Jump to content

Amarapura

Coordinates: 21°54′N 96°03′E / 21.900°N 96.050°E / 21.900; 96.050
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dr. Blofeld (talk | contribs) at 12:40, 10 January 2008 (→‎Notes: {{Mandalay Division}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Amarapura
အမရပူရမ္ရုိ့
Pahtodawgyi
Pahtodawgyi
CountryBurma
Admin. divisionMandalay Division
Population
 (2005)
 • Religions
Buddhism

Amarapura (Burmese: အမရပူရမ္ရုိ့; MLCTS: a. ma. ra. pu ra. mrui.; lit. City of Immortality) is a city in the Mandalay Division of Myanmar, situated 11 km to the south of Mandalay. It is often referred to as Taungmyo (Southern City) in relation to Mandalay but nowadays the two have become continuous from urban sprawl.

King Bodawpaya (1781-1819) of the Konbaung Dynasty founded Amarapura as his new capital in 1783, soon after he ascended the throne. In 1795, he received the first British embassy to Burma from the British East India Company led by Michael Symes [1]. Bodawpaya's grandson, King Bagyidaw (1819-1837), moved the Court back to Ava in 1823. Bagyidaw's successor King Tharrawaddy (1837-1846) again moved the royal capital back to Amarapura.[2]

From 1841-1857, King Mindon (1853-1878) decided to make Amarapura the capital again before relocating to his planned city of Mandalay in 1860. Today little remains of the old city as the palace buildings were dismantled and moved by elephant to the new location, and the city walls were pulled down for use as building materials for roads and railways.[2] Part of the moat is still recognisable near Bagaya Monastery.

The city is known today for its traditional silk and cotton weaving, and bronze casting. It is a popular tourist day-trip destination from Mandalay.

U Bein Bridge, detail

Sights of interest

U Bein Bridge across the Taungthaman Lake
  • Pahtodawgyi – A stupa built by King Bodawpaya in 1816 outside the city walls [2]
  • Bagaya Kyaung – a wooden monastery founded by King Mindon
  • U Bein’s Bridge – a 1.2 km wooden footbridge (longest teak bridge in the world) built by the mayor U Bein salvaging the unwanted teak columns from the old palace during the move to Mandalay
  • Kyautawgyi Paya – A stupa built by King Pagan in 1847 at the farther end of U Bein's bridge
  • Palace Ruins – containing tombs of King Bodawpaya and King Bagyidaw, and part of the old moat
  • Maha Gandhayon Kyaung - a large modern monastery complex with hundreds of monks and novices, well known throughout the country
  • Chinese Temple - built in 1838 during King Tharrawaddy's reign

In 1800, Buddhist clergy from Sri Lanka obtained higher ordination in this city and founded the Amarapura Nikaya ( Amarapura sect).

Notes

Amarapura locals
  1. ^ An Account of An Embassy to the Kingdom of Ava by Michael Symes 1795.
  2. ^ a b c "The Konbaung Period - Amarapura by Dr. Richard M. Cooler, Northern Illinois University".

21°54′N 96°03′E / 21.900°N 96.050°E / 21.900; 96.050