Burmese pagodas are that typically house Buddhist relics, including relics associated with Buddha. Pagodas feature prominently in Myanmar's landscape, earning the country the moniker "land of pagodas." Several cities in the country, including Mandalay and Bagan, are known for their abundance of pagodas. Pagodas are the site of seasonal .
Burmese pagodas are enclosed in a compound known as the aran (အာရာမ်, from Pali ārāma), with gateways called mok (မုခ်, from Pali mukha) at the four cardinal directions. The platform surrounding a Burmese pagoda is called a yinbyin (ရင်ပြင်).
According to 2016 statistics compiled by the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee, Myanmar is home to 1,479 pagodas exceeding in height, a quarter of which are located in Sagaing Region.
Terms
In the
Burmese language, pagodas are known by a number of various terms. The umbrella term
phaya (ဘုရား, pronounced ), which derives from
Sanskrit vara,
refers to pagodas, images of the Buddha, as well as royal and religious personages, including the Buddha, kings, and monks.
Zedi or
jedi[Robert E. Buswell and Donald S. Lopez, eds., The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism (Princeton University Press, 2014), s.v. "jedi (zedi)".] (စေတီ), which derives from
Pali cetiya, specifically refers to typically solid, bell-shaped stupas that may house relics.
Pahto (ပုထိုး) refers to hollow square or rectangular buildings built to resemble caves, with chambers that house images of the Buddha.
Burmese pagodas are distinguished from
Kyaung in that the latter are monasteries that house Buddhist monks.
Types
Burmese zedis are classified into four prevalent types:
-
Datu zedi (ဓာတုစေတီ, from Pali dhātucetiya) or datdaw zedi (ဓာတ်တော်စေတီ) - zedis enshrining relics of the Buddha or
-
Paribawga zedi (ပရိဘောဂစေတီ, from Pali paribhogacetiya) - zedis enshrining garments and other items (alms bowls, robes, etc.) that belonged to the Buddha or sacred personages
-
Dhamma zedi (ဓမ္မစေတီ, from Pali dhammacetiya) - zedis enshrining sacred texts and manuscripts, along with jewels and precious metals
-
Odeiktha zedi (ဥဒ္ဒိဿစေတီ, from Pali uddissacetiya) - zedis built from motives of piety, containing statues of the Buddha, models of sacred images
Of the four classes,
dhammazedis and
udeikthazedis are the most prevalent, since they are routinely erected by donors as a work of merit.
Burmese zedis are typically constructed with bricks, covered with whitewashed stucco.
Prominent zedis are gilded with gold.
Burmese zedis are crowned with a spired final ornament known as the
hti, which is hoisted in a traditional ceremony (ထီးတော်တင်ပွဲ,
htidaw tin pwe) that dates to the pre-colonial era.
See also
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Buddhism in Myanmar
-
Cetiya
-
Awgatha
-
Pagoda festival
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Dhamma Talaka Pagoda, Birmingham UK
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Global Vipassana Pagoda, Mumbai India
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Golden Pagoda, Arunachal Pradesh India
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Sand pagoda
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Stupas in Sri Lanka
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Relics associated with Buddha
External links