Nong Relic (Relic in the middle of the water)
It is a relic in the middle of the Mekong River. It is one of the relics that contains the relics of the Buddha. It enshrines the relics of the Nine Palms (Phanom), presumably built in about the 20th-22nd centuries, due to the shape of the relic of Bangphan, which was originally located on the waterfront of the Nong Phra Temple.
In the year 2109. The Lord Chai, the brother of the king, built a pagoda over the Nong Khai tunnel, built with a brick of a million elephants' art, named "Nong Khai relics." According to the book of the Annals, Section 70, it is recorded that "the relics of Nong Khai fell on the 9th evening of the month of Buddha 290, at the close of dusk," breaking into three pieces, falling down the northeast stream, with a right-angle base on one side that came up half the water, and was then eroded by the tide, and was in the middle of the Mekong, about 180 meters from the present coast, where the base of the relics could be seen when the Mekong receded. If, from the day the relics fell to this day, it has been more than 70 years.
The municipality of Nong Khai, together with the residents of the Temple community, rebuilt the replica of the Nong Relic. In 2005, on the edge of the Mekong River near the original Pagoda Relic Relic, it has a base size of 10 by 10 meters wide, 15 meters high, and reinforces the waterline defenses to prevent erosion from the Mekong River. The Nong Relic Relic is worshipped by the people of Nong Khai Province. On the 15th evening of the 3rd month, it is held annually.


















































































