Visiting Mandalay Palace, Palace in Mandalay, Myanmar
The Mandalay Palace (Burmese: မန္တလေး နန်းတော်, pronounced: [máɴdəlé náɴdɔ̀]), located in Mandalay, Myanmar, is the last royal palace of the last Burmese monarchy. The palace was constructed, between 1857 and 1859 as part of King Mindon's founding of the new royal capital city of Mandalay. The plan of Mandalay Palace largely follows the traditional Burmese palace design, inside a walled fort surrounded by a moat. The palace itself is at the centre of the citadel and faces east. All buildings of the palace are of one storey in height. The number of spires above a building indicated the importance of the area below.[1] For more info, visit this link:
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Myanmar Mandalay Monastry Part 15
Welcome to my travelchannel.On my channel you can find almost 1000 films of more than 70 countries. See the playlist on my youtube channel.Enjoy!
Mandalay is the second-largest city and the last royal capital of Burma. Located 445 miles (716 km) north of Yangon on the east bank of the Irrawaddy River, the city has a population of one and half million, and is the capital of Mandalay Region.
Mandalay is the economic hub of Upper Burma and considered the centre of Burmese culture. A continuing influx of Chinese immigrants, mostly from Yunnan, in the past twenty years, has reshaped the city's ethnic makeup and increased commerce with China. Despite Naypyidaw's recent rise, Mandalay remains Upper Burma's main commercial, educational and health center.
Atumashi Monastery: The Atumashi Kyaung , which literally means the inimitable monastery, is also one of the well known sights. The original structure was destroyed by a fire in 1890 though the masonry plinth survived. It was indeed an inimitable one in its heyday. The reconstruction project was started by the government on 2 May 1995 and completed in June 1996.
Buddha's Replica Tooth Relic Pagoda: One of the Buddha's Sacred Replica Tooth Relics was enshrined in the Mandalay Swedaw Pagoda on Maha Dhammayanthi Hill in Amarapura Township. The pagoda was built with cash donations contributed by the peoples of Burma and Buddhist donors from around the world under the supervision of the Burmese military government. The authorities and donors hoisted Buddha's Replica Tooth Relic Pagoda Mandalay's Shwe Htidaw (sacred golden umbrella), Hngetmyatnadaw (sacred bird perch vane) and Seinhpudaw (sacred diamond bud) on 13 December 1996.
Kuthodaw Pagoda (The World's Biggest Book): Built by King Mindon in 1857, this pagoda modeled on the Shwezigon Pagoda at Nyaung U, is surrounded by 729 upright stone slabs on which are inscribed the entire Buddhist Scriptures as edited and approved by the Fifth Buddhist Synod. It is popularly known as the World's Biggest Book for its stone scriptures.
Kyauktawgyi Pagoda: Near the southern approach to Mandalay Hill stands the Kyauktawgyi Buddha Image built by King Mindon in 1853--78. The Image was carved out of a huge single block of marble. Statues of 80 Arahants (the Great Disciples of the Buddha) are assembled around the Image, 20 on each side. The carving of the Image was completed in 1865.
Maha Muni Pagoda: The Image is said to have been cast in the life-time of the Gautama Buddha and that the Buddha embraced it 7 times thereby bringing it to life. Consequently, devout Buddhists hold it to be alive and refer to it as the Maha Muni Sacred Living Image. Revered as the holiest pagoda in Mandalay, It was built by King Bodawpaya in 1784. The image in a sitting posture is 12 feet and 7 inches (3.8 m) high. As the image was brought from Rakhine State it was also called the Great Rakhine Buddha. The early morning ritual of washing the Face of Buddha Image draws a large crowd of devotees everyday. The Great Image is also considered as the greatest, next to the Shwedagon Pagoda, in Burma. A visit to Mandalay is incomplete without a visit to Maha Muni Pagoda.
Mandalay Hill: The hill has for long been a holy mount. Legend has it that the Buddha, on his visit, had prophesied that a great city would be founded at its foot. Mandalay Hill, 230 metres in elevation, commands a magnificent view of the city and surrounding countryside. The construction of a motor road to reach the hill-top has already been finished.
