Anawrahta


Description: Anawrahta also spelled aniruddha was a ruler of the kingdom of bagan and the first ruler of a unified burma.

Anawrahta also spelled Aniruddha or Anoarahtâ or Anoa-ra-htá-soa, was a ruler of the kingdom of Bagan and the first ruler of a unified Burma.

His father was Kunhsaw Kyaunghpyu, who took the throne of Pagan from Nyaung-u Sawrahan and in turn was overthrown by the sons of Nyaung-u Sawrahan, Kyiso and Sokka-te, who forced Kunhsaw Kyaunghpyu to become a monk. When Anawrahta came of age, he challenged the surviving brother Sokka-te to single combat and slew him. Anawrahta offered to return ruler ship to his father, who refused and remained a monk, so he took the throne in 1044.

He made a pilgrimage to Ceylon, returning to convert his country from Ari Buddhism to Theravada Buddhism. To further this goal he appointed Arahan, a famous Mon monk of Thaton. In 1057 he invaded Thaton under the premise that they had refused to lend Pagan the Pali Tipitaka, and successfully returned with the Mon king Manuha as prisoner. Anawrahta returned to Pagan with the Mon royal family, 32 white elephants (each of which was laden with the sacred books of the Tripitaka) and Thaton's remaining 30,000 inhabitants - including craftsmen and builders. The Mon king was dedicated to the Shwezigon as a pagoda slave. But despite their inglorious defeat, the sophisticated Mons proceeded to dominate Pagan's cultural life for the next century - many of the thousands of pagodas at Pagan are Mon in style and the Burmans evolved their script from Mon

From 1057-1059 he took an army to Nanzhao to seek a Buddha's tooth relic. As he returned, Shan chiefs swore allegiance to him, and he married Saw Monhla, princess of the Shan chief of Moguang. In 1071 Anawrahta received the complete Tipitaka from Sri Lanka. Buddhists from Dai regions (southern Yunnan and Laos), Thailand, and India (where Buddhism had been oppressed) came to study in Pagan as Anawrahta moved the center of Burmese Buddhism north from Thaton.

He also built the famous Shwezigon Pagoda.

In the end, Anawrahta was successful in his quest, and Theravada Buddhism became the dominant religion in Myanmar within two centuries.

Despite his war-like tendencies, Anawrahta is said to have been a very religious man.He is believed to have dispatched a ship laden with treasure to Bodhgaya in India, where the Buddha gained enlightenment, to pay for the restoration of the Mahabodhi temple.

Anawrahta was killed by a wild buffalo in 1077. His rule was usurped by a general called Kyanzittha, who allegedly fell in love with Anawrahta's wife to be, the Princess of Mon Kingdom.

Anawrahta Street (Frasier Street) in Yangon (formerly Rangoon) is named after him.


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