve sisters not to take any life. However, the twelve girls catch fishes in the river: the eleven elder sisters kill the fishes they caught by passing a string through the animals' eyes, while the youngest only passes through one eye of hers. In their next reincarnation, they are reborn as sisters again, and are given to a local king as his co-wives. Meanwhile, in the land of the ogres, famine ravages their land. The ogress queen tells her husband, the ogre king, will find him food, then bathes in a magical pond to become a human maiden. The ogress queen, in disguise, goes to marry the local king and becomes his favourite co-wife, to the jealousy of the other twelve sisters. 206:
way back home thanks to their younger sister who had left marks in the path. But their father tried again and this time they were not able to find their way back home. They spent days walking deeper and deeper into the forest and became very hungry. Their father had given them twelve packets of rice, but when they opened them they found out that eleven of them were filled with sand and only one had rice in it. They shared that little rice and ate it crying, lamenting their misfortune. Wandering aimlessly the twelve girls came to a lake, where they tried to catch fish to satiate their hunger. Each of the sisters succeeded in catching a fish and eleven of them playfully poked the eyes of their fish with sharp twigs, except for the youngest one who poked only one eye.
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would be their slave for the day, but if he won, they would have to give him 12 packets of rice. Every day, he would win 12 packets of rice for his mother and royal aunts, which raises a lot of questions from the aunts. Neang Pov decided that it was time to reveal everything so she did. Puthisen was a precocious child, his genius causing him to win against every kid and adults in any sort of games. It was soon revealed to the king about his genius, he asked for Puthisen's visit to the imperial palace so he could challenge him. He recognized the King as his father as soon as he saw him. Neang Pov revealed to him about the past and sent him to live in the royal palace.
360:, Ta Eisei (តាឥសី), when Puthisen was resting in his Ashram to: "If arrives dawn, marry dawn. If it arrives at dusk, marry dusk." ("ពេលទៅដល់យប់សម្លាប់យប់ ទៅដល់ថ្ងៃសម្លាប់ថ្ងៃ" => "ទៅដល់ថ្ងៃរៀបការថ្ងៃ ដល់យប់រៀបការយប់") When Puthisen arrived in the Kingdom of the Yakk, the sentinel giants read the letter and followed its orders. She fell in love when she saw the heroic, virtuous and handsome young man. Unbeknownst to Neang Santhamea, her beloved daughter Neang KongRei (នាងកង្រី) became the adoring wife of her greatest enemy. From then on, they reigned peacefully and had two sons named, "Chum Sen" (ជុំសែន) and "Reth Sen" (រថសែន). 218:
The king was spellbound by Santhumala's beauty and swiftly married her, promoting her to the rank of first queen. Jealous of the king's favoritism, the Twelve Sisters were not kind to the new queen. Although they were polite to her in front of the king, they were often mean to her in private. To take her revenge from the Twelve Sisters, Santhumala, the favorite queen, feigned sickness and the king became worried. She told the king that the cause of her disease was the ill-treatment of the twelve other wives and the only thing that would heal her would be a medicine distilled from the eyes of the Twelve Sisters.
202:. Not long thereafter the wife became pregnant and the rich man wished with all his might that the child would be a boy, but his wife gave birth to a girl. His wife, however, conceived again and again. She became pregnant twelve times and each time she had a daughter. By that time his business started to go wrong for him since the ships that took his goods to sell in another country were robbed several times. Finally the rich merchant ended up borrowing a lot of money from his friends trying to fix his business problems. Yet, no matter what he did, his family kept getting poorer. 331:), which was ruled by a Yakkani Queen named Neang Santhamea (យក្សសន្ធមារ). There, Neang Santhamea appointed the 12 sisters as servants for her toddler, KongRei. They lived with her for a while, until the youngest sister met an elderly man who warned her about the Yakk and advised her to flee. She did not listen, but one day when feeding the horse, she came upon a barn that was filled with human carcasses. She panicked and remembered the old man's remarks. She alerted her sisters and fled, they each stole a crown and some valuables from the Yakk queen. 463:
the ogre realm to be eaten, and changes the wording. On Rathasena's arrival, the ogress's daughter falls in love with him, and he is anointed with her to rule the realm. After a dalliance, he takes her to the royal park, gets her drunk, learns from her the means to restore the sight to the twelve sisters, and escapes. On failing to follow him, the ogress's daughter dies of a broken heart. On seeing him return, the ogress Sandhamāra dies of defeat. Rathasena restores sight to the twelve, who again become queens.
