Mrauk-U (Myo Haung) is another interesting historical site in Rakhine,  fast becoming a tourist attraction. Mrauk-U was founded in 1430 AD and  flourished till 1785 as recorded in its history. Known as the Golden  City by foreign travelers of the era it was a focus of trade due to its  strategic on the coastal region of Bay of Bengal. Many historical sites  such as the old palace grounds and ancient pagodas principally  Shitthoung Pagoda (Eighty thousand pagodas), the old city of Vesali, the  Mahamuni Image of Kyauktaw offers a glimpse into the Rakhine history.

  A new tourist site which is becoming increasingly more popular in  recent years is the old capital of Rakhine (Arakan) called Mrauk-U. Some  of the local people refer to it as Myo ( or Mro) Haung, the old city.  It was first constructed by the Rakhine King Min_Saw Mon in 1430 AD, and  remained its capital for 355 years until 1784 when the Rakhine Kingdom  ceased to exist as a separate entity and became an integral part of the  Myanmar Kingdom.
  The Golden City of Mrauk-U became known in Europe as a city of oriental  splendor after Friar Sebastian Manrique visited the area for about (8)  years between 1629 to 1637 AD and though he was a Portuguese Augustinian  missionary he wrote his fascinating "Travels" in Spanish and published  it as a book in 1649 and 1653. Father Manrique's vivid account of the  coronation of King Thiri_Thudhamma in 1635 and about the Rakhine Court  and intrigues of the Portuguese adventurers fired the imagination of  later authors, especially after an English translation was published by  the Hakluyt Society in 1927 in 2 volumes. In Volume One of this English  translation we can read the intriguing account of Rakhine in mid-17th  century. Manrique wrote of his astonishment when he was shown a pair of  pendant ear-rings, set with priceless rubies as large as a small hen's  egg. He said when he beheld these kyauk-nagats he could scarcely fix his  eyes on them due to the radiant splendor they cast; he just stood  amazed. In the markets also he saw "being sold in abundance, diamonds  rubies, sapphires, emeralds, topazes, gold and silver in plates and  bars, tin and zinc, which were very difficult to get in his home  country.
    
       
 
         It was the English author Maurice Collis who made Mrauk-U and Rakhine  famous after his book The Land of the Great Image based on Friar  Manrique's travels in Arakan, was published in 1942. The Great Image is  of course, the Maha Muni Buddha Image which is now in Mandalay, though  originally it was made and venerated in this area about 15 miles from  Mrauk-U where another Maha Muni Buddha Image flanked by two other Buddha  images is now worshipped. You can visit this place also on the hillock  called Sirigutta, about (6) miles east of Kyauktaw town.
How to get there
  About ten years ago it was difficult to travel to this area but you can  easily visit Mrauk-U now. From Yangon there are daily flights to  Sittway the capital of Rakhine State. There are Travel and Tour  Companies in Yangon and Sittway which operate tours to Mrauk-U and the  surrounding area.
      
 
 
   In Sittway you should visit the newly built Rakhine State Cultural  Museum and Library and the Buddhist Museum where many interesting  antiquities of Rakhine's colorful past are on display.
  From Sittway to Mrauk-U you can take a boat on the Kaladan River and  then go into some of its tributary streams. Mrauk-U, on Thinghanadi  creek is only 45 miles from Sittway and the sea coast. It is a very  pleasant river journey. If you are visiting in the winter months you can  see flocks of wild geese, ducks and other migrating waterfowl. To the  east of the old city is the famous Kiccapanadi stream and far away the  Lemro River. The city area used to have a network of canals.
  In Mrauk-U itself you can visit the Archaeological Museum which is near  the Palace Site. This site is right in the centre of Mrauk-U which was  built in a strategic location by leveling three small hills. Recently  the Archaeology Department has been excavating the Palace Site which was  occupied by Rakhine Kings for over two hundred years.
  Even the pagodas are strategically located on hilltops and look like  fortresses as indeed they were once used as such in times of enemy  intrusion. There are moats, artificial lakes and canals and the whole  area could be flooded to deter or repulse attackers.
          
 
 
   There are innumerable pagodas and Buddha images all over the old city  and the surrounding hills. Some are still being used as places of  worship today; many in ruins are now being restored to their original  splendor. You should at least visit some; the most famous and well worth  seeing are the Shitthaung, the Andaw, the Dukkhan Thein (Sima or  Ordination Hall), the Koethaung, the Laymyetnha and the Shwe Daung  pagodas.
  The Shitthaung or "temple of the 80,000 Buddhas" is a fascinating place  full of small images, scenes in sculpture of Buddhist stories with the  kings and queens, courtiers and common people portrayed in their  mediaeval costumes and head-dresses, all frozen in stone throughout the  ages. You should take a good torch-light to examine the myriad  interesting scenes and figures lining the dark corridors of this temple.  You can see some Rakhine men boxing and wrestling, some girls dancing  and playing, and then there are also the mythical birds, beasts and  half-human celestials and demons. Try and find the figures of both the  male and female Vasundhra/ Vasundhari symbolizing the God /Goddess of  the Earth.
  The Shitthaung Pagoda, located about half a mile to the north of the  palace site was built by one of the most powerful kings of the Mrauk-U  Dynasty, called by the people, Minbargyi, but according to records on  inscriptions as King Minbin who reined from 1513 to 1553. The king built  this fortress-temple after repulsing a Portuguese attack. The  Portuguese mercenaries later served under Rakhine kings. There was also  surprisingly an elite corp of Japanese bodyguards protecting the kings  of Rakhine.
  The Andaw (meaning the tooth relic of Buddha) is a pagoda only 86 feet  to the north-east of the Shitthaung Pagoda. Built by King Min Hla Raza  in 1521 it is said to enshrine the tooth relic received from a Sri  Lankan king by King Minbin.
  This temple is a hollow octagonal building made of pure sandstone  blocks; there are two internal concentric passages, with a prayer hall  on the east. Like other temples it is on a small hillock.
  Visitors should see the frescoes giving detailed portrayals of life in  the Mrauk-U court; these frescoes are found in Laymyetnha and the Shwe  Daung Pagoda. Laymyetnha Pagoda was built by King Min Saw Mon in 1430 AD  as one of the original pagodas at the time of the founding of Mrauk-U.  The name of the Pagoda means "Four faced" as there are four entrances to  this square sandstone structure with a central solid stupa 80 feet  high. There are 28 Buddha images as mentioned in the Sambuddha  scripture.
       
