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The Golden City Of Mrauk-U
Historical Background ( 1430 – 1784 A.D)
Eighteen kings had reigned in the Launggret city.
The last king, Minsawmon, ascended the throne with the Queen Sawsit
in 1404 A.D. For many years since, the country had been in turmoil;
usurpers, one after another, became the rulers in the last years of
the Launggret dynasty. The governments of the Launggret were
extremely weak and the rulers were hardly able to control the whole
of the country. There was a great deal of dissatisfaction and unrest
throughout the country. The military networks were also completely
out of order.
In the midst of such general confusion Minkhoung, the King of Inwa,
sent his son, Minraikyawzwa to attack Launggret and occupied it in
1406 A.D. Minsawmon fled to Bengal. One year later, minkhari a
younger brother of Minsawmon, ruling in Thandway, sought the
military aid of the King Razadirat of Bago. Razadirat sent him an
army of fifty thousand solders. Launggret was captured and Minkhari
occupied the throne in 1407 A.D. Then the King of Inwa sent an army
again to Launggret. Thus for a period of twenty four years, Rakhine
had become a battle-field in the struggle for power between the
kings of the central Myanmar. Inwa and the lower Myanmar, Bago.
During this period the dethroned King Minsawmon had been taking
shelter at the court of the King of Thuratan who himself having been
engaged in wars could not give Minsawmon any help. The King of Delhi
had come to attack Thuratan with a large army, composed of
elephants, horses, chariots, infantry and “dogs as large as
bullocks” trained for warfare. Minsawmon helped the King of Thuratan
in fighting of the King of Delhi. By his advice, the large dogs were
disabled by means of iron hooks baited with raw flesh. The elephants
and horses were tricked to fall into pits covered with straws and
earth. The bottom of these pits were planted with iron spikes.
Ultimately, the Thuratan King won a complete victory. The exiled
Rakhine King taught the Thuratan King’s followers the technique of
trapping a herd of wild elephants. The procedure consisted of
driving them into a space enclosed by a stockade and a ditch. He
also taught them the art of training elephants.
Then Minsawmon was sent back to Rakhine accompanied by a large army,
and won back Launggret in 1429 A.D. In the year 791 B.E, on
Thursday, the first waning day of Kason, Minsawmon was restored to
the throne of Launggret, Rakhine. After the King Minsawmon had
occupied the throne for about two years, he decided to abandon
Launggret and to build another city at a more suitable place. The
reasons for the decision included the following.
The royal palace at Launggret was struck by thunderbolts, intruded
by poisonous snakes, and perched by evil birds. Besides, the city
had been ruled and ruined by the invaders. This called for the
abandonment of Launggret and a new city site was sought for. His
sole ambition had been to make Rakhine prosperous and strong, and to
this end in mind, he had sacrificed everything. He had acquired vast
administrative experience during his stay with the King of Bengal.
Then King Minsawmon set out in golden boats and silver boats
upstream of the Lemro River in the company of seers, astrologers,
and ministers, and came to a tributary in the west. Then he saw a
strange well-dressed old man on top of Golden Hill who was playing a
flute.
The strange man called out to the King and pointed at the Galon
Taung which was situated on the western side of the Golden Hill.
When the company reached a stream they witnessed the following
scene:
A woman, carrying a basket and a mesh-snare was catching fish out of
water on the southern side was questioning another woman who was
also fishing on the northern side.
“Here, my sister Mrauk-U, did you catch any fish?”
“Yes, I did”, reply the other.
Then the woman of the northern side asked the woman of the south.
“Here, my sister Wathay, did you catch any fish?”
“Yes, I did,” the southern woman replied.
Listening to these conversations they learnt that the northern side
was called Mrauk-U, and that the other side was Wathay. Then from
the foot of the Galon Taung they set forth towards the source of the
Mrauk-U Creek in search of the new city site. On the way they
witnessed a series of strange sights. In a place there lay a patch
of land covered with a grove of reeds that shot up in a clockwise
climb towards which a rat, chased by a cat, ran, but when they
reached there, the rat turned around and chased out the cat; then a
barking deer chased by a tiger ran and then turned around and chased
his enemy as the former reached the spot. Furthermore, a frog chased
by a snake ran and turned around when it got there and bit it. As
the snake was too big, the frog could eat only a part of it and the
remaining portion was shown to Minsawmon.
