A busabok (Thai: บุษบก, RTGS: butsabok) is a small open structure used in Thai culture as a throne for the monarch or for the enshrinement of Buddha images or other sacred objects. It is square-based and open-sided, usually with twelve indented corners, with four posts supporting a roughly pyramidal multi-tiered roof culminating in a pointed spire, and usually richly decorated. The structure of the multi-tiered roof is very similar, but much smaller in size, to the mondop architectural form.[1][2][3] The term is derived from the Sanskrit word puṣpaka, a reference to the Pushpaka Vimana, a flying chariot from the Hindu epic Ramayana (and the Thai version Ramakien).[4]
^Chaturachinda, Gwyneth; Krishnamurty, Sunanda; Tabtiang, Pauline W. (2004). Dictionary of South & Southeast Asian Art. Silkworm Books. ISBN1943932158.
^"Thammas: The preaching seat". Muang Boran. 14. 1988.
^สมใจ นิ่มเล็ก (12 September 2019). "เหตุใดสถาปัตยกรรมไทยจึงมีการ "ย่อมุม"". Silpa Wattanatham (in Thai). Retrieved 7 May 2020. Originally published in Silpa Wattanatham. September 2013. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
^Sthapitanond, Nithi; Mertens, Brian (2012). Architecture of Thailand: A Guide to Tradition and Contemporary Forms. Didier Millet. p. 126. ISBN9789814260862.
^Kisluk-Grosheide, Daniëlle; Rondot, Bertrand (2018). Visitors to Versailles: From Louis XIV to the French Revolution. Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 155. ISBN9781588396228.