7. The
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
In the succession of rulers
of the eighteenth century some were strong and despotic, while others were
ineffective and withdrawn. Some tried to expand their power and fought wars,
while others appeared satisfied with existing conditions. There were several
wars with Thailand and the population of Myanmar had to bear the deprivations
that war invariably brings not only to the conquered, but also to the country
where the conquering armies are levied.
After a war between the Mon
and the Myanmar in which the Mon initially attacked and then conquered Ava
itself, the Myanmar king Alaungpaya (1752-60), who believed himself a
Bodhisatta, crushed Mon resistance once and for all. After Pago had fallen into
his hands in 1756, Lower Myanmar was devastated and many of the Mon survivors
fled to Thailand or were deported as slaves.
Like Bayinnaung, Alaungpaya
established a Myanmar empire, at the same time decimating the population of the
country by drafting the peasantry into the army for campaigns against Ayutthaya
(Thailand) and other countries. The Sasanavamsa does not comment on the
atrocity of war. War is perceived as it is, cruel and pitiless -- but it is the
affair of rulers, not of bhikkhus. The manner in which rulers conduct their
affairs is entirely their responsibility. Pannasami probably took very
seriously the Buddha's injunction that a member of the Sangha should not talk
about rulers and royal affairs.
The Sasanavamsa pays
much attention to a controversy which raged in monastic circles throughout the
eighteenth century. At the beginning of the century, some bhikkhus began to
wear their robes outside the monasteries as they were worn within them, that
is, covering only one shoulder. Even when going on their daily alms round, they
failed to drape the robe in the traditional way. When challenged as to the
orthodoxy of this practice, they produced various interpretations and opinions,
but could not validate their practice through the authority of the scriptures.
Different kings endorsed one or other of the two opinions and bhikkhus of the
orthodox school even died for their conviction when a king had outlawed the
covering of both shoulders.
The most interesting aspect
of this historical period of the religion is not so much the actual controversy
as the power the king had in religious affairs. The kings of Myanmar were not
normally expert in the Vinaya and yet they took the final decision in matters
of monastic discipline after due consultation with the leaders of the Sangha.
In the more than one hundred years that this controversy prevailed, different
kings supported the orthodoxy of either view. This shows that this system is
not entirely satisfactory. However, the right view which was in accordance with
the Vinaya did eventually triumph due to the persistence of the majority of the
Sangha. Only the worldly power was in a position to regulate the Sangha into
which undesirable elements entered repeatedly. To keep the Order pure, it had
to be always under careful scrutiny and bogus ascetics had to be removed. The
kings of Myanmar in co-operation with the Sangharajas[43] and the other senior bhikkhus had
established a system of supervision of the bhikkhus by royal officials. In
every township, the king's representatives were responsible for ensuring that
the bhikkhus adhered scrupulously to the rules of the Vinaya. Bhikkhus who
transgressed were taken before religious courts and punished according to the
code of discipline.
The controversy concerning
the correct manner of wearing the robes came up for arbitration for the last
time under Bodawpaya (1782-1819), the fifth son of Alaungpaya. He decided in
favour of orthodoxy and thenceforth all bhikkhus had to cover both shoulders on
the daily alms round. This ruling created one unified sect throughout Myanmar
under the leadership of a council of senior bhikkhus appointed by the king.
These were called the Thudhamma Sayadaws and the Thudhamma sect has survived in
Myanmar down to the present day.
Bodawpaya appointed a
chapter of eight eminent bhikkhus as Sangharajas, leaders of the Sangha, and
charged them with the duty to safeguard the purity of the Order of bhikkhus. As
a direct result of the discipline and stability created by the work of these
senior bhikkhus, the Sangha prospered, and consequently scholarship flourished
under Bodawpaya's reign.
The name of the
Mahasangharaja Nanabhivamsa is especially noteworthy in this respect.
