About Mandalay
| Age |
: |
153 years |
| Population |
: |
801, 707 (In Year
2000) |
| Temperature |
: |
Min 10°C
- Max 43.3°C |
| Location
|
: |
Latitude 21° 58' N,
Longitude 96° 04' E |
History of Mandalay
King Mindon, making it the capital of an
independent kingdom for less than 30 years, had
founded the town only 29 years earlier in 1857.
Contrary to other Burmese towns, especially Yangon,
Mandalay has not grown from a smaller settlement to
town proportions. In 1857 Mandalay was set up in an
empty area, because, according to an ancient
prophecy, in that exact place a town would come into
existence on occasion of the 2,400th jubilee of
Buddhism.
The city was named after the Mandalay Hill, which
is situated at the northeast corner of the present
city. The hill has for long been a holy mount and it
is believed that Lord Buddha prophesied that a great
city, metropolis of Buddhism, would be founded at
its foot. It was King Mindon who fulfilled the
prophecy.
King Mindon decided to fulfill the prophecy and
during his reign in the Kingdom of Amarapura he
issued a royal order on 13 January, A.D 1857 to
establish a new kingdom. The Ceremony of Ascending
the Throne was celebrated in July, 1858. The royal
city and the kingdom were demarcated. The whole
royal city was called Lay Kyun Aung Mye ("Victorious
Land over the Four Islands") and the royal palace,
the Mya Nan San Kyaw ("The Royal Emerald Palace").
The kingdom was called the Kingdom of Yadanabon,
along with other name Ratanapura, means " The
Bejeweled Site ". Later it was called Mandalay after
the Mandalay Hill, 2.5km far to the north east of
the royal palace, and today the name still exists.
The name " Mandalay " is a derivative of the Pali
word " Mandala ", which means" a plains land "and
also that of the Pali word " Mandare ", which means
"an auspicious land ". At that time a transfer of
the capital not only meant leaving an old town and
erecting a new town in a different place. As all
secular buildings of that time, including the royal
palaces, were built from wood, a transfer of the
capital meant the complete dismantling of the houses
of the old settlement, which then were loaded on
carts and the backs of elephants to be reconstructed
at the place chosen for the new town. This way of
moving entire capitals is a tradition in Myanmar.
The transfer of the capital from Amarapura to
Mandalay had not been the first of its kind. The
most important Burmese town of the northern
Ayeyarwaddy valley had for a long time been the town
of Ava, founded in 1364, about 20 kilometers
southwest of Mandalay. In 1636 at that time,
powerful royal family from Taungu about 280
kilometers north of Yangon and 320 kilometers south
of Mandalay moved to Ava and made it the capital of
a Burmese realm roughly equaling the extent of the
present Burmese state.
But in 1782 the town was packed up and moved
about 8 kilometers to the Northeast, to the
aforementioned Amarapura. In 1823 the entire capital
was dismantled again and rebuilt 8 kilometers
Southwest in Ava. But in 1838 Ava was damaged by an
earthquake, and was therefore in 1841 packed up
again and once more transferred to Amarapura. But
this was not of duration either, as only 16 years
later the entire town was moved again this time 12
kilometers to the Northeast to the present Mandalay.
Who, in the face of all this moving of the Burmese
capital, might assume that it was more or less only
a temporary camp of tents, is very wrong. At least
the royal palaces, despite their being made from
wood, were immensely large. Many, enormous teakwood
tree trunks served as pillars to support the royal
palaces, often several stories high.
The rhyming couplet easy to memorize the year o f
building the royal city is " Okkyit-Kyaw Aye /
Mandalay " or " Aung Kyaw Chan Aye / Mandalay " (
i.e, M.E 1221 ). The city's layout of the
construction is the same at that of the earlier
Kingdom of Amarapura, and from the bird's eye-view,
it has the structure of geographical squares and
rectangular shapes, with streets and roads crossing
one another at right angles. There are four parts
dividing the city, namely, Ashe-pyin ( East Part ),
Anok-pyin (west Part), Taung-pyin (southern part)
and Myauk-pyin (Northern Part), with 54 plots. With
the Ground-breaking ceremony, King Mindon laid the
foundation of Mandalay on the 6th waning day of
Kason, M.E 1221, (A.D 1857). The King simultaneously
laid the foundations of seven edifices: the royal
city with the battlemented walls, the moat
surrounding it, the Maha Lawka Marazein Stupa, the
higher ordination hall named the Pahtan-haw Shwe
Thein, the Atumashi ( the Incomparable ) monastery,
the Thudhama Zayats or public houses for preaching
the Doctrine, and the library for the Buddhist
scriptures.
When King Mindon passed away, his son King Thibaw
ascended the throne, and in M.E 1247, Myanmar fell
under the British colony. It was the old capital
ruled by two successive kings the one where the last
of Myanmar's monarchs reigned.
After the British had conquered Mandalay in 1886
they turned the royal palaces of Mandalay into their
military headquarters and christened the complex
Fort Dufferin.
During World War II the Japanese installed a
military camp in the sam e place, which then was
bombed by the allies, until nothing was left of the
ancient palace buildings. Mandalay today is a striking phenomenon composed
of modern and classic images with the ancient
cultural beauty of the royal palace and the moat
surrounding it, and the natural impressionistic
beauty of the Mandalay Hill, harmoniously added with
new architectural photography of modern houses and
brick buildings. The former palace ground is known
by the name of Fort Mandalay. Of the ancient palaces
a few concrete replica have been built and further
reconstructions are being conducted.
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