Mandalay Palace: The whole magnificent palace complex was destroyed by a fire during World War II. However, the finely built palace walls, the city gates with their crowning wooden pavilions and the surrounding moat still represent an impressive scene of the Mandalay Palace, Mya-nan-san-kyaw Shwenandaw, which has been rebuilt using forced labor. A model of the Mandalay Palace, Nanmyint-saung and Cultural Museum are located inside the Palace grounds.
Shwenandaw Monastery: Famous for its intricate wood-carvings, this monastery is a fragile reminder of the old Mandalay Palace. Actually, it was a part of the old palace later moved to its current site by King Thibaw in 1880.
Yadanabon Zoological Gardens: A small zoo between the Mandalay Palace and Mandalay Hill. It has over 300 species and is notably the only zoo to have Burmese Roofed Turtles.Wikipedia
Museum of History opens in Mandalay University soon
Museum of History opens in Mandalay University soon (13_Dec_2018)
Myanmar/Mandalay to Mingun Part 13
Welcome to my travelchannel.On my channel you can find almost 1000 films of more than 70 countries. See the playlist on my youtube channel.Enjoy!
Mandalay is the second-largest city and the last royal capital of Burma. Located 445 miles (716 km) north of Yangon on the east bank of the Irrawaddy River, the city has a population of one and half million, and is the capital of Mandalay Region.
Mandalay is the economic hub of Upper Burma and considered the centre of Burmese culture. A continuing influx of Chinese immigrants, mostly from Yunnan, in the past twenty years, has reshaped the city's ethnic makeup and increased commerce with China. Despite Naypyidaw's recent rise, Mandalay remains Upper Burma's main commercial, educational and health center.
Atumashi Monastery: The Atumashi Kyaung , which literally means the inimitable monastery, is also one of the well known sights. The original structure was destroyed by a fire in 1890 though the masonry plinth survived. It was indeed an inimitable one in its heyday. The reconstruction project was started by the government on 2 May 1995 and completed in June 1996.
Buddha's Replica Tooth Relic Pagoda: One of the Buddha's Sacred Replica Tooth Relics was enshrined in the Mandalay Swedaw Pagoda on Maha Dhammayanthi Hill in Amarapura Township. The pagoda was built with cash donations contributed by the peoples of Burma and Buddhist donors from around the world under the supervision of the Burmese military government. The authorities and donors hoisted Buddha's Replica Tooth Relic Pagoda Mandalay's Shwe Htidaw (sacred golden umbrella), Hngetmyatnadaw (sacred bird perch vane) and Seinhpudaw (sacred diamond bud) on 13 December 1996.
Kuthodaw Pagoda (The World's Biggest Book): Built by King Mindon in 1857, this pagoda modeled on the Shwezigon Pagoda at Nyaung U, is surrounded by 729 upright stone slabs on which are inscribed the entire Buddhist Scriptures as edited and approved by the Fifth Buddhist Synod. It is popularly known as the World's Biggest Book for its stone scriptures.
Kyauktawgyi Pagoda: Near the southern approach to Mandalay Hill stands the Kyauktawgyi Buddha Image built by King Mindon in 1853--78. The Image was carved out of a huge single block of marble. Statues of 80 Arahants (the Great Disciples of the Buddha) are assembled around the Image, 20 on each side. The carving of the Image was completed in 1865.
Maha Muni Pagoda: The Image is said to have been cast in the life-time of the Gautama Buddha and that the Buddha embraced it 7 times thereby bringing it to life. Consequently, devout Buddhists hold it to be alive and refer to it as the Maha Muni Sacred Living Image. Revered as the holiest pagoda in Mandalay, It was built by King Bodawpaya in 1784. The image in a sitting posture is 12 feet and 7 inches (3.8 m) high. As the image was brought from Rakhine State it was also called the Great Rakhine Buddha. The early morning ritual of washing the Face of Buddha Image draws a large crowd of devotees everyday. The Great Image is also considered as the greatest, next to the Shwedagon Pagoda, in Burma. A visit to Mandalay is incomplete without a visit to Maha Muni Pagoda.
Mandalay Hill: The hill has for long been a holy mount. Legend has it that the Buddha, on his visit, had prophesied that a great city would be founded at its foot. Mandalay Hill, 230 metres in elevation, commands a magnificent view of the city and surrounding countryside. The construction of a motor road to reach the hill-top has already been finished.