Nanabhivamsa was an eminently learned bhikkhu who had proven his wisdom even as
a young man. Only five years after his ordination as a bhikkhu, he had
completed a commentary (tika) on the Nettippakarana. Eight years
after full ordination, at the age of twenty-eight, he became Sangharaja, and
then Mahasangharaja, the title conferred by the king on the highest bhikkhu in
his realm. Soon after this, he wrote his well respected "new
sub-commentary" on the Digha Nikaya, the Sadhujjanavilasini. At the
request of the king, he wrote a commentary on Buddhaghosa's
Jatakatthakatha and several other treatises.[44]
The king was so devoted to
the head of the Sangha that he dedicated a "very magnificent five storied
monastery" to him and later many other monasteries as well. According to
the Sasanavamsa, Nanabhivamsa was not only a scholar, but also practised
the ascetic practices (dhutanga) sitting always alone. He divided his
time between the various monasteries under his tutelage and was an
indefatigable teacher of the scriptures.
Scholarship flourished in
the reign of King Bodawpaya and Myanmar was able, for the first time, to return
thanks to Sri Lanka for nurturing the religion in the Golden Land. The bhikkhu
ordination (upasampada) preserved in Myanmar was re-introduced to Sri
Lanka where the Sasana had been interferred with by an unwise king.
The Amarapura Nikaya in Sri
Lanka
In the later half of the
eighteenth century, the upasampada ordination in Sri Lanka was barred to
all except the members of the landed aristocracy. This was a result of royal
decree probably issued with the support of at least a section of the Sangha.
However, this was a flagrant defilement of the letter and the spirit of the
Buddha's instructions. The conferring of the upasampada ordination is
dependent only upon such conditions as the candidate being a man, free from
government service, free of debt, free of contagious diseases, and upon his
having his parents' consent, etc. Members of the lower castes had now only the
possibility of becoming novices (samanera), a condition that created
dissatisfaction. A sizeable section of ordained bhikkhus also disapproved of
the royal order, but were in no position to defy it within the country. The
only recourse for those of the lower castes desiring the higher ordination was
therefore to travel to other Buddhist countries to ordain. At first, missions
were sent to Thailand where Dhammazedi's reforms lived on through the
ordination conferred to Thai bhikkhus in Pago and through the scores of Mon
bhikkhus who had found refuge in Thailand from the Myanmar armies.
At the beginning of the
nineteenth century, however, Sinhalese bhikkhus began travelling to Myanmar to
find the pure ordination there. The fame of the then Mahasangharaja of Myanmar,
Nanabhivamsa, influenced their choice. Scholarship had developed in all fields:
Pali grammar, the Vinaya, the Suttanta, and the Abhidhamma. Myanmar had, after
a long period of development, become the custodian of Buddhism.
The first delegation from
Sri Lanka arrived in 1800 and was welcomed with a magnificent reception by King
Bodawpaya himself. Nanabhivamsa, the wise Sangharaja, ordained the samaneras as
bhikkhus and instructed them for some time in the scriptures.[45] On returning to Sri Lanka, they were
accompanied by five Myanmar bhikkhus and a letter from Nanabhivamsa to the
Sinhalese Sangharaja. Five bhikkhus form a full chapter and apparently the
Myanmar bhikkhus were permitted to ordain bhikkhus without class distinction.
Even today, Sri Lanka possesses three schools, the Amarapura Nikaya, the Siyama
Nikaya (Thai school), and the Ramanna Nikaya.
The Amarapura Nikaya was so
called because King Bodawpaya had established his capital in Amarapura (between
Mandalay and Ava) and the bhikkhus had received their ordination there. The
Ramanna Nikaya[46] was presumably
founded by bhikkhus who had received ordination from Mon bhikkhus in the
tradition of the Dhammazedi reforms and who had fled to southern Thailand from
the wrath of the Myanmar kings. Both these schools were allowed to ordain
bhikkhus without discriminating against the lower classes. Only the Siyama
Sangha (the Thai ordination) continued to follow the royal command, and
ordained only novices of the higher castes as bhikkhus. Missions from Sri Lanka
continued to travel to Amarapura to consult with its senior theras and they
were all given royal patronage and sent back with gifts of the Pali scriptures
and commentarial texts.
