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uzina+pagoda Latitude and Longitude:

16°28′23″N 97°37′46″E / 16.4731674°N 97.6294996°E / 16.4731674; 97.6294996
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uzina Pagoda
ဦးဇိနစေတီတော်
Religion
Affiliation Buddhism
Region Mon State
Statusactive
Location
Country Myanmar
Uzina Pagoda is located in Myanmar
Uzina Pagoda
Shown within Myanmar
Geographic coordinates 16°28′23″N 97°37′46″E / 16.4731674°N 97.6294996°E / 16.4731674; 97.6294996
Architecture
Date established19th century
Artwork Above South Walkway Entrance to Uzina Pagoda (one of several)

The Uzina Pagoda, also known as the U Zina Pagaoda, is a Buddhist temple in Mawlamyine, Mon State, Myanmar. Built in the 19th century, the temple contains hairs allegedly from the Buddha, and contains several sculptures symbolizing scene's from the Buddha's life. [1] The temple itself is often associated with gemstones and wish fulfillment. [2]

References

  1. ^ Köllner, Helmut; Bruns, Axel (1998). Myanmar (Burma). Hunter Publishing, Inc. ISBN  9783886184156.
  2. ^ 박아연 (March 2011). "Royal Family-Commissioned Buddhist Statues Enshrined inside the Stone Pagoda of Sujongsa Temple in 1493". Korean Journal of Art History (269): 5–37. doi: 10.31065/ahak..269.201103.001. ISSN  1225-2565.



uzina+pagoda Latitude and Longitude:

16°28′23″N 97°37′46″E / 16.4731674°N 97.6294996°E / 16.4731674; 97.6294996
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uzina Pagoda
ဦးဇိနစေတီတော်
Religion
Affiliation Buddhism
Region Mon State
Statusactive
Location
Country Myanmar
Uzina Pagoda is located in Myanmar
Uzina Pagoda
Shown within Myanmar
Geographic coordinates 16°28′23″N 97°37′46″E / 16.4731674°N 97.6294996°E / 16.4731674; 97.6294996
Architecture
Date established19th century
Artwork Above South Walkway Entrance to Uzina Pagoda (one of several)

The Uzina Pagoda, also known as the U Zina Pagaoda, is a Buddhist temple in Mawlamyine, Mon State, Myanmar. Built in the 19th century, the temple contains hairs allegedly from the Buddha, and contains several sculptures symbolizing scene's from the Buddha's life. [1] The temple itself is often associated with gemstones and wish fulfillment. [2]

References

  1. ^ Köllner, Helmut; Bruns, Axel (1998). Myanmar (Burma). Hunter Publishing, Inc. ISBN  9783886184156.
  2. ^ 박아연 (March 2011). "Royal Family-Commissioned Buddhist Statues Enshrined inside the Stone Pagoda of Sujongsa Temple in 1493". Korean Journal of Art History (269): 5–37. doi: 10.31065/ahak..269.201103.001. ISSN  1225-2565.



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