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his major queen, and persuades him to pluck out the twelve queens’ eyes, leaving only the youngest with sight in one eye. The eleven others become pregnant. Sakka sends down the Bodhisatta Rathasena to be conceived by the youngest. The king has all twelve imprisoned in a cave. When the eleven give birth, they share their babies’ flesh as food. The youngest gives birth to Rathasena. On growing up, Rathasena appeals to Sakka to provide them with cloth and ornaments, and to teach him to gamble.
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was a panacea in the Kingdom of the Yakks that might be able to cure him and told him that Puthisen should go and get it. The King decided to follow her words and gave Puthisen a letter ordering him to use it for entry into the kingdom. The letter got manipulated by the Queen and became a death warrant that stated, "If arrives dawn, devour dawn. If it arrives at dusk, devour dusk." Luckily the letter was altered by a
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wilderness. When the 12 girls realized that their parents had abandoned them, they sobbed loudly, uncertain of what to do next. They wandered around the forest aimlessly, gathering leaves and wild fruits for nourishment. They came across a pond and each caught a fish. All the elder sisters poked both the fish eyes out playfully except for the youngest, Neang Pov (នាងពៅ), who carved only one of the eyes and stopped.
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descending from heaven, a noble's servant noticed them and hurried to notify his master. The noble summoned the girls and presented them to the king. As soon as the king saw them entering the royal palace, he fell in love with all of them at first sight. They were wed en masse to the King, Preah Bath
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The former rich man found it hard having so many mouths to feed. So he made a plan to abandon his daughters in the forest. He hid this plan from his wife but his youngest daughter named Phao heard about it. When their father left them alone in the deep forest, the twelve girls were able to find their
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News of the youth's requests reach the king's ears, and the monarch becomes so fond of him he dresses him in fine clothes. Meanwhile, the ogress queen, noticing the boy, realizes that the twelve sister survived, and plans to get rid of the boy. First, she gives him a letter to be given to the ogress
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A rich man, who is ruined after having twelve daughters, abandons them in a forest. They are adopted by an ogress, Sandhamāra, but escape to Kutāra. After they are found in a banyan tree, emitting a golden aura, the king of Kutāra makes all of them his queens. Sandhamāra enraptures the king, is made
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Phra Rothasen arrived back to his city and killed evil Santhumala with a magic club. He then went into the deep dark cave and healed the eyes of his mother and aunts by putting them back in their place with a special magic ointment. His mother and aunts left their deep cave and regained their former
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When Santhumala came back to her home and found that the girls were gone, she flew into a rage. She quickly found out where they were and transformed herself into a very beautiful young woman, more beautiful than any of the twelve sisters; then she went to the city of the king and asked to meet him.
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One day, she told her husband about the divine drum (ស្គរជ័យ). If you knock it, the hidden magical weapons will come out, especially the eyes of the 12 concubines. When the opportunity arose, Puthisen went in to steal the divine drum, in order to help his long-suffering mother and royal aunts. When
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The twelve sisters take refuge in a cave, and each of them gives birth to a child; the elder eleven sisters devouring their own to feed themselves, while the youngest spares her baby, a boy. After seven days, hole men come to the cave and, seeing the beauty of the child, place a wand on him and he
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One night, the ogress queen uses her powers to summon the land of the ogres next to the human realm, and steals the eyes of the twelve sisters, leaving the twelfth blind in one eye. The next day, the ogress queen lies that the twelve sisters are cannibal ogres who, in desperation, devoured her own
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To feed the twelve, he gambles, first with cowherds, later with the king. When the king learns that this remarkable boy is his own son, Sandhamāra maneuvers to have him sent to the ogre realm carrying a letter. On the way he meets a rishi who reads the letter, finds that Rathasena is being sent to
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When Puthisen reached adulthood, Neang Santhamea began to worry about the repercussions of him becoming Crown Prince. In order to avoid any possible acts of vengeance by Puthisen, Santhamea put a curse on the King. He fell ill, no matter who or what could not cure him. She told the King that there
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Meri was a kind-hearted and beautiful lady and Phra Rothasen lived with her very happily for some time, but he remembered his blind mother and aunts who still stayed in the dark cave. While showing him the palace, Meri had told Rothasen about certain magic medicines kept in a locked room including