Bodawpaya's Relationship
with the Sangha
Although King Bodawpaya
would appear to have been a pious and devout king, his relationship with the
Sangha was somewhat problematic. He supported it at times and even used it to
extend his own glory, but at times he seemed almost jealous of the respect the
bhikkhus received from the people. He realised that the bhikkhus were not
respected out of fear, but were held in genuine esteem and affection by his
subjects. His jealousy became apparent on different occasions.
At one time, he declared
that from then on the bhikkhus were no longer to be addressed by the
traditional title "Hpoungyi" meaning "The One of Great
Merit." This form of address was to be reserved for the king. Then again
he tried to confiscate land and other goods given to the Sangha and to pagodas
by previous generations. When the Sangharajas could not answer his questions to
his satisfaction, he invited the Muslim clergy for a meal to test their faith.
He had heard that they were so strict in the observance of their discipline
that they would rather die than eat pork. Unfortunately for them, they did not
display great heroism as they all ate the pork offered to them by the king.
Bodawpaya is also reputed to have been beset by a form of megalomania. He
wanted to force the Sangha to confirm officially that he was the Bodhisatta of
the next Buddha to come in this world cycle, the Buddha Metteyya. On this
issue, however, the Sangha was not to be bent even in the face of royal wrath.
The bhikkhus refused, and the king was finally forced to accept defeat. Another
expression of his inflated self-esteem was the Mingun Pagoda near Sagaing. It
was to be by far the biggest temple ever built. Scores of slaves and labourers
worked on its construction until funds were depleted. However, it was never
completed and remains today as a huge shapeless square of millions of bricks.
To his credit, King
Bodawpaya imposed the morality of the Five Precepts in his whole realm and had
offenders executed immediately. Capital punishment was prescribed for selling
and drinking alcohol, killing larger animals such as buffaloes, spreading
heretical views, and the smoking of opium. Bodawpaya ruled the country with an
iron fist and brought offending lay people as well as bhikkhus to heel. His
successors were benevolent, but possibly they could be so only because of the
fear his rule had instilled in the populace.
The Fate of Buddhism in
Upper and Lower Myanmar
Bodawpaya's successor,
Bagyidaw (1819-1837), was the first of the Myanmar kings to lose territory to
the white invaders coming from the West. The Myanmar court was so out of touch
with the modern world that it still believed Myanmar to be the centre of the
world and her army virtually invincible. Hence the king was not unduly
disturbed when the British raj, governing the Indian sub-continent, declared
war on the Kingdom of Ava in 1824 (Bagyidaw had moved the capital back to Ava).
It came to a battle near the coast in which the Myanmar general Mahabandhula
achieved little or nothing against modern British arms. The Indian colonial
government occupied all of the Myanmar coast as far south as Tenasserim in 1826
and forced the treaty of Yandabo on King Bagyidaw. In the treaty, he was forced
to accept the new borders established by the Indian government and pay
compensation to the invaders for the annexation of the coast of Lower Myanmar.
However, Bagyidaw made a
very important contribution to the development of the Sangha and to the
literature of Myanmar in general. His predecessor, Bodawpaya, had united the
Sangha by resolving the dispute relating to the draping of the robe over one or
two shoulders. Bagyidaw saw the necessity of creating stability for the Sangha.
He felt that this could be achieved to some extent by bestowing on it a sense
of its own history. He commissioned a work on the history of the religion
starting from the time of the Buddha, which was to show an unbroken succession
of the pure tradition from teacher to pupil. Its purpose was to praise the
diligent theras and expose the shameless ones.
This work, the
Thathana-lin-ga-ya-kyan, was composed at the king's request by the
ex-bhikkhu Mahadhamma-thin-gyan, a leading member of the committee appointed by
King Bagyidaw to compile the famous Hman-nan-ya-za-win, The
Glass-palace Chronicle, a secular history of Myanmar. The
Thathana-wun-tha (Sasanavamsa) -lin-ga-ya-kyan was completed in 1831;
and in 1897, it was printed in the form of a modern book for the first time in
Yangon. Pannasami based his Sasanavamsa on this work. About forty
percent of the Sasanavamsa is straight translation from the original
work, about forty percent summaries and paraphrasing of the latter, and only
some twenty percent Pannasami's own work.[47] Pannasami states in his introduction to the
Sasanavamsa that his treatise is based on the works of the ancients
(porana). The concept of mental property or copyright had not been born
and there was no moral need to refer the reader to sources except to give
authority to a statement. The only references that would lend authority to a
treatise would be the scriptures, their commentaries, and sub-commentaries, but
not a work as recent as the Thathana-wuntha-lin-ga-ya-kyan.
