| Taung Min Gyi (တောင်မင်းကြီး) 
Burmese.
‘Southern Minister’. 
Name of a Buddhist temple located on the west bank of  
Taungthaman Lake 
in Amarapura, at the 
west end of the  
							
							U Bein Bridge (fig.), 
to the  South of present-day 
Mandalay. The 
temple is named after the Chief of the southern region, i.e. the Minister of the  
			      
			      White Elephant, 
who in 1786 AD had a ca. 14.3 meter tall  
		      
		      
              Buddha image 
built and placed it in 
the temple. The image, which bears the same name as the 
temple, consists of a  
		      
		      
		      crowned Buddha 
which is seated
in the 
 
	
	
	lotus position
 (asana), 
with a 
		      
		      
		      bhumisparsa
	
	mudra. 
The width from knee to knee measures just over 11 meters. The almost 4 meter 
high  
		      
		      
		      
              chadah-like 
crown was added later, as the image initially had no crown. Until recently, the 
image was also not covered by a roof and being out in the open, it locally acquired 
the nicknamed Nay Pu Khan Ko Daw Gyi, i.e.  
‘Image 
Left in the Sun’.
See MAP.   
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