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All the twelve sisters were pregnant and they all successively gave birth to babies but all died. Since the women were being starved under Santhumala's strict orders, each one chopped her baby's body into twelve pieces to share with the other sisters to eat. When Phao gave birth to a beautiful boy
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Finally they arrived to the Yaksha kingdom, where an ogress named Santhumala saw the exhausted and emaciated girls resting under a tree and decided to adopt them. The ogress transformed herself into a human being, a pleasant-looking woman, and brought the twelve sisters to her home. For many years
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It is often stated that the folktale was based on the jātaka. Possibly, it was the other way round. The jātaka version is much shorter, in particular, omitting the romantic finale. Several key points in the plot are missing. The verses have in part been taken from well-known passages in classical
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Puthisen grew up and became curious of the outside world; he begged his mother to let him go out and play with the villagers' children. Neang Pov decided to let him go. He met a group of kids and joined them in playing Ongkounh (អង្គុញ). He would wager with the local children that if they won, he
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illusion magic, which was no small feat given her physical stature and reputation, and charmed Preah Bhat Rothtasith into making her his 13th concubine but most beloved consort. Which was soon raised to the Queen position, the highest rank in the royal harem court. After gaining her new husband's
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Santhumala found out that twelve sisters were alive and she was angry that her plan to get rid had failed. Again she feigned sickness and told the king that only a certain fruit growing in her kingdom could cure her. She also told the king that only Phra Rothasen would be able to fetch it. So she
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One day, while Santhumala was away hunting, the twelve sisters met an old man who told them that Santhumala was not a human, but an ogress who liked to eat young women like them. So they fled from the ogre kingdom and wandered for days until they arrived to a clear river where they took a bath to
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tree, asking the tree's deity for children. Soon after, the wife gave birth to 12 daughters. The expense of providing for the 12 daughters has gradually reduced the man's fortune. They became impoverished and were unable to make ends meet, so he decided to abandon their 12 children in the deep
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grows up in moments to a fifteen-year-old youth. Deity Sakya also appears to give the youth a magic "mak-nim", which he uses to play with the boys in the village. Whenever he wins, he asks for twelve portions of rice and curry, and twelve gourds of paddy, to give to his mother and his aunt.
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Thus, when he arrived at the kingdom of the ogres Phra Rothasen went straight to Meri and showed her the letter. Meri was surprised and pleased at seeing the virtuous-looking and handsome young man and she fell in love with him, celebrating her wedding with him straight away as directed.
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When Phra Rothasen arrived to the ogre kingdom he realized it was too late. He heard about her vow and carried his wife's body. Full of sadness at having lost everything, he dropped dead while holding his wife in his arms. Finally, their spirits flew together to their next
301:(สระสี่เหลี่ยม), also in Chonburi Province, is said to be the pond where Phra Rothasen brought his cock to drink water when he ran cockfights to make a living for the twelve sisters while they were banished in the deep dark cave, according to a legend of the area. 234:. With the prize money he bought rice and from then onward he brought regularly food for his mother and his eleven aunts. As years went by Rothasen became a handsome young man. When the king heard of him, he invited him to the palace where he played games of 1162: 193:
A long time ago, there was a rich merchant and his beautiful wife who lived happily in a big house. Despite their good fortune, the couple didn't have any children. One day, they went together to a shrine and made an offering of twelve
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The king was so infatuated with Santhumala that he assented. Under his orders eleven of his wives had both of their eyes gouged out, but the youngest one had only one eye removed. Following this the Twelve Sisters were banished to a
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This may not be accurate, as it seems to come from only one source, Epitome of the Pali Canon by Chroniker Press. Other sources reference readings such as Kuanghi, Kwang Hi, etc. See for example Thararat Chareonsonthichai
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They made their way to the neighboring Kingdom of Injakbat Borey (នគរឥន្ទបត្តបុរី). The sisters bathed in the pond water while playfully adorned themselves with the crowns and jewels they stole. Looking as if they were
386:. According to local folklore this mountain is related to the story. Kampong Cham province of Cambodia as the temple of the 12 sisters rest in Siem Reap, Cambodia. The story was adapted to movie and released in 1968. 430:
Several stories written in the style of a jātaka appeared in Southeast Asia. Several were assembled into collections often known as the “Fifty Jātaka” (Pali: Paññāsa Jātaka) even though the number of stories varies.
