Andaw-Thein Temple အံတော်သိမ်ဘုရား | |
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Religion | |
Affiliation | Theravada |
Location | |
Country | Myanmar |
Geographic coordinates | 20°43′6″N 93°6′30″E / 20.71833°N 93.10833°E |
Architecture | |
Founder | Thazata (ordination hall) Raza II (temple) |
Completed | 1515–1521 (ordination hall) 1607 (temple) |
Andaw Thein (Burmese: အံတော်သိမ်ဘုရား amtau sim bhu.ra:, Burmese pronunciation: [àɰ̃dɔ̀ θèiɰ̃ pʰəjá] Añṯotheiñ hpăyà) is a Buddhist temple in Mrauk U located at the northwest corner of the Shite-thaung Temple. The name means 'Tooth Shrine'. It contains a tooth relic of the Buddha brought over from Sri Lanka. It was first built as an ordination hall between 1515 and 1521 by King Thazata, and restored by Min Bin between 1534 and 1542.[1] It was later expanded into a temple by King Raza II in order to house a tooth relic of the Buddha he brought back from his pilgrimage to Ceylon, either in 1596 or 1606–1607.[note 1]
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