Mandalay Palace: The whole magnificent palace complex was destroyed by a fire during World War II. However, the finely built palace walls, the city gates with their crowning wooden pavilions and the surrounding moat still represent an impressive scene of the Mandalay Palace, Mya-nan-san-kyaw Shwenandaw, which has been rebuilt using forced labor. A model of the Mandalay Palace, Nanmyint-saung and Cultural Museum are located inside the Palace grounds.
Shwenandaw Monastery: Famous for its intricate wood-carvings, this monastery is a fragile reminder of the old Mandalay Palace. Actually, it was a part of the old palace later moved to its current site by King Thibaw in 1880.
Yadanabon Zoological Gardens: A small zoo between the Mandalay Palace and Mandalay Hill. It has over 300 species and is notably the only zoo to have Burmese Roofed Turtles.Wikipedia
Visiting Mandalay Hill, The Northeast of the city centre of Mandalay, Burma
Mandalay Hill (Burmese: မန္တလေးတောင်; MLCTS: manta. le: taung [màɴdəlé tàʊɴ]) is a 240 metres (790 ft) hill that is located to the northeast of the city centre of Mandalay in Burma. The city took its name from the hill. Mandalay Hill is known for its abundance of pagodas and monasteries, and has been a major pilgrimage site for Burmese Buddhists for nearly two centuries. At the top of the hill is the Sutaungpyei (literally wish-fulfilling) Pagoda. For more info, visit this link:
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Gold Leaf Museum, Mandalay, Myanmar
This was a small museum that showed the steps and process of turning 24 karat gold into gold leaf. It was attached to a shop where they were still performing the ancient techniques.
To see photos and read more about my GAdventures tour through Myanmar and other tours and places I visited on my second year long sabbatical world tour please check my blog:
National Museum
ငယ္ငယ္တုန္းကေတာ့ မိသားစုနဲ႔ ရန္ကုန္အမ်ိဳးသားျပတ္ိုက္ကိုေရာက္ဖူးတယ္။ ဒါေပမဲ႔ အရမ္းကိုၾကာခဲ့ျပီ။ ဘယ္လိုေျပာင္းလဲသြားလဲ မသိခဲ႔တာၾကာေပါ့။ ၂၀၁၅တုန္းကေတာ့ ေနျပည္ေတာ္အမ်ိဳးသားျပတိုက္ ထပ္ေရာက္ေသးတယ္။ အျပင္အဆင္ထိန္းသိမ္းထားတာေတြ ေကာင္းေနျပီ။ ရန္ကုန္အမ်ိဳးသားျပတိုက္လည္း ဘယ္လုိေတြျပသထားလဲ မသိေတာ့ ဒီတစ္ခါ သြားေလ့လာျဖစ္တယ္။
ေက်ာင္းသူ/ေက်ာင္းသား နဲ႔ သံဃာ၊သီလရွင္ မဟုတ္ရင္ ဝင္ေၾကး ၅၀၀ပါ။ ေက်ာင္းသားကဒ္ေတာ့လိုပါတယ္။ ႏိုင္ငံျခားသားက ၅၀၀၀ ပါ။ မနက္ ၁၀နာရီကေန ၄နာရီထိ ဖြင့္ျပီး တနလၤာေန႔နဲ႔ ျပန္တမ္းဝင္ေန႔ေတြပိတ္ပါတယ္။ ရန္ကုန္အမ်ိဳးသားျပတိုက္မွာ အထပ္ေလးထပ္ရွိတယ္။ ရတနာပံုျပခန္း၊ ျမန္မာ့ေရွးေဟာင္းအဆင္တန္ဆာျပခန္းက ဓာတ္ပံု ဗီဒီယိုရိုက္ကူးခြင့္မရွိပါဘူး။ ဓာတ္ပံုရဲ႕ဖလက္ရွ္မီးက အဝတ္အစားေတြ ပ်က္စီးေစႏိုင္လို႔ပါ။ က်န္တဲ႔အခန္းေတြကေတာ့ ဗီဒီယိုထဲမွာပါပါတယ္။ အခန္းေတြက အရမ္းက်ယ္ျပီး ျပသပစၥည္းမ်ားတာေၾကာင့္ ပစၥည္းတစ္ခ်င္းစီရိုက္ရင္ ႏွစ္နာရီမကၾကာႏိုင္လို႔ အေသးစိတ္ကေတာ့ မ်က္ျမင္ကိုယ္ေတြေလ့လာတာပိုေကာင္းပါတယ္။