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who was alive, she lied to her sisters that her son was dead. Phao named her son Rothasen and looked after him well. As he grew he found a secret way out of the deep cave. He had a cock that won in all the
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But meanwhile Meri had died of sorrow. During her long wait she had shed so many tears that she had become blind. Before she died, she solemnly vowed that she would follow Phra Rothasen in every future
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who gave him a flying horse named Pachi to ride and who gave him hospitality. While the boy slept the sage altered the meaning of the letter by replacing the words "devour him" with "marry him".
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refresh themselves. The local king saw the twelve ladies playing in the water and fell in love with them. So he brought them to his palace and married the twelve sisters.
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status with the king. They invited him to live in the palace again but Phra Rothasen told them that he had to hurry back to live with Meri who was waiting for him.
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and the folktales derived from it come in different versions, often under different titles depending from the country. This legend was also brought to
1172: 244:"If this young man arrives to our kingdom in the morning, devour him in the morning; but if he arrives in the night, devour him in the night" 1120: 226:
from where there was no way out. Then the king instructed his servants not to bring any food and not to help the Twelve Sisters in any way.
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Instead of a magical branch or potion, in this version of the story Putthasen throws magical limes or lime seeds as he runs from his wife.
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Once upon a time, there was an affluent couple who were unable to bear children of their own. They decided to travel to a giant
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The theme of the story of the Twelve Ladies is ever popular and is found in traditional theatre, dances, poetry and songs.
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she treated them as her own daughters and under her care the twelve girls grew up into beautiful young women.
1065: 442:, and translated from Pali into Thai. The Rathasena story does not appear in any other of these collections. 99:
The story of the Twelve Sisters is part of the folk tradition of certain countries in Southeast Asia such as
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Rithisen Neang Kongrey 1966-67 Film (this was the earliest version based on the legend of Kompong Chnnang)
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It is a long story about the life of twelve sisters abandoned by their parents and adopted by an
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The Lao version of the Twelve Sisters, the story of Putthasen (Buddhasen), was translated into
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They continued their journey after their meal until they arrived to the Kingdom of the Yakk (
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wrote the following letter to her adoptive daughter, Meri, in the language of the ogres:
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The Twelve Sisters story has been adapted as well to printed media, such as books,
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The Image of an Orphan: Cambodian Narrative Sites for Buddhist Ethical Reflection
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eyes. The king, in shock and horror, orders them to be banished from the palace.
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Neang Santhamea was enraged by the news, so she concealed her identity using the
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A merchant fell into poverty and abandoned his twelve daughters in the forest.
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Phra Rot Meri Ruea Nang Sip Song (พระรถเมรีหรือนางสิบสอง) movie poster
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Buddhist Ethics in the Paññāsa Jātaka (Apocryphal Birth-Stories)
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in which Rathasena, the son of one of the twelve women, is the
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collection. It is one of the stories of the previous lives of
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FINOT, Louis. “RECHERCHES SUR LA LITTERATURE LAOTIENNE”. In:
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Finot, Louis. "Recherches sur la littérature laotienne". In:
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are named Phu Tao and Phu Nang, after Putthasen and Kankari.