The preface to the original
work in Myanmar explains the reason for its compilation. The king's
representative had many times pleaded with the author to write a history of the
succession of [righteous] religious teachers so that the people would not
become heretical. Apparently the king felt that the lack of a work recording
the history of the pure religion in its entirety left scope for wrong views to
arise. But with an authoritative record of the lineage of teachers, bhikkhus
could not call on views of shameless bhikkhus of the past anymore in order to
support their heresies. This is exactly what had happened again and again
through the centuries and especially in the robe-draping dispute. The
ekamsikas, the one-shoulder-drapers, had repeatedly dug out obscure
teachers in order to support their point of view. This was to be made
impossible once and for all.
Whether this has been
successful is difficult to ascertain without a detailed study of the
developments in the Sangha since the publication of this work. However, the
fact that the original Myanmar chronicle was revised and translated into Pali
for the Fifth Buddhist Council indicates that it was by this time considered a
useful tool to put the king's authority behind a well-defined orthodox lineage,
thus making it easy to refute heresy by referring to the historical teachers.
Tharrawaddy-Min
King Bagyidaw never overcame
his shock over the loss of part of his realm. He was declared insane and was
removed from the throne by Tharawaddy-Min (1837-1846), King Mindon's father.
In the reign of
Tharrawaddy-Min, another mission from Sri Lanka visited Myanmar and was
received by the Sangharaja Neyyadhammabhivamsa. Neyyadhamma instructed the two
bhikkhus and the accompanying novice in the teachings and conferred the bhikkhu
ordination on the novice. He is known for his critical emendation of the text
of the Saddhammapajjotika and its translation into Myanmar. He was also
the teacher of the later Sangharaja Pannasami, the compiler of the
Sasanavamsa and one of the most influential theras at the time of King
Mindon. Neyyadhamma showed the need for a recension of at least some of the
Pali texts by editing the Saddhammapajjotika. His disciple, Pannasami,
was to preside over the recension of the entire Tipitaka as Sangharaja under
King Mindon.
Pagan-Min
Tharrawaddy-Min was himself
deposed because of insanity by his son Pagan-Min (1846-52), the brother of
Mindon-Min. Pagan-Min appointed Pannajotabhidhaja as his Sangharaja. In his
tenure, scholarship received encouragement as the Sangharaja himself wrote a
commentary and its sub-commentary in Myanmar on the Anguttara Nikaya. Other
works of the time, all in the vernacular, are a translation of the
Saddhammavilasini and commentaries on the Samyutta Nikaya and the Digha
Nikaya. This is also the time when the author of the Sasanavamsa
appears. He started his scholarly career with the translation into Myanmar of a
commentary on the Saddatthabhedacinta. His next work was a comparison of
the existing versions of the Abhidhanappadipika and the translation of
his emended text.
In accord with the
pre-eminence Myanmar had achieved in the Theravada Buddhist world, the kings of
the country became less fierce and wars were fewer. The successors of Bodawpaya
seem to have shown a genuine interest in religion as well as in improving the
administration of the country. Upper Myanmar moved into a period of peace,
which meant improved conditions for the bhikkhus.
The first half of the
nineteenth century saw the translation of many Pali texts into the Myanmar
language. Almost the whole of the Suttanta was now available in the vernacular
and many commentaries and sub-commentaries on Suttanta, Abhidhamma, and the
Vinaya were composed in it. This not only made it easier for bhikkhus with
limited linguistic skills to study the texts, but also made them readily
accessible to the laity. That people in a peaceful country have more time for
the study of religion is obvious and soon Myanmar would see the first Buddhist
texts printed on modern printing presses. This made it possible for a great
number of people to acquire texts relatively cheaply without having to pay a
scribe to copy them laboriously onto palm leaves.