ေတြ႕ခဲ႕သမ ွ်ထဲမွာ အၾကိဳက္ဆံုးကေတာ့ အလွျပင္ပစၥည္းေတြထည့္တဲ႔ ယြန္းေသတၱာနဲ႔ ယြန္းေပါင္ဒါဘူး။ ဒီေခတ္မွာ အဲ့့ဒါမ်ိဴး ထုတ္ၾကရင္ သိပ္ေကာင္းမွာပဲ။ refill ျပန္ျဖည့္လို႔ရတယ္ဆိုရင္ ဘူးကေတာ္ေတာ္ၾကာၾကာအသံုးခံမွာ။ ေနာက္ထပ္ၾကိဳက္တာက ပရိေဘာဂေပၚမွာ တန္ဆာဆင္ထားတဲ႔ ကႏုတ္ေတြ အရုပ္ေတြ။ တကယ္ခမ္းနားတယ္။
မီရွဲအၾကိဳက္ေတြခ်ည္းေရြးေျပာရတာထက္စာရင္ သြားေလ့လာၾကည့္ပါ။ ျပီးရင္ ဘယ္ပစၥည္းအၾကိဳက္ဆံုးလဲ၊ ဘာေၾကာင့္ၾကိဳက္လဲ စကားႏိုင္လုေျပာၾကမယ္။ ေရွးေဟာင္းအဆင္တန္ဆာျပခန္းပစၥည္းေတြ မပါ။ အကုန္လွလို႔ …
ဆိုေတာ့ ေနာက္တစ္ခါ ဘယ္ေနရာသြားရင္ေကာင္းမလဲ
ခ်စ္တဲ႔
စပ္စုစိန္ ရန္ကုန္သူမီရွဲ …
Produced by IDEA LIVE Production
Dress by @Scarlet ယဥ္ ယဥ္ေႏွာင္း
Special Thanks to National Museum - Yangon
#yangonthumichelle #michellemayshell #nationalmuseumofmyanmar
Mandalay, Myanmar and the Meaning of Gold and White
Is global spirituality possible? Maybe. This is a ground-breaking novel on the near-death experience that unveils the roots to a global spirituality. A modern woman has an extraordinary dream that seems like a near-death experience. This gives rise to a quest for truth and a journey that unveils religion's common denominator. . .The Light.
Religion’s common denominator . . .The Light
God does not have a religion.
God does not speak a language.
God does not have a culture.
It is we who require these things.
Why has humankind always sought the Light? What do pharaohs and prophets and festivals around the world tell us about the meaning of the Light? A modern woman has an extraordinary dream that seems like a near-death experience. This gives rise to a quest for truth. Dissatisfied with answers at home, she takes her search abroad and enters a labyrinth of fortunetellers, religious scholars, Sufi guides and spiritual archaeologists. Propelled by what she discovers, her journey continues to the foundation of religious unity.
A Modern-Day Journey for Peace moves us to consider if the Light of the near-death experience isn’t actually the bedrock of religion and the springboard for a universal connection. This modern-day story melds the varieties of religious experience into a visual whole. The essence of God becomes globally and tangibly defined. This story uncovers our prevailing spiritual unity despite our world’s seemingly different beliefs. Ultimately, there is a powerful spiritual bond we have with one another. Gods and the names for God have changed in every era, yet one dynamic remains constant—the Light.
Author Bio:
Judith T. Lambert, specializes in dream interpretation and holds a master’s degree in Religious Studies from John F. Kennedy University in Orinda, California. For 35 years, she has divided her time between communities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Thailand, and the USA. Extensive travels have enabled her to deepen her study of cultures and religions first hand. Her books include, The Light: A Modern-Day Journey for Peace, A Mother Goddess for Our Times: Mary’s Appearances at Medjugorje and Gabrielle’s Magical Pets, a picture book illustrated by her daughter.