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An historical and structural study of the Paññāsa Jātaka
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Bangkok Post - More on pre-Khmer Rouge Cambodian films
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Les douze jeunes filles ou l'Histoire de Neang Kangrey
248:On the way to the kingdom Phra Rothasen met an old 859:(BEFEO). Tome 17, no. 5, 1917. pp. 133-135. DOI: 434:Rathasena appears in the collection assembled at 1004:Thai Animation : The Adventure of 12 Ladies 874:Bulletin de l’École Française d’Extrême-Orient 857:Bulletin de l'École Française d'Extrême-Orient 8: 411:Two mountains located close together facing 1188:The Kurudhamma - From Ethics to Statecraft 890:Chareonsonthichai, Thararat (2017-11-29). 767:Chareonsonthichai, Thararat (2017-11-29). 40:, one of the main characters of this story 926:. London: John Murray, 1910. pp. 230-237. 717:Cambodian Buddhism: History and Practice, 238:with the monarch displaying great skill. 29: 1141: 861:https://doi.org/10.3406/befeo.1917.5323 697: 1088:Street parade with Nang Sip Song theme 971:Phra Rot Meri (พระรถเมรี) movie poster 594:and Sapol Chonnawee, and broadcast on 495:queen's father in the land of ogres. 7: 878:http://www.jstor.org/stable/43730442 309:In Cambodia this legend is known as 181:; ), the adopted daughter of ogress 1055:Nang Sip Song children's book cover 533:Puthisen Neang Kong Rey (1968 film) 719:University of Hawaii Press, 2008, 688:, University of Pennsylvania, 1978 280:where they would be joined again. 119:where it became popular among the 79:Tale, the Rathasena Jātaka of the 25: 551:Phra Rot Meri Rue Nang Sip Song 508:The story has been adapted to 340:Rothtasith (ព្រះបាទរថសិទ្ធិ). 1: 1026:Thai Nang Sip Song book cover 436:National Library of Thailand 896:Journal of the Siam Society 876:17, no. 5 (1917): 133–135. 834:The mountain of doomed love 773:Journal of the Siam Society 705:The legend of Neang KongRei 590:(2002 TV series), starring 514:Thai television soap operas 481:The Story of Twelve Sisters 446:jātaka stories such as the 1259: 1121:Nang Sip Song Prarath Meri 626:in classical style and in 601:The Adventure of 12 Ladies 475:collected a tale from the 1218:Culture of Southeast Asia 415:on the right bank of the 1126:October 5, 2013, at the 1044:Phra Rot Meri book cover 798:Phra Rot Meri - Chonburi 663:The Son of Seven Mothers 380:Kampong Chhnang Province 27:Southeast Asian folktale 948:Rithisen Neang Kong Rei 936:Puthisen Neang Kong Rey 821:"រឿង ពុទ្ធិសែននាងកង្រី" 592:Matika Arthakornsiripho 538:Rithisen Neang Kong Rei 438:in the 1920s by Prince 316:. The story goes thus: 1243:Fiction about polygamy 982:Nang SibSong นางสิบสอง 809:Chonburi - Square Pool 653:Literature of Cambodia 314:Puthisen Neang KongRei 285:Phanat Nikhom District 72:folktale, and also an 66:Puthisen Neang KongRei 64:and រឿងភ្នំនាងកង្រី​​ 41: 1238:Legendary Thai people 1066:Thai comic book cover 504:Films and soap operas 33: 993:Nang Sib Song 3-2/11 283:In Tambon Mon Nang, 684:Dorothy H. Fickle, 153:(พระรถเสน); Khmer: 1228:Cambodian folklore 1031:2013-10-05 at the 440:Damrong Rajanubhab 68:in Cambodia, is a 56:(นางสิบสอง) or as 46:The Twelve Sisters 42: 1223:Buddhist folklore 1015:Phrasuthon Manora 923:The Shans at Home 607:Phrasuthon Manora 479:which she titled 473:Mrs. Leslie Milne 448:Vessantara Jataka 378:is a mountain in 311:រឿងភ្នំនាងកង្រី​​ 305:Cambodian