 
 
   The Shwe Daung pagoda or the "Golden Hill Pagoda" is also believed to  have been built by King Minbin between the years 1531-1553. It is a  landmark pagoda as it is the tallest in this area and can be seen as far  away as 20 miles from the main Kaladan River. The hill itself is 250  feet high and is about half a mile to the south-east of the Palace Site.  It is a solid stupa with a circular base. During the First  Anglo-Burmese War, 1824-26, the Myanmar forces built earthen  fortifications on this hill and mounted guns which inflicted heavy  losses on the British forces. Some of these fortifications can still be  seen today.
  Standing on a plain of rice fields is the Koethaung Pagoda; the name  means 90,000 and probably signified the number of Buddha images it was  supposed to contain. It was built by King Min Taikkha, the son of King  Min Bin who built the Shitthaung or temple of 80,000 images, so the son  exceeded the father by 10,000! It is the biggest pagoda in the Mrauk-U  area. Like the Shitthaung, this pagoda is also a massive fortress-like  structure built with stone walls and terraces. There are 108 smaller  pagodas surrounding it, all made of sandstone. With a winding corridor  it is like a cave tunnel which you have to traverse until you reach the  central chamber. The inner gallery has collapsed and is no longer  accessible. There is an octagonal pagoda in the middle surrounded by  over one hundred smaller pagodas. Unlike some of the other temples, not  only sandstone, but bricks were also used in this pagoda.
  Apart from the pagodas, visitors should not miss seeing the Ordination  Hall, Htukkan Thein, and the exquisite little library the Pitakataik.  Htukkan (or Dukkhan) Thein is located about 300 feet to the north-west  of Shitthaung Pagoda. Built in 1571 by King Min Phalaung it is on a  hillock 30 feet high, with two stone stair ways (8) feet broad on the  east and south.

  No longer used as an Ordination Hall, it is now one of the well-known  pagodas of Mrauk-U. There is a long vaulted passageway which leads to  the central shrine room which is 15 feet in height. This room is said to  be the place where the Buddhist Archbishop used to sit to discuss  religious affairs with Senior Monks. See the seated stone ladies  preserving in sculpture the ancient hair-styles, among the many other  interesting figures. There are also 140 niches with Buddha images.
  The little library or Pitaka-taik, the Repository for the Buddhist  scriptures was built in 1591 also by King Min Phalaung. It measures only  14 feet from east to west, 10 feet from north to south and is only 9  feet in height. Built entirely of stone there are lovely designs on the  outer walls making it look like a tiny jeweled casket shaped like a  blooming lotus. There were 48 libraries in Mrauk-U but only this one is  preserved, though it is sometimes obscured by thickets of bushes and  partly covered by moss and weeds which flourish in the 200" of annual  rainfall in the region.
  This library is reputed to have housed 30 sets of the Buddhist Tipitaka  which King Narapatigyi (1638-1645) received from Sri Lanka.  Unfortunately it acquired an unpleasant appellation due to its dark  windowless interior. It is now known as Chin-kite library, Chin-kite  meaning mosquito-bite. The Rakhine people say that Chin-kite is a  Myanmar mispronunciation of the Rakhine word Khraung kaik, the name of  the city wall which is close to the north of the library. If you have  difficulty in finding this library asks for the Htupayon Pagoda as it is  just north of this pagoda.
  The artificial, man-made lakes named Anomakan and Letsekan on the  southern part of Mrauk-U were once part of the defense system. They are  now peaceful havens for visitors as well as for the local people, and  for animals, birds and fish. Letsekan is (3) miles in length and half a  mile wide. Some of the old city walls can also be seen.
      
 
 
   The Portuguese and other Europeans were given a separate quarter at  Mrauk U, only about half a mile west of the palace site. The place is  called Daingripet and this place for the European settlement is on the  other bank of Aungdat creek. The old church built by Father Manrique,  now in ruins, can still be seen in this place. It is near the Daingri  tank built by King Ba Saw Phyu (1459-1482).
  Rakhine has other historical sites which are earlier than Mrauk U, at  Vesali, only 6 miles to the north, and at Launggret a little further  away, but easily reached by car in about half an hour.
  If you are interested in spectacular places of historical interest and  natural beauty Mrauk-U is the place. There are now comfortable hotels  and guest houses where you can stay while exploring this ancient land,  which was once a seat of oriental splendor.
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