Contact me at: judithlambertbooks.com and judithlambertbooks@gmail.com
Amazon.com
Skype Dream Consultations Available
International Museum Academy Myanmar
The British Council is implementing “International Museum Academy Myanmar (IMA Myanmar)” project in close collaboration with “Ministry of Religious Affairs and Culture” to form a strategic alliance and partnership with a long term vision to safeguard Myanmar’s rich cultural heritage through institutional support to the under-resourced museum sector as well as the professional development of museum professionals to significantly raise Myanmar’s museum sector to international standards of best practice.
As part of the IMA Project, British Council has been organising research and training programmes with different UK partners since 2014 until now to continue professional support to museum staffs all over the country. In this documentary, you will hear voices from UK partners as well as the Museum professionals about the situation of the Museums across the country and development and future of the Myanmar Museum sector including the professional skills of the museum staffs.
5-Fact Challenge at the Mon Cultural Museum (Mawlamyine, Myanmar)
TIME STAMPS
0:25 The Mon People
2:51 First Look at the Mon Cultural Museum
5:37 Buying Ticket - No Cameras Allowed
7:52 Mon Traditional Clothing
8:09 Mystery of the Shelduck
9:31 The 5-Fact Challenge
12:09 Mon Musical Instruments
14:10 Where Is Mon State?
15:30 Mon Naming Ceremony
16:28 Traditional Mon House
16:53 The Rubber Industry
18:19 Laterite Bricks
19:34 SOLVED: The Rooster/Shelduck Mystery
20:37 Did I Pass the 5-Fact Challenge?
25:08 Summary and Conclusion
26:47 Post Credits Bonus Clip
27:43 Post Museum Cup of Tea!
Mawlamyine is the capital city of Mon State, which is the home of the Mon people. I knew very little about the Mon, and so I set off one day to visit the Mon Cultural Museum. Unfortunately, I was not allowed to bring in any cameras - not even my little GoPro - and I was forced to use my smartphones (neither of which work properly when it comes to video and audio).
Even so, I enjoyed my trip to the museum very much, and I learned a lot. I also invented a new Travel Challenge while I was there: the 5-Fact Challenge. The idea is that I can't just wander through the museum and leave. I have to test myself. And the test was to learn 5 interesting things about the Mon people, culture, or history and commit them to memory.
After my visit to the museum, I sat outside near a giant gong, and I tested myself to see if I could recall all 5 facts from my 5-Fact Challenge. Did I fail or pass the test?
Cheers,
Douglas (AKA The Cycling Canadian)
MESSAGE FROM THE CYCLING CANADIAN:
Thanks for checking out this video. I am the Cycling Canadian (AKA Douglas), and I'm making videos about my experiences traveling around the world both on and off a touring bike. I travel on a low budget, so I tend to stay in simple guest houses and spend my time exploring the local streets and markets on foot.
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I started making these videos on a recent 50-day trip to Bangladesh, and I enjoyed it so much that I kept exploring and making videos. You can see all of my videos on my main YouTube channel right here:
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Playlists are a great way to make sure you don't miss any of my videos. I put all of my travel vlogs into playlists. If you use them, you can see all of the videos from each country in order:
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I don't just make videos. I also write about my trips and take pictures. I have some detailed written journals from previous trips on my website. The website is also called The Cycling Canadian, and this link will take you there:
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Joby Gorillapod
All editing done with Windows Movie Maker and Windows Paint. (My poor little computer doesn't have the power to run anything else.)
MYANMAR: WORLD'S LARGEST JADE MARKET in MANDALAY and its sweatshops ????
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's visit the Jade Market in the city of Mandalay in Myanmar. Myanmar is home to the largest jade reserves on the planet and this precious stone makes up just under 50% of the country’s GDP. The Myanmar Jade Market (and the sweatshops that you will see here) is several square hectares of organized chaos. Here buyers from all over the world, but mostly China and India, come to buy jade in bulk and ship it home to local jewelers.
Myanmar (formerly Burma) is a Southeast Asian nation of more than 100 ethnic groups, bordering India, Bangladesh, China, Laos and Thailand. Yangon (formerly Rangoon), the country's largest city, is home to bustling markets, numerous parks and lakes, and the towering, gilded Shwedagon Pagoda, which contains Buddhist relics and dates to the 6th century.