version 289:Chonburi Province 177:(នាងកង្រី); Lao: 121:Malaysian Chinese 117:Malaysian Siamese 85:Shakyamuni Buddha 50:The Twelve Ladies 16:(Redirected from 1250: 1233:Laotian folklore 1150: 1146: 1130: 1118: 1112: 1107: 1101: 1096: 1090: 1085: 1079: 1077:Thai manga cover 1074: 1068: 1063: 1057: 1052: 1046: 1041: 1035: 1023: 1017: 1012: 1006: 1001: 995: 990: 984: 979: 973: 968: 962: 957: 951: 944: 938: 933: 927: 918: 912: 911: 887: 881: 870: 864: 853: 847: 842: 836: 831: 825: 824: 817: 811: 806: 800: 795: 789: 788: 764: 758: 757: 755: 754: 748: 742:. Archived from 741: 733: 727: 713: 707: 702: 620:children's books 603:(animated movie) 584:(2000 TV series) 572:(1987 TV series) 566:(1983 TV series) 293:Carissa carandas 21: 1258: 1257: 1253: 1252: 1251: 1249: 1248: 1247: 1203: 1202: 1159: 1154: 1153: 1147: 1143: 1138: 1133: 1128:Wayback Machine 1119: 1115: 1108: 1104: 1097: 1093: 1086: 1082: 1075: 1071: 1064: 1060: 1053: 1049: 1042: 1038: 1033:Wayback Machine 1024: 1020: 1013: 1009: 1002: 998: 991: 987: 980: 976: 969: 965: 958: 954: 945: 941: 934: 930: 920:Milne, Leslie. 919: 915: 889: 888: 884: 871: 867: 854: 850: 843: 839: 832: 828: 819: 818: 814: 807: 803: 796: 792: 766: 765: 761: 752: 750: 746: 739: 735: 734: 730: 714: 710: 703: 699: 695: 671: 639: 616: 547: 526: 506: 501: 499:Popular culture 471:Anthropologist 469: 456: 428: 392: 370:Kampong Chhnang 307: 191: 157:(ពុទ្ធិសែន) or 97: 70:Southeast Asian 60:(พระรถเมรี) in 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 1256: 1254: 1246: 1245: 1240: 1235: 1230: 1225: 1220: 1215: 1205: 1204: 1201: 1200: 1195: 1190: 1185: 1180: 1175: 1170: 1165: 1158: 1157:External links 1155: 1152: 1151: 1140: 1139: 1137: 1134: 1132: 1131: 1113: 1102: 1091: 1080: 1069: 1058: 1047: 1036: 1018: 1007: 996: 985: 974: 963: 952: 939: 928: 913: 882: 865: 848: 837: 826: 812: 801: 790: 759: 728: 725:978-0824832988 708: 696: 694: 691: 690: 689: 682: 670: 667: 666: 665: 660: 658:Phnom Kong Rei 655: 650: 645: 638: 635: 615: 612: 611: 610: 604: 598: 585: 579: 573: 567: 561: 557:Phra Rod Meree 553: 546: 543: 542: 541: 535: 530: 525: 522: 505: 502: 500: 497: 468: 465: 455: 452: 427: 421: 391: 388: 376:Phnom Kong Rei 366:Phnom Kong Rei 306: 303: 224:deep dark cave 190: 187: 151:Phra Rotthasen 134:in Hinduism) ( 96: 93: 81:Paññāsa Jātaka 44:The legend of 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1255: 1244: 1241: 1239: 1236: 1234: 1231: 1229: 1226: 1224: 1221: 1219: 1216: 1214: 1211: 1210: 1208: 1199: 1196: 1194: 1193:Nang Sip Song 1191: 1189: 1186: 1184: 1181: 1179: 1176: 1174: 1171: 1169: 1166: 1164: 1161: 1160: 1156: 1145: 1142: 1135: 1129: 1125: 1122: 1117: 1114: 1111: 1106: 1103: 1100: 1095: 1092: 1089: 1084: 1081: 1078: 1073: 1070: 1067: 1062: 1059: 1056: 1051: 1048: 1045: 1040: 1037: 1034: 1030: 1027: 1022: 1019: 1016: 1011: 1008: 1005: 1000: 997: 994: 989: 986: 983: 978: 975: 972: 967: 964: 961: 956: 953: 950: 949: 943: 940: 937: 932: 929: 925: 924: 917: 914: 909: 905: 901: 897: 893: 886: 883: 879: 875: 869: 866: 862: 858: 852: 849: 846: 841: 838: 835: 830: 827: 822: 816: 813: 810: 805: 802: 799: 794: 791: 786: 782: 778: 774: 770: 763: 760: 749:on 2011-08-12 745: 738: 732: 729: 726: 722: 718: 712: 709: 706: 701: 698: 692: 687: 683: 680: 676: 675:Auguste Pavie 673: 672: 668: 664: 661: 659: 656: 654: 651: 649: 648:Thai folklore 646: 644: 641: 640: 636: 634: 631: 629: 625: 621: 613: 608: 605: 602: 599: 597: 593: 589: 588:Nang