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Shwethalyaung Hill

Coordinates: 21°36′7.28″N 96°8′43.01″E / 21.6020222°N 96.1452806°E / 21.6020222; 96.1452806
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shwethalyaung Hill
View from the town
Highest point
Elevation275 m (902 ft)[1]
ListingList of mountains in Burma
Coordinates21°36′7.28″N 96°8′43.01″E / 21.6020222°N 96.1452806°E / 21.6020222; 96.1452806[1]
Naming
Native nameရွှေသာလျောင်းတောင် (Burmese)
Geography
Shwethalyaung Hill is located in Myanmar
Shwethalyaung Hill
Shwethalyaung Hill
Location in Burma
LocationMandalay Region, Myanmar
Climbing
First ascentunknown
Easiest routeescalator

Shwethalyaung Hill (Burmese: ရွှေသာလျောင်းတောင်), also known as Kyaukse Hill (Burmese: ကျောက်ဆည်တောင်), is a 275 metres (902 ft) hill that is located to the east of Kyaukse in Myanmar. Shwethalyaung Hill is known for its abundance of pagodas and monasteries, and has been a sacred pilgrimage site for Burmese Buddhists. At the top of the hill is the Shwethalyaung Pagoda.[2]

History

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King Anawratha of Pagan obtained several Buddhist relics on a trip to China. Upon his return to Pagan, he decided to build a pagoda to house the precious relics. He strapped the replica of the Buddha's tooth to the back of his white elephant Sinma Yintha and told the elephant to choose a suitable spot for the new pagoda. When the elephant stopped in the two hills, named Shwethalyaung and Pyat Kha Yway, the monarch ordered the construction of pagodas on each summit and enshrined the relic at Shwethalyaung Pagoda. To honor the royal elephants, a festival named Kyaukse elephant dance festival is held every year at the foot of Shwethalyaung Hill.[3][4][5][6]

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References

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  1. ^ a b GoogleEarth
  2. ^ "Kyaukse and Elephant Dance". ICS Group.
  3. ^ "A new generation of dancers keeps the Kyaukse elephant dance festival alive". The Myanmar Times. 20 October 2016.
  4. ^ "ကျောက်ဆည်မြို့မှ အလှတရား (သို့မဟုတ်) ဖူးမြော်ကြစို့အတူတူ မဟာမြတ်လေးဆူ". Myanmar DigitalNews (in Burmese). 29 September 2020.
  5. ^ "Where elephants dance". The Myanmar Times. 21 October 2014.
  6. ^ "Kyaukse Celebrates Elephant Dance Festival, Despite Bomb Concerns". The Irrawaddy. 19 October 2013.