English: The funeral pyre for Chan Kusalo (the Buddhist "archbishop" of Northern Thailand) two days before the cremation ceremony at Wat Chedi Luang in Chiang Mai. The pyre is in the shape of a nok hatsidiling (a creature which is part elephant, part serpent and part bird from the mythical Himaphan forest). The gold leaf covered coffin is already placed inside the Burmese inspired mondop-like structure resting on top of the body of the creature.
လိက်တအ်ဂှ် သၠးကဵုလဝ် အခေါင် သွက်ဂွံ စၠောအ်ကပ်ပဳ၊ ပရး ကီု သီုကဵု ပလေဝ်ပခိုဟ်ပတိုန် အတိုင်သၞောတ်ဝ် GNU Free Documentation License, တုဲ မူ ၁.၂ ဟွံသေင်မ္ဂး မူတြေံနူဂှ် မတြးပတိတ် နကဵု သၞောတ်ဝ်လာင်ဇြေန် Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue
{{Information |Description={{en|1=The funeral pyre for '''Chan Kusalo''' (the Buddhist "archbishop" of Northern Thailand) two days before the cremation ceremony at Wat Chedi Luang in Chiang Mai. The pyre is in the shape of a ''hamsa'' (a mythical goose or