Interesting Places in Myanmar
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Monywa
The name Monywa comes from "Mon" meaning
"cake or snack food" and "Ywa" which is the
Myanmar word for village. There is a legend
which says that in the old days a Myanmar king
fell in love with a seller of cakes from this
town and made her his queen. The original name
some say, is Mon - thema- ywa or " Village of
the woman cake seller". There has been a big
village at Monywa from the Bagan Period. The
classical name for Monywa is Thalawadi. The
chronicles mention that Monywa was one of the
places where King Alaungphayar encamped for the
night on his campaign to Manipur in 1758. During
the Myanmar kings' time Monywa remained just a
big village as the administrative centre for the
region was at Ahlon. It was only a year after
the Annexation of 1886 that Monywa became the
Headquarters of the Lower Chindwin District. In
the last few years with the legalizing of the
border trade with India, Monywa has grown into a
bustling trading.
In Monywa town, there are busy markets,
popular restuarants, a Degree College affiliated
to Mandalay University, a Technical High School,
and soon there will be an Institute of
Economics, the second after the one in Yangon.
Monywa Hotel, now privatised, has comfortable
four-room bungalows with attached amenities, all
air-conditioned. centre, second only to Mandalay
in the Upper Myanmar region.
Thanboddhay Pagoda
If you are travelling to Monwya by car you
should stop about 20 kilometres before you reach
the town to visit this most unusual Buddhist
temple complex on 37 acres of land which is part
of the Mohnyin Forest Monastery retreat. The
pagoda was started on 20th June 1939 and
completed on 2nd March 1952.It was the
brain-child of the famous Mohnyin Sayadaw whose
life-like effigy can be seen nearby.
Some visitors say that this Pagoda reminds
them of Borobodur, as it is similar in
architectural design. Unlike Borobodur this is a
modern place of worship, well maintained, and
with interesting samples of modern Buddhist art.
There are many different Buddha images, row upon
row in ascending tiers in niches along the
walls: the total number is 582, 257, an amazing
figure! Unlike most of the pagodas in Myanmar,
the entrance is not guarded by Chinthes, the
mythical lions, but by statues of a pair of
magnificant white elephants which are sacred and
auspicious in Buddhist symbolism.
Thanboddhay is the only pagoda with this
unique shape in the whole country. The square
temple base (each side about 166 feet) which
worshippers can enter is topped by receding
terraces, with myriads of small stupas (864 in
number) surrounding the central golden chedi,
132 feet in height.
Bodhi Tahtaung and Po Khaung Taung
From Thanboddhay Pagoda you can go by car about
five miles along a good branch road to Po Khaung
Taung, a small range of hills in the Monwya
area. There you will see more unusual sights not
found in other parts of Myanmar.
First you should stop for a while in the fast
growing forest of one thousand Bodhi trees (Ficus
religiosa); this Bo or pipal tree is sacred to
all Buddhists because Gaudama Buddha attained
Enlightenment while meditating under this tree. |