Having witnessed these strange events, the seers and the astrologers
unanimously agreed that the place could be the soil of divine
choice. The matter was then reported to the King, recommending
building of the royal palace.
There was a large Khamoung tree nearby, and when it was cut off,
five white lizards were found inside its hollow. The seers then
foretold that the future kings would observe the five precepts and
that they would be honest and good. The King’s advisers also
interpreted the omen as being highly propitious and they predicted
that many vessels laden with rich merchandise from neighbouring
countries would call at this city annually.
When the spot which had been pointed out by the old man was cleared
for building the palace, they found on the northern side a pot
filled with red earth, on the southern side another pot filled with
white earth and four front teeth of a tiger.
The seers said that the omen of the pots foretold the prosperity of
the city. The red earth meant that the future kings would reign long
and that the city would be plentiful of goods. The white earth
indicated that the future kings would ascend the throne of Mrauk-U
beneath the shade of White Umbrellas, riding on White Elephants. The
four front teeth of a tiger signified that no enemy would ever be
able to take this city of Mrauk-U.
When it came to selecting the opportune moment of building the
palace, the seers read that as Minsawmon was a Thursday-born, the
following two alternative fates waited for the City and for the
King.
If the building of the palace were carried out on time of Mainlet
Kansan, the King would live long but the City would be doomed in
three years; if built on time of Kanlet Kansan, the King would live
for only three years but the City would flourish for many hundred
years. The King chose the latter alternative, namely shorter life
for himself and longer life his descendents.
The construction of the city was started in the year 792 M.E, (1430
A.D) Sunday, on the first day of the waxing moon of Tawthalin at
sunrise which was the time of Kanlet Kansan.
The Inner City Of The Palace-Site
After many days of careful searches, Minsawmon selected in a
hilly tract a strategic position for his new capital, Mrauk-U.
According to the advice of his ministers and astrologers, he leveled
three small hills, Taungnyo, Kukka, and Moonlay, on which he built
his palace and another building for the royal family and then
fortified the surrounding hills for defensive purposes. The
palace-site was situated in the heart of the city. The moats had
been made by damming the small streams. Surrounding this inner city
of the palace-site and the lowlying ground was the first wall, made
up of earthen works damming the Panzaymyaung on the north, and hill
streams on the south.
The inner city of the palace-site was made up of three terraces. The
lowest terrace measured about 1740 feet from east to west and 1606
feet from north to south. Many parts of the first wall had since
disappeared and stones had been used in the construction of the quay
of the Sittway harbour called Mingyikyauktan. A new settlement had
been put up at the clear space of the wall especially at the
north-eastern corner. At present, a village, Nyaungbinzay, flanks
the north side of the city. The last remaining part is the south
eastern wall near Warettaw quarter and is twenty-five feet high.
The palace-site had been rebuilt and repaired many times during a
period of over two hundred years. Major repairs were started by the
King Minbin in the year of 893 B.E, on Saturday, the 2nd day of the
waxing moon of Thidingyut.
The second terrace is about 1000 feet long from east to west and 800
feet from north to south. The upper terrace is about 600 feet each
side. The area of the inner city is about 1.2 square miles. The
highest terrace is about fifty feet high from the lowest ground
level. The layout of the ground plan is somewhat similar to that of
the Mahamuni Shrine; the lines from west to east dips considerably
towards the north, and these form the lines north to south and south
to the east.
The detailed measurements surveyed by Dr. Forchhammer in 1870 are as
follow:
No. 1 terrace measurements from north to south west line 1606 feet,
to east line 1200 feet; from west to east 1740 feet; enterning the
west gate, the distance from the wall of the first to that of the
second enclosure is 140 feet, to that of the third 237 feet; across
platform III 656 feet; from the opposite gate of the III platform to
that the second 267 feet, to that of the first enclosure 440 feet.
