Daw Gyam Phaya Su (ဒေါ်ဂျမ်းဘုရားစု)
Burmese. ‘Lady Gyam
Pagoda Group’. Name of a
brick
monastery in
Inwa,
that is usually translated as Lady Gyam Pagoda Complex, with Gyam
being the name of the female benefactor who had it built and Daw being a
title given to mature women or women in a senior position and which is
usually translated into English as
‘Aunt’
or
‘Miss’.
The
official Burmese-English sign at the temple entrance uses an
alternative transliteration,
spelling the name as Gyan, which
‒though not following the literal
transliteration‒ is close to the actual
pronunciation and is recorded
by many as the going name. The temple complex is said to date from the
Ava
Period, but besides the name of its
benefactor
there remains no historical record. The walled temple has a large
bell-shaped pagoda surrounded by some smaller
edifices, as well as two large
zedi with receding
terraces
in the northeastern corner of the complex, the outermost being somewhat
smaller than its neighbour,
which has
mythological
guardians at the corners, i.e.
sphinx-like man-lions
called
Manuthiha (fig.)
and
mythological lions
known as
chintha (fig.),
with the latter standing at the corners of the base. The temple also
features several
Buddha images
(fig.),
with most of them seated in the
bhumisparsa
pose, though one is depicted performing
a
vitarka
mudra
(fig.).
See also
MAP.
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