Bagan Archaeological Museum
Bagan Archaeological Museum The Bagan
Archaeological Museum was opened on 17th April 1998
in the world renowned ancient city Bagan, in
Mandalay Division, Upper Myanmar. It is situated
near the Gawdawtpalin Pagoda.
The first museum
The first archaeology museum in the true sense of
the term was built near the northern covered cause
way of Ananda Temple in 1904, in a very modest way.
A small oblong one storey brick building of 60 feet
by 30 feet in which some ancient stone inscriptions,
Buddha images and other cultural objects collected
from the Bagan area were haphazardly displayed.
After some years as a large number of new art
objects and antiquities were added, the museum
looked like an overstocked storehouse.
The new museum
In 1976 the site to the south of Gawdawt Palin
Pagoda was selected and designated for
Archaeological Museum Compound in which an octagonal
shaped museum building was constructed. In it were
displayed very rare and fragile artifacts excavated
from ruined Bagan monuments. Three big oblong sheds
were built near it as annexure under which stone
inscriptions and stone statues of the Bagan Period
were displayed. It was called Archaeological Site
Museum Bagan and was officially opened in October
1979.
There are many display rooms. On the ground floor
there is a fully decorated and air-con hall large
enough to hold international conference, symposium,
seminar or meeting. On this floor are the display
room for objects of visual arts of the Bagan Period
such as terra cotta, stucco works, wood carvings,
stone sculptures, metal works, lacquer works, etc.,
the showroom exhibiting models of 55 different
coiffeurs used by fashionable court ladies of the
Bagan Period, the display room in which originals,
replicas and ink copies of Bagan stone inscriptions
and other forms of epigraphy, the gallery where
paintings by famous Myanmar artists of to-day
depicting the social life and military might of
ancient Bagan, as well as copies of frescoes on
walls and ceilings of ancient temples, and the
display room in which models of Bagan monuments of
architectural and artistic wonder.
Going up to the second floor by grand marble
floored stairways, we reach the display rooms on
religious themes. Here we find that exhibits are
Buddha statues and images of various makes,
postures, and styles providing us some knowledge of
Buddhist iconography. In the room of Buddhist Art
are displayed objects of all visual Buddhist arts.
Viewers of these objects may well appreciate the
depth and extent of Buddhist influence upon Myanmar
culture. Here on the second floor is another art
gallery, but it specialises in religious themes.
Paintings by artists of to-day and murals by master
painters of Bagans time on display in the gallery
all represent Bagan pagodas and monuments or depict
Buddhist stories - jatakas.
Next above the second floor is the flat roof of
the whole building from where pilgrims, visitors and
tourists can enjoy a panoramic view of the entire
"pagoda land" of Bagan and patiently wait for the
right moment to watch the "large orange coloured
globe" gradually sinking behind the Tantkyi Taung
hill range on the west bank of the mighty Ayeyawaddy
River.
To crown the pleasures of your visit to Bagan a
big bronze statue awaits your attention in the
centre of the round-about lawn in the front of the
museums portico. The statue represents the hero
king Pyusawhti (A.D.167-242), the third king in the
Bagan dynasty of 55 kings. Legend has it that he
conquered the five enemies who had been molesting
Bagan by slaying them with his mighty bow and
arrows. The enemies were the big bird, the big boar,
the big tiger, the big flying squirrel and the wild
weed bu (gourd). The Bupaya Pagoda standing on the
brink of the Ayeyawaddy River at Bagan is attributed
to Pyusawhti. It stands on the site where the hero
king finally eradicated the troublesome weed.
Visitors to Bagan have now two grand museums. The
entire area of 16 square miles of Bagan
Archaeological Zone itself is a field museum of
nearly ten centuries old and a splendid modern
museum of very recent time.
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