Sip Song 586: 583: 582:Nang Sip Song 580: 577: 576:Phra Rothasen 574: 571: 570:Nang Sip Song 568: 565: 564:Nang Sip Song 562: 559: 558: 554: 552: 549: 548: 544: 539: 536: 534: 531: 528: 527: 523: 521: 519: 515: 511: 503: 498: 496: 492: 488: 484: 482: 478: 474: 466: 464: 460: 453: 451: 449: 443: 441: 437: 432: 425: 422: 420: 418: 414: 413:Luang Prabang 409: 406: 403: 401: 397: 389: 387: 385: 384:sleeping lady 381: 377: 373: 371: 367: 361: 359: 353: 349: 346: 341: 338: 332: 330: 325: 322: 317: 315: 312: 304: 302: 300: 296: 294: 290: 286: 281: 279: 273: 271: 270:reincarnation 265: 261: 257: 253: 251: 246: 245: 239: 237: 233: 227: 225: 219: 215: 211: 207: 203: 201: 197: 188: 186: 184: 180: 176: 173:เมรี; Khmer: 172: 168: 164: 160: 156: 152: 148: 144: 140: 137: 133: 129: 124: 122: 118: 114: 110: 106: 102: 94: 92: 90: 86: 82: 78: 75: 71: 67: 63: 59: 58:Phra Rot Meri 55: 54:Nang Sip Song 51: 47: 39: 38: 32: 19: 18:Nang Sib Song 1213:Jataka tales 1198:Samunprithai 1168:Movie poster 1163:Story (Thai) 1144: 1116: 1105: 1094: 1083: 1072: 1061: 1050: 1039: 1021: 1010: 999: 988: 977: 966: 955: 947: 942: 931: 921: 916: 899: 895: 885: 873: 868: 856: 851: 845:Khmer movies 840: 829: 815: 804: 793: 776: 772: 762: 751:. Retrieved 744:the original 731: 716: 715:Ian Harris, 711: 700: 685: 678: 669:Bibliography 643:Jataka tales 632: 617: 606: 600: 587: 581: 575: 569: 563: 555: 550: 537: 507: 493: 489: 485: 480: 470: 467:Shan version 461: 457: 444: 433: 429: 410: 407: 404: 393: 374: 362: 354: 350: 342: 333: 326: 318: 313: 308: 298: 297: 282: 274: 266: 262: 258: 254: 247: 243: 240: 228: 220: 216: 212: 208: 204: 192: 189:Thai version 182: 178: 174: 170: 166: 162: 158: 154: 150: 146: 142: 138: 125: 98: 65: 57: 53: 49: 45: 43: 35: 34:Statue of a 902:: 287–306. 779:: 287–306. 624:Thai comics 614:Other media 578:(TV series) 560:(1981 film) 540:(2000 film) 518:Khmer films 516:(ละคร) and 477:Shan people 400:Louis Finot 390:Lao version 200:tree spirit 198:hands to a 123:community. 89:bodhisattva 52:, known as 1207:Categories 753:2012-09-15 693:References 510:Thai films 232:cockfights 95:Background 74:apocryphal 908:2651-1851 785:2651-1851 596:Channel 7 402:in 1917. 299:Sa Siliam 163:Putthasen 147:Rathasena 143:Santhamea 141:; Khmer: 1124:Archived 1099:สุธนชาดก 1029:Archived 637:See also 524:In Khmer 329:Rakshasa 159:Rithisen 155:Puthisen 132:Rakshasa 113:Malaysia 105:Cambodia 101:Thailand 545:In Thai 454:Summary 426:version 337:Apsaras 278:rebirth 183:Sundara 179:Kankari 175:KongRei 169:(Thai: 165:) with 161:; Lao: 149:(Thai: 139:Sundara 115:by the 1110:Poetry 906:  783:  723:  609:(2003) 424:Jātaka 417:Mekong 396:French 321:Banyan 295:tree. 196:banana 167:Manora 128:ogress 77:Jātaka 1149:2017. 1136:Notes 747:(PDF) 740:(PDF) 628:manga 368:) in 250:Rishi 37:yakṣī 904:ISSN 781:ISSN 721:ISBN 358:Rshi 345:Maya 236:dice 171:Meri 109:Laos 107:and 62:Thai 900:105 777:105 398:by 136:Lao 130:(a 48:or 1209:: 898:. 894:. 775:. 771:. 677:, 630:. 622:, 520:. 512:, 450:. 287:, 103:, 91:. 910:. 880:. 823:. 787:. 756:. 20:)

Index

Nang Sib Song

yakṣī
Thai
Southeast Asian
apocryphal
Jātaka
Paññāsa Jātaka
Shakyamuni Buddha
bodhisattva
Thailand
Cambodia
Laos
Malaysia
Malaysian Siamese
Malaysian Chinese
ogress
Rakshasa
Lao
banana
tree spirit
deep dark cave
cockfights
dice
Rishi
reincarnation
rebirth
Phanat Nikhom District
Chonburi Province
Carissa carandas

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