Sacred and Profaned
Misguided restorations of the exquisite Buddhist shrines of Pagan in Burma may do more harm than good
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2002, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 8)
By the time a king named Alaungsithu came to power in 1113, Pagan traders had become so skillful on the seas that the king himself captained an oceangoing ship with 800 crew on a trading mission to Ceylon, 1,500 miles southwest across the Indian Ocean. The ambitious explorer-king was also something of a poet, dedicating ShwegugyiTemple in 1131 with the lines, as translated from the Burmese: “I would build a causeway sheer athwart the river of samsara [worldly cares], and all folk would speed across thereby until they reach the Blessed City.”
Unfortunately, Alaungsithu’s treacherous son Narathu, impatient to rule, smothered him to death on a Shwegugyi terrace. After that, Narathu killed his uncle, as well as his own wife and son, poisoned an older half brother who was heir to the throne, and then married one of his father’s mistresses. When she complained that he never washed, the new king personally dispatched her with a sword thrust through her heart. When it came to ensuring his own afterlife by temple-building, the psychopathic Narathu was a stickler for precision brickwork. He insisted that the bricks in the 12th-century DhammayangyiTemple, the largest in Pagan, be set so close together that a needle could not pass between them. He was eventually done in by assassins.
The Pagan Empire began to disintegrate in 1277 with its ignominious defeat at the hands of Kublai Khan’s army at Ngasaungsyan, near the Chinese border 400 miles to the north. When the Burmese refused to pay tribute to the Mongol ruler, Khan sent his 12,000-horse cavalry to invade their kingdom. Marco Polo, traveling with the Mongols, wrote of the bloody debacle in which Pagan’s soldiers, on foot and atop elephants, were lured into a forest and slaughtered. Though scholars debate whether the Mongols ever occupied the city, most agree that by the end of the 13th century, religious zeal had gotten the best of the Pagan kings. By spending so much money on temples and turning so much land over to a tax-exempt religious order, they had bankrupted the country.
Pagan went into gradual decline. The monasteries were open, and pilgrims journeyed there, but the temples were neglected, and plundered by treasure hunters who eviscerated statues and dug into stupa bases searching for precious stones. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, a wave of Europeans removed sculptures and carvings to museums in Berlin and other cities.
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Comments (2)
RENAMING AN ANCIENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL MONUMENT It might be all of a surprise,one of the Bagan temples very important archaeologically, culturally not only for Myanmar people but also for the people of the world who love and admire the ancient cultural heritage of the world. It is THABEIKHMOUK (BOYCOTT) TEMPLE UNESCO NUMBERING 744 Tha-peik-hmouk-gu-hpaya (363a) construction period 12th century AD,is renamed as Panthuku Mahahtay gu-hpaya with new stone inscription after renovation in 1998 Dec 11 by Singapore Golden Monastery Abbot. Originally there is no signboard since it was donated by the ancient Bagan people and Named by themselves as Thabeikhmouk hpaya in honor of king's Abbot Panthuku who stand for the suffering Bagan people for the earth filling work to construct Sulamani temple by King the 2nd Narapati Sithu in 1188AD.The term Thabeikhmouk is literally equal Boycott in English expressing disagreement. Thapeikhmouk guhpaya is the one and the only temple bearing very strange name and donated by the people themselves to honor the monk Panthuku ( a brilliant and well known in Bagan history). Since that time and before 1998 there is no inscription of any kind but its stand for centuries as Thapeikhmouk hpay and old people live in Bagnan and NyaungU know the name of hpaya. So I am terribly disappointed and with renaming. UNESCO recorded and printed seven volume Bagan Inventory and it can be seen in page 286 in vol: Three.
Posted by Hla Tun on January 30,2012 | 12:48 AM
thank you...
Posted by ali on June 17,2008 | 12:52 AM