atumashi kyaung monastery mandalay myanmar burma

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Atumashi Kyaung Monastery in Mandalay, Myanmar (Burma) Royalty Free Stock Photo
Atumashi Kyaung Monastery in Mandalay, Myanmar (Burma) Royalty Free Stock Photo
Atumashi Monastery, Mandalay, Myanmar Royalty Free Stock Photo
Atumashi Monastery, Mandalay, Myanmar Royalty Free Stock Photo
Atumashi Monastery, Mandalay, Myanmar Royalty Free Stock Photo
Ornate exterior of the Atumashi Monastery in Mandalay Royalty Free Stock Photo
Ornate doors at the Atumashi Monastery in Mandalay Royalty Free Stock Photo
Atumashi Kyaung Monastery in Mandalay, Myanmar (Burma)
Atumashi Kyaung Monastery Maha Atulawaiyan Kyaungdawgyi is a Buddhist monastery located near Shwenandaw Monastery in Mandalay, Royalty Free Stock Photo
Thai women travel at Atumashi Kyaung Monastery in Mandalay, Myanmar. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Ornate gate at the Atumashi Monastery in Mandalay Royalty Free Stock Photo
Ornate exterior of the Atumashi Monastery in Mandalay Royalty Free Stock Photo
People inside the Atumashi Monastery in Mandalay Royalty Free Stock Photo
Inside the Atumashi Monastery in Mandalay Royalty Free Stock Photo
Atumashi Monastery, Mandalay, Myanmar Royalty Free Stock Photo
The Atumashi Monastery is a Buddhist monastery located in Mandalay, Myanmar (Burma). It was built in 1857 by King Mindon, two years after the capital was moved to Mandalay. The monastery was built at a cost of 500,000 rupees. The original monastery structure was built using teak, covered with stucco on the outside, with its peculiar feature being that it was surmounted by five graduated rectangular terraces instead of the traditional pyatthats, Burmese-style tiered and spired roofs. The structure burned down in 1890 after a fire in the city destroyed both the monastery and the 30 feet (9.1 m) tall Buddha image, as well as complete sets of the Tipitaka. During the fire, a 19.2-carat (32 ratti) diamond, which adorned the Buddha image (originally given to King Bodawphaya by Maha Nawrahta, the Governor of Arakan) disappeared as well. In 1996, Burma's Archaeological Department reconstructed the monastery with prison labor.


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