Politically Pagan-Min was no
luckier than Bagyidaw, as he lost the provinces of Pathein (Bassein) and Yangon
(Rangoon) to the British, who were ever ready to create some pretext for war.
So, in 1852, the Kingdom of Ava lost access to the sea and became increasingly
dependent on the colonial power. Like his father, Pagan-Min was overthrown in a
palace revolt. Although not a leader of the uprising, his brother Mindon was
placed on the throne. He did not execute the deposed king as was usually the
case after a revolt, but allowed him to end his days in dignity.
The Colonial Administration
and the Sangha
The occupation by the
British forces was of utmost significance for the Sangha as the British
administration did not grant the traditional protection afforded it by a
Buddhist ruler. In accordance with the colonial policy established in India,
that the colonial government should be strictly secular, the new lords refused
to take on the role of a Buddhist monarch and accept responsibility for the
enforcing of the bhikkhus' discipline. Without this, Buddhism in Lower Myanmar
soon suffered and offending bhikkhus went unpunished. The colonial
administration would recognise its mistake only much later, when it was too
late, and when they were not able to establish control in the Sangha any
longer.[48]
King Mindon
Even today King Mindon's
reign (1852-1877) is surrounded by the mystique of a golden era in the minds of
the Myanmar people. No war occurred during the twenty-five years of his tenure
and the king himself is said to have been of gentle disposition and adverse to
violence. He even declared a dislike for capital punishment which was
customarily inflicted by sovereigns for the slightest disobedience or even
disagreement.[49] He was not only held
in esteem by his subjects, but even praised by a British envoy. The colonisers'
comments on the Myanmar and their kings were usually dictated by a parochial
narrow-mindedness and a simplistic view that was only widened by contact with
the conquered. Therefore General Fytche's words describing King Mindon are all
the more impressive: "Doubtless one of the most enlightened monarchs that
has ever sat on the Burmese throne.[50] He is polished in his manner, has considerable knowledge of
the affairs of state and the history and the statistics of his own and other
countries. In personal character he is amiable and kind and, according to his
light, religious."[51]
King Mindon transferred the
capital from Ava to Mandalay, the last royal capital before the British
annexation of the whole of Myanmar in 1886. In the early years of his reign,
Mindon strove to improve monastic discipline. Although a system of official
investigation of complaints relating to bhikkhus' misdemeanours existed, each
king had to take his own initiative in re-establishing order in the Sangha.
Mindon found that the
attitude of many members of the Sangha to their code of conduct was exceedingly
lax. He therefore wanted all bhikkhus of his dominions to take a vow of
obedience to the Vinaya rules in front of a Buddha image. He consulted the
Sangharaja who convened an assembly of mahatheras, the Thudhamma Council. As
opinions regarding the vow differed, the primate's disciple, Pannasami, had to
deliver a religious address in support of the king's views. He reasoned that
vows were also taken by the bhikkhus at the time of ordination and that if the
king sincerely desired to improve the discipline in the Order, he should be
supported. All agreed, and the vow was prescribed.
The greatest challenge King
Mindon had to face as a Buddhist monarch was undoubtedly his duty to look after
the spiritual welfare of his subjects not only in his own dominions, but also
in the parts of Myanmar occupied by the British. Moreover, he and many of the
leading sayadaws of his court were increasingly aware that the British were
only waiting for an occasion to annex the whole of Myanmar. Mindon's army
clearly would not be able to stand up to the might of the Indian colonial
government. Therefore, it was not only important to support religious
activities in the occupied territories but it was also essential to prepare the
religion for the time when it would have to survive without the support of a
Buddhist monarch.
The British had made it
clear at the outset that they would not take over the traditional role of the
Myanmar kings, that of protector of the Sasana. The new masters' religion,
Christianity, rapidly gained influence through the missionary schools. The
schools were popular because their education provided much assistance in
securing a job and favour with the colonisers. Christian religious education
was a compulsory part of their curriculum.
