Sandamuni Pagoda | |
---|---|
စန္ဒာမုနိစေတီ | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Theravada Buddhism |
Location | |
Country | Mandalay, Mandalay Region, Burma |
Shown within Myanmar | |
Geographic coordinates | 22°00′12″N 96°06′35″E / 22.003470°N 96.109758°E / 22.003470; 96.109758 |
Architecture | |
Founder | King Mindon Min |
Completed | 1874; 151 years ago (1874) |
Sandamani Pagoda (Burmese: စန္ဒာမုနိစေတီ; formally နန်းမြေဘုံသာစံနန်းတော်ရာစန္ဒာမုနိဘုရား) is a Buddhist stupa located southwest of Mandalay Hill. It was commissioned by King Mindon Min in 1874 as a memorial to Mindon Min's younger brother, Kanaung Mintha, who was assassinated along with 3 princes, Malun, Saku, and Maingpyin, during the 1866 Myingun Prince rebellion. The pagoda was erected at the provisional location of the royal palace, the Nanmyay Bontha.
This pagoda contains the graves of the Kanaung, Sagu Mintha, Malun and Maingpyin Princes. It also contains an iron image of the Buddha cast by Bodawpaya in 1802, and removed from Amarapura by Mindon in 1874. The statue reportedly weighs 40,924.8 pounds (18,563.2 kg).
Notes
- ^ Fiala 2002.
- ^ Mandalay 1910, p. 12.
References
- List of Ancient Monuments in Burma (I. Mandalay Division). Vol. 1. Rangoon: Office of the Superintendent, Government Printing, Burma. 1910.
- Fiala, Robert D. (2002). "Sandamuni Pagoda, Mandalay, Myanmar". Asian Historical Architecture. Retrieved 12 July 2015.