Thai king's ashes returned to palace

In a ceremony steeped in tradition, Thais have farewelled their revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej a year after his death.

King Bhumibol Adulyadej

Mourners have farewelled Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej in an elaborate ceremony in Bangkok. (AAP)

The ashes and bones of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej have been returned to the palace as part of an elaborate, five-day cremation ceremony that drew hundreds of thousands of black-clad mourners to Bangkok's historic old quarter.

King Bhumibol was the world's longest-reigning monarch when he died a year ago aged 88. His seven-decade rule spanned some of the most tumultuous moments in modern Thai history, including several coups, a deadly crackdown on student protesters, natural disasters and a regional financial crisis.

His son, new King Maha Vajiralongkorn, presided over the burning of his father's remains in a golden crematorium at a late-night ceremony in the Thai capital on Thursday.

Many mourners stayed to watch as smoke rose from the crematorium. Some broke down in tears.

The crowds had diminished on Friday, but thousands of people still lined the streets to glimpse what they could of a ceremony that in total cost $US90 million ($A118 million).

"I can't express my sadness at the loss. It's like a child longing for a parent," said Boonpherm Buatho, 56, a housekeeper.

Shielded from the sun by a large white-and-gold umbrella, King Vajiralongkorn led a religious ceremony to return his father's remains to the palace. He sprinkled the bones with sacred water as classical Thai music played.

The remains were blessed by Thailand's Supreme Patriarch, the head of the order of Buddhist monks. The late king's bones will be taken to the Grand Palace, where he had lain in state since his death last October.

The ceremony on Thursday brought Thailand to a standstill as many businesses, including banks, shut to honour the late king.

On Saturday, a religious ceremony for the late king's remains will take place within the palace.

On Sunday, the bones will be transferred to the palace hall where the relics of past kings are kept. A procession will then take his ashes from the palace to be divided between the temples of Wat Rajabopidh and Wat Bovoranives.


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Source: AAP


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