Mandalay, situated about 600 kilometers north of Yangon on the
Ayeyarwaddy river, is with about half a Million inhabitants
Myanmar's second largest city.
Despite the wonderful sound of its name, inviting associations
to an archaic fairy tale kingdom, Mandalay is neither very old
nor particularly beautiful. But Mandalay was the capital of
the last, independent Burmese kingdom, which in 1886 was finally
conquered by British colonial forces.
The town had been founded only 29 years earlier in 1857 by King
Mindon, making it thecapital of an independent kingdom for
less than 30 years.
Contrary to other Burmese towns, especially Yangon, Mandalay has
not grown from a smaller settlement to town proportions. In 1857
Mandalay was set up in an empty area, because, according
to an ancient prophecy, in that exact place a town would come
into existence on occasion of the 2,400th jubilee of Buddhism.
King Mindon decided to fulfill the prophecy and so in 1857 transferred
his capital a modest 12 kilometers from Amarapura to the
South.
At that time a transfer of the capital not only meant leaving
an old town and erecting a new town in a different place. As all
secular buildings of that time, including the royal palaces, were
built from wood, a transfer of the capital meant the complete
dismantling of the houses of the old settlement, which then
were loaded on carts and the backs of elephants to be reconstructed
at the place chosen for the new town.
This way of moving entire capitals is a tradition in Myanmar.
The transfer of the capital from Amarapura to Mandalay had not
been the first of its kind. The most important Burmese town of
the northern Ayeyarwaddy valley had for a long time been the town
of Ava, founded in 1364 about 20 kilometers southwest of
Mandalay. In 1636 the at that time powerful royal family from
Taungu about 280 kilometers north of Yangon and 320 kilometers
south of Mandalay moved to Ava and made it the capital of a Burmese
realm roughly equalling the extent of the present Burmese state.
But in 1782 the town was packed up and moved about 8 kilometers
to the Northeast, to the aforementioned Amaraputra. In
1823 the entire capital was dismantled again and rebuilt 8 kilometers
Southwest in Ava. But in 1838 Ava was damaged by an earthquake,
and was therefore in 1841 packed up again and once more transferred
to Amarapura. But this was not of duration either, as only 16
years later the entire town was moved again this time 12 kilometers
to the Northeast to the present Mandalay.
Who, in the face of all this moving of the Burmese capital, might
assume that it was more or less only a temporary camp of tents,
is very wrong. At least the royal palaces, despite their being
made from wood, were immensely large. Many, enormous teakwood
tree trunks served as pillars to support the royal palaces,
often several stories high.
The royal palaces of Amarapura were erected on a square area in
Mandalay, about one kilometer from the banks of the Ayeyarwaddy.
The palace grounds were fenced in with a wall and ditch.
After the British had conquered Mandalay in 1886 they turned the
royal palaces of Mandalay into their military headquarters and
christened the complex Fort Dufferin.
During World War II the Japanese installed a military camp
in the same place, which then was bombed by the allies, until
nothing was left of the ancient palace buildings.
Today the former palace ground is known by the name of Fort
Mandalay. Of the ancient palaces a few concrete replica have
been built and further reconstructions are being conducted.