Tuesday 22 April 2008

To the Glass Palace







Mandalay
Age :141 years
Temperature :Min 10°C - Max 43.3°C
Location :Latitude 21° 58' N, Longitude 96° 04' E


'by the old Mawlamyine Pagoda, lookin
eastward to the sea
There's Myanmar girl a-settin,
and I know she thinks o'me;
For the wind is in the plam-trees,
an the temple-bells they say;
Come you back, you British soldier;
come you back to Mandalay!
Come you back to Mandalay,
Where the flotilla lay:
Can't you 'ear their paddles chunkin'
from Yangon to Mandalay?
On the road to mandalay
Where the flyin'-fish play,
And the dawn comes up like thunder
Outer china'cross the Bay!'


(From ''Mandalay'' by Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936), the poem that gave the world its first inkling of the exotic city)
The principal cultural and economic city of upper Myanmar, and former royal capital, is located in Central Myanmar, 668 km north of Yangon, Mandalay still evokes images of a romantic bygone era. Also known as Ratanabon-nepyi (meaning Gem City), it was built in 1857 by King Mindon. The royal palace and its impressive surrounding moat sits at the foot of the imposing Mandalay Hill.
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.
The rhyming couplet easy to memorize the year of 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.
How to get there ?????
Mandalay International Airport is the gateway. Mandalay is only over an hour's flight from Yangon. Myanma Airways, Yangon Airways and Air Mandalay operate daily flights. By road, it takes about 12 hours by Express coaches, and about 14 hours by train.

1 comment:

Ko Kyaw said...

This is fantastic. It has inspired me to get off my arse and fly out to manadalay.
It's beautiful. I fly out next week. What an adventure I'm going to have.
Thanks.

British Soldiers at Mandalay Palace

British Soldiers at Mandalay Palace

Mandalay Palace

Mandalay Palace

Mandalay Hill from the Moat

Mandalay Hill from the Moat