points on sen lines at
Wat Pho Temple,
Phra Nakhon district,
Bangkok Thai massage, like
Thai traditional medicine (TTM), is a combination of influences from Indian and Southeast Asian traditions of medicine, and the art as it is practiced today is likely to be the product of a 19th-century synthesis of various healing traditions from all over the kingdom. Historically, during the
Sukhothai period, there was an evidence of Thai massage in the stone inscription at
Wat Pa Mamuang, which mentioned the use of massage for treating illnesses. Moreover, in the
Ayutthaya period, the department of traditional massage was established, and medical practitioners were categorized according to their specific expertise. The spirit intermediary of traditional Thai massage and Thai medicine is
Jīvaka (ชีวกโกมารภัจจ์ Jīvaka Komarabhācca), who is said in the Pāli
Buddhist canon to have been the
Buddha's physician over 2,500 years ago. He was recorded in ancient documents as having extraordinary medical skills, for his knowledge of herbal medicine, and for having treated important people of his day, including the Buddha himself. ==Training==