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- Published: 19 Nov 2008
- Uploaded: 04 Feb 2011
- Author: korakhine
Native name | |
---|---|
Official name | Mrauk U |
Pushpin label position | bottom |
Pushpin map | Burma |
Pushpin map caption | Location in Burma |
Map caption | Map of Mrauk U with main temples |
Subdivision type | Country |
Subdivision name | |
Subdivision type1 | Division |
Subdivision name1 | Rakhine State |
Population blank1 | Rakhine |
Population blank1 title | Ethnicities |
Population blank2 | Buddhism |
Population blank2 title | Religions |
Population density km2 | auto |
Coordinates display | inline,title |
Coordinates region | MM |
Established date | 1433 |
Established title | Settled |
Latns | N |
Longew | E |
Coordinates | 20°35′45.90″N93°11′38.58″N |
Timezone | MST |
Utc offset | +6.30 |
Mrauk U (, ) is an archaeologically important town in northern Rakhine State, Myanmar. It is also the capital of Mrauk-U Township, a sub region of the Sittwe District. It was the capital of Mrauk U Kingdom, the most important and powerful Rakhine (Arakanese) kingdom from 1433 to 1784.
Although located in a tropical region, Mrauk U enjoys lower temperatures when the Northeastern Monsoon falls. From mid October to mid March during the Cool Season, temperatures can drop to 13°C. This season coincides with the tourist season for Myanmar.
Another dismissed myth was that in the region where Mrauk U was to be constructed, lived a lonely female monkey. She met a peacock and the two later cohabited. The female monkey conceived with the peacock, and it laid an egg. A human son was born from the egg and he grew up to become a mighty prince. The prince later built a city near the jungle, and in respect of his birth story, the city was called Myauk-U meaning ‘Monkey’s Egg’.
The city also traded with non-Asian powers such as Portugal and then the VOC of the Netherlands. The VOC established trading relations with the Arakanese in 1608 after the Portuguese fell in favour due to the lack of loyalty of Portuguese mercenaries, such as Filipe de Brito e Nicote in the service of the Arakanese king. The VOC established a permanent factory in Mrauk U in 1635, and operated in Arakan till 1665.
At its zenith, Mrauk U was the centre of a kingdom which stretched from the shores of the Ganges river to the western reaches of the Ayeyarwaddy River. According to popular Arakanese legend, there were 12 'cities of the Ganges' which constitute roughly half of modern day Bangladesh which were governed by Mrauk U, including Dhaka and Chittagong. During that period, its kings minted coins inscribed in Arakanese, Kufic and Bengali. The inclusion of Kufic and Bengali were not that the Mrauk U kings had embraced Islam, but in order to gain legitimacy over the mainly Islamic Bengalis who were subjects.
Much of Mrauk U's historical description is drawn from the writings of Friar Sebastian Manrique, a Portuguese Augustinian monk who resided in Mrauk U from 1630 to 1635.
The most notable temples in Mrauk U are the Shite-thaung Temple (Temple of 80,000 Images or Temple of Victory), Htukkanthein Temple (Htukkan Ordination Hall), the Koe-thaung Temple (Temple of 90,000 Images) and the Five Mahn pagodas.
Although Mrauk U is a primarily Buddhist site, there are several religious buildings of other faiths. The most notable would be the old Santikan Mosque, built during Min Saw Mon's reign, in the southeast of the town. Friar Manrique also mentions the presence of a Roman Catholic church and a small number of converts and foreign born Catholics (including ronin who were forced out of Japan due to persecution by the shogunate of Tokugawa Ieyasu)
Mrauk U houses a growing tourist industry, as it has only recently become a reachable tourist destination.
Category:Township capitals of Burma Category:Populated places in Rakhine State Category:1431 establishments Category:Buddhist temples in Burma Category:Visitor attractions in Burma Category:Kaladan River
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