After the conquest of Lower
Myanmar, many bhikkhus had fled north in order to remain within the
jurisdiction of the Myanmar kings. Many monasteries in British Myanmar were
left without an incumbent and whole villages were therefore bereft of the
opportunity to receive religious and general education. King Mindon, aware of
this situation, tried to convince bhikkhus to return to Lower Myanmar in order
to serve their people. The king's efforts proved successful and many bhikkhus
returned to their places of origin. But soon it became clear that without the
king's ecclesiastic officials to control the discipline of the Sangha, many
bhikkhus developed a careless attitude towards their code of discipline.
The Okpo Sayadaw, from Okpo
between Yangon and Pago, had stopped many bhikkhus on their way to Upper
Myanmar when the movements of bhikkhus out of the conquered territories was at
its peak around 1855. He assembled the bhikkhus around himself teaching that
the Sangha needed no protection from the secular power if it observed the rules
of the Vinaya strictly. His monastery was the birth place of a movement of
strict monastic discipline. He also emphasised that mental volition was what
really mattered in the religion of the Buddha and that acts of worship done
with an impure intention were worthless. He obviously felt that much of the
Buddhist practice had become a ritual and that the essence had been lost. In
addition to this, however, his movement also challenged the authority of the
king's Council of Sayadaws, the leaders of the unified Thudhamma sect, when he
declared their ordination was invalid due to a technicality. As a result, he
took the higher ordination anew together with his followers.
The Okpo Sayadaw was not the
only critic of the Thudhamma sayadaws. In Upper Myanmar, the Ngettwin Sayadaw
criticised many religious practices and maintained that a radical reassesment
of religious teachings was necessary. The Ngettwin Sayadaw was also a source of
inspiration for the Okpo Sayadaw and other reformers. He had been the teacher
of Mindon's chief queen and had also advised the king on many occasions.
Interestingly, he was a driving force in a movement in Upper Myanmar that
wanted to return to the fundamentals of the religion, but more radically than
the Okpo Sayadaw. The Ngettwin Sayadaw, together with many other bhikkhus, left
the royal city and went to live in the forest near Sagaing. He started to
preach that meditation was essential for all bhikkhus and he required an
aspirant to novicehood to prove that he had practised meditation before he
would ordain him. All the bhikkhus around him had to spend a period of the day
in meditation and he emphasised that meditation was of much greater importance
than learning. He advised lay people to stop making offerings of flowers,
fruits, and candles to Buddha images, but to meditate regularly on the Uposatha
days. Of course, his instructions that offerings to Buddha images were
fruitless and merely dirtied the places of worship, caused considerable
unhappiness with the traditional Thudhamma Council and presumably with many
ordinary people. However, the Ngettwin Sayadaw never strove to form a different
sect by holding a separate ordination as did the Okpo Sayadaw. His reforms were
within the community and within a Buddhist society that was presided over by a
king. The Okpo Sayadaw had no place for royalty in his view of the world and
did not hesitate to confront the system that was still alive, though obviously
doomed.
Two other important sayadaws
of King Mindon's reign deserve mention: the Shwegyin Sayadaw and the Thingazar
Sayadaw. The Shwegyin Sayadawalso tried to reform the Sangha and his movement
is still very much alive and highly respected in Myanmar today. He had studied
under the Okpo Sayadaw, but when he returned to his native Shwegyin near Shwebo
in Upper Myanmar, he avoided controversy in never rebelling against the
Thudhamma Council. He introduced two new rules for his bhikkhus, that they must
not chew betel and consume tobacco after noon. He also maintained that the
Sangha must regulate itself without help from the authority, but he never
doubted the validity of the traditional ordination ceremony.
