Water, Ideology, and Kingship at the Ancient Burmese Capital of Bagan, Myanmar: An Iconographic Analysis of the Nat Yekan Sacred Water Tank

Author:

Iannone Gyles1,Rivera Raiza S.2ORCID,Lin Saw Tun3ORCID,Soe Nyein Chan4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, Trent University, 1600 Westbank Drive, Peterborough, ON K9L 0G2, Canada

2. Independent Researcher, Ottawa, ON K2P 0E8, Canada

3. SEAMEO SPAFA, Bangkok 10300, Thailand

4. Independent Researcher, Mandalay, Myanmar

Abstract

Bagan, the imperial capital of the Burmese Empire (11th–14th centuries CE), was situated in what is now known as Myanmar’s “dry zone”, Southeast Asia’s most arid region. This setting necessitated the development of a subtle, yet extensive rain-fed water management system that channeled water from the Tuyin mountain range in the southeast to the walled and moated royal city in the northwest. Nat Yekan tank, a rock-cut reservoir located on the western edge of the summit of the Thetso–Taung portion of the Tuyin range, played significant utilitarian and spiritual roles in collecting, sacralizing, and then channeling waters down into the vast Mya Kan reservoir, which, in turn, fed the water management system that redistributed this valuable resource across the Bagan plain. The iconographic elements carved into the stone walls of the Nat Yekan tank attest to its spiritual importance and tie it to an ideological program of kingly legitimacy grounded in guarantees of fertility and prosperity for all.

Funder

NATIONAL GEGRAPHIC SOCIETY

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Religious studies

Reference57 articles.

1. Rivers, Oceans, and Spirits: Water Cosmologies, Gender, and Religious Change in Southeast Asia;Andaya;Trans–Regional and –National Studies of Southeast Asia,2016

2. Aung-Thwin, Michael, and Aung-Thwin, Maitrii (2012). A History of Myanmar Since Ancient Times: Traditions and Transformations, Reaktion Books.

3. Bautze-Picron, Claudine (2003). The Buddhist Murals of Pagan: Timeless Vistas of the Cosmos, Weatherhill.

4. Beer, Robert (2003). The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols, Shambhala.

5. Béguin, Gilles (2009). Buddhist Art: An Historical and Cultural Journey, River Books.

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