Entering the north gate of the first enclosure there are 233 feet to
the second, 166 feet to the third, and 879 feet across to the
topmost platform, 138 feet from the south gate of terrace III to
that of the second and 450 feet to that of the first enclosure.
The walls were constructed with old sandstone blocks of various
sizes, well hewn and cemented with mortar which possesses great
adhesiveness. The cement was prepared by mixing sand and clay of
proper consistency and pieces of buffalo hide, tails, and hoofs
boiled in water till in became viscous like gum in solution. The
walls are 7 feet thick at the base, 4 feet at the top; in few
places, especially on the III platform, the height of the stone
walls had been raised by 2-3 feet bricks, and addition made by the
Myanmars after they had conquered Rakhine.
The north gate was called Mathataga (funeral gate); royal funeral
processions left the palace through this to the cemetery.
The lowland space between the first and second enclosures on the
west side was once filled with a clear mass of water, on which, in
former times, the queen and princesses would enjoy themselves every
evening on the water in their gilded royal boats to the
accompaniment of music amid the laughter and cheers of the other
inmates of the royal enclosure who probably lined the top of the
fringing wall. This broad expanse of water is now no longer in
existence; it was filled up in 1916 and 1917 to serve utilitarian
needs of certain officials.
The gates were all completely demolished with the exception of the
one at the south east corner, the entrance to the first enclosure.
The entrance is 10 feet wide; on either side the wall protrudes 8
feet with a thickness 71/2 feet and a height of 12 feet. On the
inner side of the wall a thick stone slab was firmly inserted in the
wall about one foot above the ground, and a second similar one above
it at a height of 8 feet; in the centre of each stone is a hole of 5
inches diameter. This was apparently intended to receive the two
ends of a beam to which a swinging door was attached. Close by is a
low steep hill known as Ywantaung. Tradition has it that the Royal
Central Clock (Big drum) was hung on top of this hill.
In the north east corner of the second enclosure is a large pool,
laid out with bricks and stones surrounded by a wall with an
entrance on each cardinal side and stairs leading to the water edge.
It was originally dug by Minphalaung (1571 – 1593 A.D) but was
repaired during the Myanmar occupation of Mrauk-U. On the south side
lies a well-polished stone slab, 4’ 7” high from the socket, 2’ 7”
broad, 6” thick, bearing an inscription in Myanmar language.
According to this inscription, it is learnt that it was engraved by
Maha Mingyi Kyawzwa who was appointed a governor of Dhanyawaddy by
the King of Myanmar. He repaired this pool on Wednesday, the 9th of
waning of Pyatho in 1183 M.E. (Dec. 1821 A.D). The pool was also
called Nant Tha Kan, by the Myanmar Governor. It means ‘scented –
pool’. In fact, its original Rakhine name had been Nunn – Tha – Kan
meaning ‘The Royal Family Pool’. Besides, according to tradition and
Rakhine historical annals, the pool was used in the coronation
ceremony of the kings of Mrauk-U Dynasty. It measures 135 feet in
length, 135 feet in breadth, 24 feet in depth and 540 feet in
perimeter.
The stone slab on which the inscription had been written has now
been entirely broken and the writing is more or less defaced, as the
people of the village wash their clothes on the stone fragments.
Most of the surrounding walls of this pool are in disrepair; within
the enclosure and close to water are four square stone pillars, one
at each corner, standing erect; they are four feet high. Each side
measures 1’ 6”, the two sides turned towards the pool exhibiting the
rude figures of Bilus or Rakkhas or Giants; in each of whose hand
carries a club. These pillars were erected by Minphalaung.
On the north side of the second wall is a large circular well with a
circumference of 76 feet, and is built of stone. The well was also
ascribed to Minphalaung and was reserved for use by the King only.
Besides, an old gate-way can be seen in the east wall of the second
terrace. It is similar to the cave under the palace site walling,
but really is a secret door for the passage of the royal family. The
door was reserved exclusively for emergency use and was very easy to
go out even on fully equipped royal elephants.
On the south side of the lowest terrace there was a large Royal
Garden. Now, the garden has been filled with weeds and grasses and
is being used as a playground.
