Po_Sop

Phosop

Phosop

Thai goddess of rice


Phosop (Thai: โพสพ) or Phaisop (Thai: ไพสพ) is the rice goddess of the Thai people.[1] She is a deity more related to ancient Thai folklore than a goddess of a structured, mainstream religion.[2] She is also known as Mae Khwan Khao (Thai: แม่ขวัญข้าว;[3] "Mother of Rice Prosperity").

Quick Facts Phosop โพสพ, Affiliation ...
Rudimentary Phi Na spirit house at a rice field in Isan

Background

Ritual offerings are made to propitiate the Rice Goddess during the different steps of rice production. Villagers believe that Phosop ensures everyone has enough to eat.[4]

In modern Thailand, paying homage to Phosop by rice farmers had been declining in recent times, but Queen Sirikit gave royal patronage to this ancient custom of Thai folklore in August 2008.[5]

These traditional celebrations related to rice and its cultivation stages have a deep traditional significance in order to ensure that farmers will have good harvests.[6] Every year the Royal Ploughing Ceremony takes place in Thailand. At the end of it people scramble to collect the seeds from the furrows in order to increase their luck.[7]

According to archaeological evidence, cave paintings at Pha Mon Noi, part of Pha Taem National Park, Ubon Ratchathani province. Phosop has been worshiped for over 2,000 years.[8]

Representation

The iconographic representation of Phosop is of a beautiful woman wearing full jewelry and a red or green dress. She is in the sitting or standing position holding a harvested rice sheaf on her right shoulder,[9] but sometimes also resting on her arm.[10] The recent iconography of this goddess is based on the devī of Hinduism but its origins are local and more ancient.[11]

In certain locations a young village woman may dress as Phosop during local rice harvest festivals and celebrations.[12]

Rice goddess in Southeast Asia

Cili, a Balinese Dewi Sri effigy made with lontar palm leaves.

Indonesia

A similar rice goddess also can be found in Indonesia; Dewi Sri, also known as Nyi Pohaci, is the Javanese, Sundanese and Balinese rice, agriculture and fertility goddess. Shrines to Dewi Sri are a common feature in local rice fields.[13]

Khmer

The Cham Po Ino Nogar, Po Yan Ino Nogar Taha or Po Nagar, the rice goddess of the Cham people, a minor ethnic group in Cambodia and Vietnam, has similar attributes and rites as the Thai and Lao rice goddess.[14] She is related to Lady Po Nagar, the traditional deity of the Cham people.

Khmu

Dances to propitiate the rice goddess are common among the Khmu people, a Mon-Khmer group living mostly in northern Laos and also in Vietnam.[15]

Laos

Known as Nang Khosop in Laos, the rice goddess is also part of the local rural culture. There are different versions of the Laotian origin myth regarding rice. According to a manuscript in Wat Si Saket, after a thousand-year famine one day a young man caught a golden fish. The king of the fishes heard the cry of agony and went to ask the man to free the golden fish in exchange for a treasure. The treasure was Nang Khosop, the maiden who was the soul of the rice. While she lived in the fields rice nourished humans for many more centuries and the Buddhist doctrine progressed. But one day an unrighteous king brought about again a famine on the land by storing the rice that was due to the people in order to acquire gold, elephants and luxury goods for himself. During the hard days of the famine an old couple of slaves met a hermit in the forest.

Seeing that they were famished the hermit appealed to Nang Khosop to feed them. But the rice goddess was angry and refused. Then the hermit, fearing for the future of the Buddhist Dharma, slaughtered Nang Khosop and cut her into many little pieces. As a consequence the fragments of the rice goddess became the different varieties of rice such as black rice, white rice, hard rice (khâo chao) and glutinous rice. The old couple taught humans how to cultivate this new rice in small grains and the Buddhist doctrine flourished.[16]

According to another legend of the Vientiane region the Phi Na, a tutelary spirit that looks after the rice fields originated in the skull, the mouth and the teeth of Nang Khosop.[17]

Buddhist connection

Some authors have studied how Buddhism has brought about a reinterpretation of pre-Buddhist meanings through the myth of the rice goddess.[18]

Modern use as a symbol

Phosop is featured in the logo of the Rice Department (กรมการข้าว) of the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives of Thailand.[19]

Worship in Bangkok

The capital of Thailand, Bangkok, about 100 years ago, used to be full of rice fields. At present, the rice fields in Bangkok are almost nonexistent. There are probably only a few districts in the eastern suburbs were Min Buri, Nong Chok and Lat Krabang. Therefore, there are only a few shrines built to pay homage to Phosop were Wat Siri Wattanaram temple in Taling Chan's Bang Phrom. Here, Phosop is worshiped along with other goddesses, Nang Kwak and Phra Mae Thorani, all three of them are in the same shrine.

The idol of Phosop is believed to have been made of gold before, but in the 1970s it was stolen from three men from outside the area. Until now, the original idol is still not found[20] . Another one is Soi Lat Phrao 1 near Lat Phrao Square, because this area used to be a rice field before. Phosop here is enshrined in joss house.[21]

Pop culture

Phosop is adapted as a protagonist in a Thai fantasy/romantic-comedy TV drama titled A Mission from the Goddess of Rice (ปาฏิหารย์รักแม่โพสพ; lit: "Love Miracle of Mother Phosop") on Channel 3 in 2021.[22]

See also


Notes

  1. ชนชาติไทในนิทาน : แลลอดแว่นคติชนและวรรณกรรมพื้นบ้าน / ศิราพร ณ ถลาง กรุงเทพฯ : มติชน, 2545
  2. หน้า 69 – On History, ภาพเขียนสีที่ผาหม่อนน้อย ร่องรอยของ 'พระแม่โพสพ' เมื่อ 2,000 ปีที่แล้วในอุษาคเนย์ / ศิริพจน์ เหล่ามานะเจริญ. ฉบับประจำวันที่ 24–30 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2556 มติชนสุดสัปดาห์ ปีที่ 44 ฉบับที่ 2258 (in Thai)
  3. Phya Anuman Rajadhon, Essays on Thai Folklore ISBN 974-210345-3
  4. "(Indonesian) Mitos Nyi Pohaci/Sanghyang Asri/Dewi Sri". My.opera.com. 2008-03-01. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  5. Stringler, Florence. (2011) L'alimentation des Laotiens. Cuisine, recettes et traditions au Laos et en France, pg. 31
  6. Charles Archaimbault. (1973) Structures religieuses lao: rites et mythes. Volume 2 of Collection Documents pour le Laos, pg. 240
  7. Thongdaeng, Wityada; Thongpan, Saran (September 2012). ชุมทางตลิ่งชัน ย่านเก่า [ก่อน] กรุงเทพฯ [Taling Chan Junction old neighbourhood [before] Bangkok] (in Thai). Bangkok: Muang Boran Journal. pp. 188–216. ISBN 978-974-7727-93-7.
  8. Thongpan, Saran (2017-08-05). "ศาลแม่โพสพ" [Mother Phosop Shrine]. Sarakadee (in Thai). Retrieved 2021-08-07.
  9. "ปาฏิหาริย์รักแม่โพสพ" [A Mission from the Goddess of Rice]. Ch3plus (in Thai).

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