Shwethalyaung Buddha

Shwethalyaung Buddha
Shwethalyaung Buddha
Location within Burma
17°20′17″N 96°27′45″E / 17.337931°N 96.462409°E / 17.337931; 96.462409Coordinates: 17°20′17″N 96°27′45″E / 17.337931°N 96.462409°E / 17.337931; 96.462409
Information
Denomination Theravada Buddhism
Founded 994 (994)
People
Founder(s) King Migadepa
Location
Address Bago
Country Myanmar

The Shwethalyaung Buddha (Burmese: ရွှေသာလျှောင်းဘုရား [ʃwèθàljáʊɴ pʰəjá]; officially ရွှေသာလျောင်းရုပ်ပွားတော်ကြီး) is a reclining Buddha in the west side of Bago (Pegu), Myanmar. The Buddha, which has a length of 55 metres (180 ft) and a height of 16 metres (52 ft), is believed to have been built in 994, during the reign of Mon King Migadepa. It was lost in 1757 when Pegu was pillaged. During British colonial rule, in 1880, the Shwethalyaung Buddha was rediscovered under a cover of jungle growth. Restoration began in 1881, and Buddha's mosaic pillows (on its left side) were added in 1930.

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