''Dhamayangyi Temple"
The name may be derived from Dhammaramsi (the rays of Dhamma). This is
the largest temple in Bagan. Dhammayangyi Temple is one the two temples
which consist of four vestibules and two parellel corridors. The finest
brickwork can be seen in this temple and its enclosure walls.
The
temple is usually associated with King Narathu, who built the temple
during his ruthless three years' tenure. The legend has it that he was
killed by Indian mercenaries, who were sent by the king of Pateikkaya,
which is a tributary of Bagan. The reason was to avenge for Narathu's
murder of the chief's daughter, whom the chief had sent to Narathu's
father, Alaungsithu, as tribute. Narathu did raise her as queen after
killing his own father. Soon after that, he discovered her hatred toward
him so he killed her with his own hands in one of his episodes of
violence.
Dhammayangyi Temple (Burmese: ဓမ္မရံကြီးပုထိုး, IPA:
[dəma̰jàɴdʑí pətʰó]) is a Buddhist temple located in Bagan, Myanmar.
Largest of all the temples in Bagan, the Dhammayan as it is popularly
known was built during the reign of King Narathu (1167-1170). Narathu,
who came to the throne by assassinating his father Alaungsithu and his
elder brother, presumably built this largest temple to atone for his
sins.[1]
The Dhammayangyi is the widest temple in Bagan, and is
built in a plan similar to that of Ananda Temple.[2] Burmese Chronicles
state that while the construction of the temple was in the process, the
king was assassinated by some Indians and thus the temple was not
completed. Sinhalese sources however indicate that the king was killed
by Sinhalese invaders.
The temple's interior is bricked up for unknown reasons, thus only the four porches and the outer corridors are accessible
Dhammayangyi Temple (built c. 1165?)
The Dhammayangyi (or Dhamma-yan-gyi) Pahto, extending approximately 255
feet on each of its four sides, is Bagan�s most massive shrine. There
is considerable controversy over the identity of the builder and the
construction of the building itself. It probably was built by King
Narathu (1167?-1170?) over a three year period to atone for his wicked
rule. Yet some have attributed it to Narathu�s father and predecessor,
Sithu I, who also built Thatbyinnyu. Legend suggests that Narathu met
his end in a series of morbid events shortly after acceding to the
throne. He had smothered his father and, shortly thereafter, his
brother. After he had one of his wives (a former Indian princess and one
of the wives of his father) executed for her Hindu hygienic rituals, he
was assassinated by eight men, disguised as Brahmin priests, sent by
the princess� father. Others, however, have suggested that his death
came at the hands of a Ceylonese mission that not only killed the king
but sacked the city and introduced Ceylonese influence into the
architectural spirit of Bagan.
The Dhammayangyi, similar in its
ground plan similar to the Greek Cross of the earlier Ananda Pahto, is a
very large square single story pyramidal temple with six monumental
ascending exterior terraces. Oriented toward the east, the
Dhammayangyi�s brickwork is finely crafted�perhaps it is the finest
in Bagan. (Narathu reportedly would execute masons if he could stick a
pin between the bricks). Because of the death of the builder, perhaps,
the temple was never finished. There is, however, another mysterious
element to the temple, in addition to the identity of its builder. There
are two inner ambulatories around a solid square central core that is
approximately 82 feet on each side.. Almost all of the inner ambulatory
passages were filled with rubble, probably from around the time of its
construction. Some suggest that if Narathu was the builder, workers
stopped building at the time of his death and perhaps even filled in the
inner ambulatory out of spite. The Dhammayangyi remains one of the most
unique and intriguing constructs on the Bagan plain.
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