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== See also ==
== See also ==
{{Commonscat|Thrones of Myanmar}}
{{Commonscat|Thrones of Myanmar|ปัลลัง}}


* [[Throne]]
* [[Throne]]

รุ่นแก้ไขเมื่อ 10:44, 12 สิงหาคม 2562

Depiction of the Burmese royal throne by a court painter.

ปัลลัง (พม่า: ပလ္လင်; จาก บาลี: ปลฺลงฺก, หมายถึง "บัลลังก์") refers to one of six types of thrones recognized in traditional Burmese scholarship. The palin is a major symbol of the Burmese monarchy and feature prominently in Burmese architecture and Burmese Buddhist iconography. The palin is featured on the seal of Myanmar's Ministry of Religious Affairs and Culture.

Types of palin

Traditional Burmese scholarship recognizes six types of thrones, namely:

  1. Aparājitapallaṅka (အပရာဇိတပလ္လင်​) - the Buddha's throne
  2. Kamalāsanapallaṅka (ကမလာသနပလ္လင်​) - Brahma's throne
  3. Dibbāsanapallaṅka (ဒိဗ္ဗာသနပလ္လင်) - nat's throne
  4. Rājapallaṅka (ရာဇပလ္လင်) - monarch's throne
  5. Dhammāsanapallaṅka (ဓမ္မာသနပလ္လင်) - Buddhist monk's throne
  6. Aṭṭakaraṇapallaṅka (အဋ္ဋကရဏပလ္လင်​) - judge's throne

Usage by Burmese monarchs

The Lion Throne at Mandalay Palace in 1903.

In pre-colonial times, the rājapallaṅka (Burmese yazapalin) seated the sovereign and his main consort. Traditionally, Burmese palaces possessed eight types of thrones, housed in nine palace halls, leading to the Burmese adage, "eight thrones, 9 palace halls" (ပလ္လင်ရှစ်ခန်း ရွှေနန်းကိုးဆောင်).[1]

King Thibaw and Queen Supayalat on The Lion Throne at Mandalay Palace

The thrones were carved of wood, specifically by hereditary palace carpenters.[2] An auspicious time was chosen by astrologers to commence operations, and construction of these thrones was heralded by a royal ceremony to propitiate spirits.[2] The thrones were simultaneously constructed according to a prescribed list of requirements, coated with resin, and decorated with gold leaf and glass mosaic.[2]

The most important throne was the "Lion Throne" (Sīhāsanapallaṅka), which had a replica in the Hluttaw as well.[2]

The thrones used different prescribed motifs and designs, types of wood, and were allocated to specific halls in the royal palace.[3] The thrones were also grouped by height, as follows:

  1. Mahāpallaṅka (မဟာပလ္လင်​) - 24 ฟุต (7.3 เมตร)
  2. Majjhimapallaṅka (မဇ္စျိမပလ္လင်) - 12 ฟุต (3.7 เมตร)
  3. Cuḷapallaṅka (စူဠပလ္လင်) - 6 ฟุต (1.8 เมตร)

Below is a list of these eight types of thrones:

No. Name (Pali) Name (Burmese) Primary Motif Type of Wood Location(s) in Palace Prescribed Usages
1 Sīhāsanapallaṅka သီဟာသနပလ္လင် Chinthe (lion) Gmelina arborea Royal Audience Hall;

Hluttaw

2 Bhamayāsanapallaṅka ဘမယာသနပလ္လင် Bumblebee Cinnamomum tamala Glass Palace
3 Padumasanapallaṅka ပဒုမ္မာသနပလ္လင် Lotus Artocarpus heterophyllus Western Audience Hall
4 Haṃsasanapallaṅka ဟံသာသနပလ္လင် Hamsa (bird) Hopea odorata Eastern Hall of Victory
5 Gajasanapallaṅka ဂဇာသနပလ္လင် Elephant Magnolia champaca Byedaik (Privy Council)
6 Saṅkhasanapallaṅka သင်္ခါသနပလ္လင် Conch Mangifera indica Regalia Hall
7 Migasanapallaṅka မိဂါသနပလ္လင် Deer Ficus glomerata Southern Gatehouse Hall
8 Mayurāsanapallaṅka မယုရာသနပလ္လင် Peacock Butea monosperma Northern Gatehouse Hall

Usage in Buddhism

A throne seating an image of the Buddha at Botataung Pagoda.

The palin is also used to seat images and statues of the Buddha, variously called gaw palin (ဂေါ့ပလ္လင်), phaya palin (ဘုရားပလ္လင်) or samakhan (စမ္မခဏ်), from the Pali term sammakhaṇḍa. This palin is a feature of many Buddhist household shrines in Burma.

References

  1. "ယဉ်ကျေးမှု ထုံးဓလေ့ဟောင်း တို့နိုင်ငံသားတို့မမေ့ကောင်း". Myanmar News Agency. {{cite web}}: Cite ไม่รู้จักพารามิเตอร์ว่างเปล่า : |dead-url= (help)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Thant, Yi Yi (December 1960). "The Thrones of the Burmese Kings" (PDF). Journal of Burma Research Society. 43: 97–123.
  3. Tha, Maung (2016-11-15). "ပလ္လင်ရှစ်ခန်း၊ ရွှေနန်းကိုးဆောင်". Ministry of Information. {{cite web}}: Cite ไม่รู้จักพารามิเตอร์ว่างเปล่า : |dead-url= (help)

See also