The second terrace was made only for the use of members of the royal
family. In 1630 A.D, Father Manrique, the Portuguese ambassador,
stayed with princes for two years at the second terrace with the
permission of Thirithudhammaraza the King of Mrauk-U.
The wall, which circumvallates the third and topmost terrace, rises
to a height of 30 feet above the second terrace on the north and
east side and 20 feet to 30 feet over the level of lowest platform.
The walls at the south and west sides are lower and the space
between them are narrower than those on the north and east sides.
These walls had been made to protect the palace against the attacks
of enemies.
The palace buildings were built of teak and were lacquered and
gilded. Genuine gold and silver plates were used for decoration on
the topmost terrace. The King and his queens resided in the palace.
The palace was built security-tight. The Rakhine kings of Mrauk-U
dynasty selected the Japanese samurais (swordsmen) as their
bodyguards. Now, nothing of interest is known about these samurais.
Of the old palace itself, only traces of the walls remain. The great
palace had been destroyed.
An interesting thing can still be found at the centre of the old
palace-site. It is a man-made hole. According to the tradition, the
hole is said to be an entrance to an escape route which leads to the
outside of the palace and is connected with a secret tunnel to the
Shitthaung Pagoda about half a mile north of the palace. It may also
be an entrance to the underground assembly hall. On the side of each
stone wall is a small hole of 5 inches in diameter, apparently
intended to receive the two ends of a beam, to which a swinging-door
was attached. During the second world war, two Indian soldiers
slipped down that hole and had disappeared.
The Golden Palace
The early 17th century was the Golden Age of Rakhine. In 1599,
King Min Razagyi conquered Bago, the most powerful Kingdom
possessing a white elephant, an animal regarded as one of the
prestigious seven symbols of a ‘universal monarch.’ The possession
of the white elephant passed to the conqueror who gained the title
’The Lord of White Elephant’. Mrauk-U had grown into an extremely
rich city due mainly to its abundant rice production. With a
rainfall of between 200 and 300 inches a year the crop never failed
while her Indian neighbours suffered from severe droughts. Thus
Mrauk-U had been prosperous from generation to generation. Moreover,
the kings of Mrauk-U had stood up successfully against all foreign
and domestic rivals for two hundred years. A few wars ever fought
were short, and ended mostly in victory. No civil strife had ever
ruined the peasantry. Little wonder, then, Mrauk-U had been a rich
and prosperous dynasty.
Regretfully, all had been ruined. Nothing can be found on the old
palace site except three-step walls. Historian D.G.E Hall had made a
remark on the palace of Mrauk-U.
Within was the palace-city, built to the same traditional pattern as
Bagan and Inwa and many other old capitals in Asia. The walls may
still be traced today, but the palace building, built of teak, have
long disappeared. The massive stone walls and fortifications were
erected by King Minbin (1531 – 53 ) against the threat of attack in
the days of Tabinshwehti.
According to Rakhine Razawinthit (the New Rakhine Chronicle),
Thirithudhammaraza, King of Mrauk-U, in 1622 A.D, had repaired the
palace and the old city. He repaired the city-wall, the palace-wall,
the fort, the gate, the moat, the palace watchtower, the wooden
spire (pyathat), and the throne room.
Another source of information is Manrique’s description of Mrauk-U.
By the detailed accounts of the Augustan Father Manrique who came to
Mrauk-U as an ambassador from Portuguese Goa, we can have a glimpse
of scene in the Mrauk-U palace of his time.
“From Daingripet the palace was quite visible, for it was less than
half a mile away and stood on a rise fifty feet above the creek. Its
layout was similar to that of the Mahamuni. There were three
enclosures which rose in tiers, each bounded by a thick stone wall.
The circumference of the outermost square was 2000 yards, the side
varying from a quarter to one-third of a mile. Its greatest width
did not exceed 620 yards. The main audience hall and the private
apartments were situated in the innermost square, which measured 218
yards from west to east, and 293 yards from north to south. They
were of teakwood, lacquered and gilded, the roofs carved with
figures and rising in spires.”
