Buphaya (ဗူးဘုရား)
Burmese.
Gourd Pagoda.
Name of a Buddhist
stupa
in
Bagan
(fig.), located on the
east bank of the Irrawaddy River.
It was built in the 3rd Century AD by King
Pyusawhti.
According to ancient chronicles, in the reign of its first monarch, King
Thamoddarit, Bagan was ravaged by the Five Great Menaces, i.e. a
large
tiger,
a huge flying
squirrel,
a giant wild
boar,
a big
bird,
and
the extensive proliferation of the vines of a gourd
plant, all of which
King Pyusawhti quelled with a magic bow that he possessed (fig.).
Hence, when he became King, Pyusawhti had
pagodas built at each of the places where he had
destroyed the
Five Great Menaces, with the Buphaya pagoda, at the spot of the latter of the
Five Great Menaces, built in the shape of a gourd (fig.), hence its name. Besides its
bulbous dome, a design
favoured by the
Pyu,
this pagoda's architectural style is considered an early form or prototype of
other Bagan monuments, and is rather similar to the 10th Century
Ngakywenadaung
Pagoda (fig.) built by King
Nyaung-u Sawrahan, who is also known as the
so-called
Cucumber
King
or
Farmer
King
Taungthugyi Min, and of which the name means
the
Earring
of Ngakywe.
The Gourd
Pagoda (fig.)
originally stood allegedly in the city's centre, but erosion by the
Irrawaddy River
has over time eaten away large parts of the land, including the entire western
part of the ancient city wall, and it
now stands at the east bank of the river. The current Buphaya is a replacement of the original pagoda, which was destroyed
in an earthquake in 1975, when it broke into pieces and fell into the
Irrawaddy
River.
See also
MAP.
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