#VicStefanu
Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
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MYANMAR: The iconic NIGHT FOOD MARKETS, ROYAL CITY OF MANDALAY ????
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's visit Mandalay, which is the second-largest city and the last royal capital of Myanmar (Burma), and let's walk around the night food stalls that show up around sunset time on the busy 86th street, about a kilometer west form the royal palace. Mandalay is a city and former royal capital in northern Myanmar (formerly Burma) on the Irrawaddy River. In its center is the restored Mandalay Palace from the Konbaung Dynasty, surrounded by a moat. Mandalay Hill provides views of the city from its summit, which is reached by covered stairway. At its foot, the Kuthodaw Pagoda houses hundreds of Buddhist-scripture-inscribed marble slabs.
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Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
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My videos include subjects about: video, tour, documentary, tourism, how to, scenic, graphic, traveling, travel, visit, historic, old, ancient, historical, famous, world, tourist, art, culture, holiday, vacation, channel, youtube, history, events, trends, information, attractions, nature, museum, park, houses, palaces, forts, castles, vic stefanu, vlog, awesome, civilization, architecture, construction, landmark, what to see, what to do, where to go, places, locations, market, shopping, centre, guide, things, buy, fun, to do, science, journal, production, films, towns, cities, countries, Europe, Asia, America, USA, England, United Kingdom
MYANMAR: Spectacular ancient TEAKWOOD BUDDHIST MONASTERY in MANDALAY ????
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's visit the magnificent Shweinbin Monastery which is a Buddhist monastery in Mandalay, Burma, built in the tradition of Burmese teak architecture. The monastery was built in 1895 by a Sino-Burmese merchant married to a Burmese woman of royal extraction. The monastery's construction strictly adheres to traditional rules of Burmese monastic architecture and includes all of the designated pyatthat-crowned pavilions. Mandalay is a city and former royal capital in northern Myanmar (formerly Burma) on the Irrawaddy River. In its center is the restored Mandalay Palace from the Konbaung Dynasty, surrounded by a moat. Mandalay Hill provides views of the city from its summit, which is reached by covered stairway. At its foot, the Kuthodaw Pagoda houses hundreds of Buddhist-scripture-inscribed marble slabs.
Myanmar (formerly Burma) is a Southeast Asian nation of more than 100 ethnic groups, bordering India, Bangladesh, China, Laos and Thailand. Yangon (formerly Rangoon), the country's largest city, is home to bustling markets, numerous parks and lakes, and the towering, gilded Shwedagon Pagoda, which contains Buddhist relics and dates to the 6th century.
Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com.
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My videos include subjects about: video, tour, documentary, tourism, how to, scenic, graphic, traveling, travel, visit, historic, old, ancient, famous, world, tourist, art, culture, holiday, vacation, channel, youtube, history, events, trends, information, attractions, nature, museum, park, houses, palaces, forts, castles, vic stefanu, vlog, awesome, civilization, architecture, construction, landmark, what to see, what to do, where to go, places, locations, market, shopping, centre, guide, things, buy, fun, to do, science, journal, production, films, towns, cities, countries, Europe, Asia, America, USA, England, United Kingdom
Mandalay||Inside of an Ancient Pagoda in Amarapura||Myanmar
Amarapura, Mandalay was once capital of Myanmar and now a township of Mandalay. Amarapura is old city of Myanmar. There have lots of memory of old Myanmar. There have lot of pagoda. All them are very old. So, we just have one to show how it is look inside now.
Myanmar Mandalay (Highlights) Hill Part 17
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Mandalay Myanmar
Mandalay is the second-largest city and the last royal capital of Burma. Located 445 miles (716 km) north of Yangon on the east bank of the Irrawaddy River, the city has a population of one and half million,and is the capital of Mandalay Region.Mandalay is the economic hub of Upper Burma and considered the centre of Burmese culture. A continuing influx of Chinese immigrants, mostly from Yunnan, in the past twenty years, has reshaped the city's ethnic makeup and increased commerce with China.Despite Naypyidaw's recent rise, Mandalay remains Upper Burma's main commercial, educational and health center.The city gets its name from the nearby Mandalay Hill. The name is likely a derivative of a Pali word although the exact word of origin remains unclear.