On this occasion his boat landed him near the steps which led up to
the west gate, in the outermost wall of the palace-city. He passed
through that gate with others who had permission to attend the royal
leyee and passing in turn through the second and third walls and
reached the topmost enclosure. There stood the palace proper in
front of him, the hall of audience with it “ great wooden pillar of
such length and symmetry that one would be astonished that trees so
lofty and straight could exist.”
Manrique was conducted into a building, the room of which were
paneled with scented timber, such as sandalwood and eagle-wood, the
latter an aromatic wood with a sweet cloying fragrance, which clang
always to it in a damp hot climate. Passing through these perfumed
chambers he came to a pavililon known as the “House of Gold”, the
walls of which were plated with gold. Along the ceiling was a golden
creeper, like a melon or a narrow plant, with many gourds or
pumpkins moulded in the same metal, like the vine which at that date
was in the Great Mughals audience hall, though that was more in the
Chinese style, the leaves of emeralds and the grapes of garnets. In
this chamber were seven idols of gold, each the size and shape of a
man, the metal being thicker than two finger breadths. They were
covered with precious stones of great size.
At the palace, Manrique was shown a golden casket standing on a
golden table, carved with devices and studded with gems. This casket
held some ear-rings. Made or ruby, these ear-rings were shaped like
a pyramid. They were about the length of a little finger, the base
being of the size of a hen’s egg.
The above is Manrique’s description of the palace at about the time
of 1630 A.D.
Five years later Manrique was fortunate enouth to find himself at
the coronation of the King, Thirithudhammaraza. It was in January,
1635. All were ready for the celebration of the King’s coronation.
Manrique described part of what he had seen, as follows:
As they entered the triple-walled fortress the sun rose, its rays
suddenly bringing to life the gilded roofs, which flashed as if they
were made of gold, so brilliantly that travelers often thought the
palace was plated with gold. The roof of the Hall of Audience, which
was carved with much fancy, was supported by a forest of gilt and
red lacquer pillars.
Shwegutaung Pagoda was built on a hillock close to the north-east
corner of the palace-site. It could be seen from the upper palace.
They were of the same family from the historical and archaeological
view-point. This position in which the shrine sits at NE site of the
palace is the characteristic position found in many other major
shrines in urban Buddhist centres in South-East Asia and Sri Lanka,
including Pyu cities in Myanmar. The ground plan of Mrauk-U’s
palace-site is very similar to the Mahamuni Shrine. It may be
associated with the royal ancestors. Thus, Shwegutaung was
intimately connected with the function of Rakhine Kingship.
The Fortresses, the Moats and the Walls of the City
Before giving a description of the city’s formidable
fortifications, we should, at least as a background, review the
history of the previous Rakhine city, Launggret.
At the beginning of the 15th centry, Rakhine had been a pawn in the
power struggle between the Central Myanmar, Inwa and lower Myanmar,
Bago. The Rakhine King, Narameikhla who later acquired the name
Minsawmon had to flee to Bengal and take shelter under the
protection of the Sultan. When Minsawmon was restored to the throne
of Rakhine, he reviewed the security position of his country. Then,
he concluded that the geographical position of Launggret was
unsatisfactory for defence against enemy’s attacks. It was situated
on a plain and was very easy for enemies to overrun the city.
Hence, the King Minsawmon selected and built his new city, Mrauk-U.
It stood in a lovely valley of about three miles wide, wholly
enclosed by high rocky mountains which served as natural
fortifications. The inner ranges of these mountains had been cut
away to make roads from the summits to the plains. Forts were built
on these mountains and were provided with artillery. The city walls
did not run all the way in a continuous line but were built only in
the gaps between the natural barriers: the mountains and the tidal
rivers,. Thus the city walling plan was set without any definite
limit. The city was not built on the pattern of other old Rakhine
capitals such as Vesalil, Dhanyawaddy nor like any other old cities
of Asia. The plan was irregular and its conformation was dependent
on the topography of the site. Northern Mrauk-U was a tangle of
hills and creeks, considerable higher and rougher than the hillocks
within the city and the west was a lowland intersected with
innumerable deep creeks which were subjected to the violence of
hightides. The southern part of the city was filled with stony
hills. But on the east side, there stretched the plain of Parein (Paungdok)
extending up to the Lemro River. According to the Rakhine history,
most of the invaders came naturally out of these directions, as
there were several roads leading to the city over the high
mountains. Accordingly, eastern side of Mrauk-U was fortified more
heavily.
The parallel lines of artificial walls and moats were constructed on
the eastern side between Mukayo Hills and Kassapa Mraung. These
walls were one mile long. They were built of sandstone and earth.
Most of the walls and moats still remain standing to this day and
are called Pasoephat Moat, Kyarkhalaung Moat and Kyaikitethama Moat.
And several forts surrounded them. These forts were built on the
side of the nearby ridges which lay north to south along the Parein
plain. Among them Myataung Fortress and Laythartaung Fortress were
more well-known.
Besides this system of defence, the kings had also built a line of
artificial lakes on the eastern side of the city boundary. The lakes
had been made by simply damming the small streams running between
the ridges. Among them Letsekan and Anomakan on the south are
considerable in size.
Letsekan measures three miles in length, half mile in breadth and
about thirty feet deep. These lakes supply fresh water for the
population of the city, and the water is also used for the
irrigation of crops in dry seasons. On the other hand, these lakes
were so built with dams and sluices that if enemies had succeeded in
breaking through the eastern moats and penetrated into the city, the
waters would be released, flooding the town and drowning the
invaders.
In such an emergency, people of the city could take refuge in the
citadels and on the inner hillocks. Most of the pagodas lilke
Shitthaung and Dukkhanthein stood on hillocks at least fifty feet
above the mean level of the city and so were out of danger of
floods.
According to the Rakhine history, Minbin (1531 – 53 A.D), the most
powerful King of Mrauk-U Dynasty, had strengthened the massive stone
walls of the city of Mrauk-U with the help of the Portuguese. He
also dug a deep moat filled with tidal water; and when the Bago
invaders had penetrated the eastern outskirts of the city, he opened
the sluices of his great reservoirs and flooded them out.
The city became bigger in size, as the defense systems were modified
again and again whenever deemed threatened by Bago in the east and
Bengal in the west.
On the west side, there had been no man-made moats because there
were ditches which received the water from the natural small streams
flowing down the ridges. This side was a plain but was full of tidal
deep creeks. No invading army could cross them easily.
A single stream, Alezi Chaung, traverses the lowest part of this
valley. Draining from the hills on the eastern side of the main
ridge, it winds its way south and then westwards, seeking its way
southwards and then westwards again to enter the Aungdat Chaung. The
Rakhines had very cleverly dug these canals connecting this main
stream with the Lemro River. In this way, it controlled both the
Kaladan and the Lemro Valleys and had access to the two main rivers
by water and by land.
Aungdat, the western side of the Mrauk-U City, became the main port
for the foreign ships coming by way of the Kaladan River and
Paungdok, the port for the ships plying the Lemro River as well as
those coming from the southern provinces (Rammawady, Dwarawady,
Maygawady provinces) and Myanmar. This gave the advantages of the
port, without the attendant risk of a surprise attack by an enemy
fleet. In Mrauk-U’s heyday there was a naval base near Urittaung
(present Ponnagyun). The fleet often assembled there for its
campaigns to the east and the west coasts.
Finally, the north-south distance covered by the outmost walls of
the Mrauk-U City was 1.4 miles and the east-west distance at its
narrowest was about a mile and at its widest about a mile and a
quarter. However, a double wall existed on the north about 700 feet
apart, the inner one on this side forming a dam and a small lake
which now has silted up. On the south side a double wall had also
existed. About half a mile further south, two lakes were formed by
connecting the ridge tops. The perimeter of the outer city was some
twelve miles long.
Due to the threat of Bago, another wall was also built about 3700
feet further south, making this city almost impregnable.
Furthermore, a whole series of reservoirs had been built by
connecting the ridges on the east. Mrauk-U was thus made even more
impregnable than before. The area of the city, without taking into
account the outermost defense line, was nearly 25 miles square, a
very big city as one can see.
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