Around the city:
Atumashi Monastery: The Atumashi Kyaung , which literally means the inimitable monastery, is also one of the well known sights. The original structure was destroyed by a fire in 1890 though the masonry plinth survived. It was indeed an inimitable one in its heyday. The reconstruction project was started by the government on 2 May 1995 and completed in June 1996.
Buddha's Replica Tooth Relic Pagoda: One of the Buddha's Sacred Replica Tooth Relics was enshrined in the Mandalay Swedaw Pagoda on Maha Dhammayanthi Hill in Amarapura Township. The pagoda was built with cash donations contributed by the peoples of Burma and Buddhist donors from around the world under the supervision of the Burmese military government. The authorities and donors hoisted Buddha's Replica Tooth Relic Pagoda Mandalay's Shwe Htidaw (sacred golden umbrella), Hngetmyatnadaw (sacred bird perch vane) and Seinhpudaw (sacred diamond bud) on 13 December 1996.
Kuthodaw Pagoda (The World's Biggest Book): Built by King Mindon in 1857, this pagoda modeled on the Shwezigon Pagoda at Nyaung U, is surrounded by 729 upright stone slabs on which are inscribed the entire Buddhist Scriptures as edited and approved by the Fifth Buddhist Synod. It is popularly known as the World's Biggest Book for its stone scriptures.
Kyauktawgyi Pagoda: Near the southern approach to Mandalay Hill stands the Kyauktawgyi Buddha Image built by King Mindon in 1853--78. The Image was carved out of a huge single block of marble. Statues of 80 Arahants (the Great Disciples of the Buddha) are assembled around the Image, 20 on each side. The carving of the Image was completed in 1865.
Maha Muni Pagoda: The Image is said to have been cast in the life-time of the Gautama Buddha and that the Buddha embraced it 7 times thereby bringing it to life. Consequently, devout Buddhists hold it to be alive and refer to it as the Maha Muni Sacred Living Image. Revered as the holiest pagoda in Mandalay, It was built by King Bodawpaya in 1784. The image in a sitting posture is 12 feet and 7 inches (3.8 m) high. As the image was brought from Rakhine State it was also called the Great Rakhine Buddha. The early morning ritual of washing the Face of Buddha Image draws a large crowd of devotees everyday. The Great Image is also considered as the greatest, next to the Shwedagon Pagoda, in Burma. A visit to Mandalay is incomplete without a visit to Maha Muni Pagoda.
Mandalay Hill: The hill has for long been a holy mount. Legend has it that the Buddha, on his visit, had prophesied that a great city would be founded at its foot. Mandalay Hill, 230 metres in elevation, commands a magnificent view of the city and surrounding countryside. The construction of a motor road to reach the hill-top has already been finished.
Mandalay Palace: The whole magnificent palace complex was destroyed by a fire during World War II. However, the finely built palace walls, the city gates with their crowning wooden pavilions and the surrounding moat still represent an impressive scene of the Mandalay Palace, Mya-nan-san-kyaw Shwenandaw, which has been rebuilt using forced labor. A model of the Mandalay Palace, Nanmyint-saung and Cultural Museum are located inside the Palace grounds.
Shwenandaw Monastery: Famous for its intricate wood-carvings, this monastery is a fragile reminder of the old Mandalay Palace. Actually, it was a part of the old palace later moved to its current site by King Thibaw in 1880.
Yadanabon Zoological Gardens: A small zoo between the Mandalay Palace and Mandalay Hill. It has over 300 species and is notably the only zoo to have Burmese Roofed Turtles.
Garden Hotel, Mandalay, Myanmar, HD Review
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Located in Mandalay, 1,000 feet from Zegyo Market, Garden Hotel features free WiFi access and free private parking.
The rooms come with a flat-screen TV. Some units have a sitting area for your convenience. Every room includes a private bathroom. For your comfort, you will find slippers and free toiletries.
You will find a 24-hour front desk at the property.
There are lots of activities in the area, such as golfing and biking. The hotel also provides bike rental. Shwe Kyi Myint Pagoda is 1,000 feet from Garden Hotel, and Cultural Museum & Library is 1,650 feet away. The nearest airport is Mandalay International Airport, 21 miles from Garden Hotel.
Getting Internet in Mandalay Myanmar its a miracle July 2013