The Thingazar Sayadaw was
one of the most popular of the great sayadaws of his time. He was also part of
the movement to return to the basics of the teachings and greatly emphasised
the importance of practice as opposed to mere scholarship. Though he was
greatly honoured by the king and made a member of the Thudhamma Council, he
preferred spending long periods in solitude in the forest. In the numerous
monasteries built for him by the royal family and the nobility of the country,
he insisted on the practice of the purest of conduct in accordance with the
Vinaya. However, he did not involve himself in disputes with the extreme
reformers or the Thudhamma council. He became very popular through the humorous
tales he told in sermons preached in his frequent travels up and down the
country.[52]
King Mindon had no easy
task. One section of the Sangha was pressing for far reaching reforms, yet it
was the king's duty to maintain a certain continuity of the traditional ways
for the benefit of the people in general. What complicated the situation was
the fact that the Sangha of Lower Myanmar felt more and more independent of the
Buddhist monarch and his Thudhamma council of senior mahatheras. This is
illustrated graphically by the Okpo Sayadaw's declaration that the Sangha
needed no regulation by the worldly power. This view gained popularity also in
Upper Myanmar. Luckily, King Mindon's devotion to Buddhism was genuine and he
was not deterred by the difficulties confronting him. He was determined not to
allow the Sangha to split into factions that were openly opposing each other.
This he achieved to some extent through careful diplomacy and through the
calling of a great Synod, a Sangayana, in the royal city of Mandalay.
The Sangayana, or Buddhist
Council, is the most important function of the Buddhist religion. The first
Sangayana was held during the first Rains Retreat after the Parinibbana of the
Buddha; the texts to be regarded as authentic were determined at this time.
There had been three more Sangayanas since, according to the Theravada
tradition. The council convened by the great Emperor Asoka, whose missionaries
brought Buddhism to Myanmar, probably provided the most inspiration for Mindon.
The Fourth Council, the one prior to Mindon's council, was held in Sri Lanka in
the first century BC, at the Aluvihara near Matale, for the purpose of writing
down the Tipitaka, which up to that time had been passed on orally.
King Mindon himself presided
over the Fifth Buddhist Council, during which all the canonical texts were
recited and the correct form was established from among any variant readings.
The task took more than three years to accomplish, from 1868 to 1871. When the
bhikkhus had completed their great project, the king had all of the Buddhist
scriptures, the Tipitaka, engraved on 729 marble slabs. The slabs were then
housed each in a separate small pagoda about three meters high with a roof to
protect the inscriptions from the elements. The small shrines were built around
a central pagoda, the Kutho-daw Pagoda, the Pagoda of the Noble Merit. To
commemorate the great council, King Mindon crowned the Shwedagon Pagoda in
Yangon with a new Hti or spire.
The Fifth Buddhist Council
and the crowning of the Shwedagon Pagoda reminded all the people of Myanmar of
the importance of their religion, as well as of the fact that the king and the
Thudhamma Council of senior monks were still the guardians of the Sasana. The
authority of the Thudhamma Council was greatly enhanced also in Lower Myanmar
through the synod. Although the British had not allowed King Mindon to attend
the raising of the new spire onto the Shwedagon, the crowning was a symbol of
the religious unity of Myanmar which persisted in spite of the British
occupation. The religion was also later to become the rallying point for the
Myanmar nationalists who fought for independence from the colonisers.
King Mindon's reign produced
a number of scholarly works as well as translations from the Pali. Neyyadhamma,
the royal preceptor, himself wrote a sub-commentary on the Majjhima Nikaya,
which had been translated by one of his disciples under his guidance. A
commentary in Myanmar on the Pali Jatakas was composed by Medhavivamsa and the
compiler of the Sasanavamsa, Pannasami, put his name to a great number
of works. One of the queens of King Mindon requested Pannasami to write the
Silakatha and the Upayakatha. His teacher asked him to compose
the Voharatthabheda, Vivadavinicchaya,
Nagarajuppattikatha. He also wrote a commentary on Aggavamsa's
Saddaniti. Whether all these works were composed by Pannasami or whether
they were composed under his supervision and control is difficult to assess. It
is interesting to note that a majority of his works were composed in Pali,
which was no doubt an attempt to encourage bhikkhus not to forgo Pali
scholarship now that Myanmar translations were readily available. The calling
of a great Buddhist council to purify the scriptures was part of this movement
towards the revival of the study of the original texts.
During King Mindon's reign
bhikkhus from Sri Lanka came to Mandalay on several occasions to solve
difficult questions of Vinaya and to receive the bhikkhu ordination in Myanmar.
After Mindon's death in 1877, his son Thibaw ascended the throne. He was weak
and of feeble intellect, and his reign was short. In 1886, he lost his kingdom
to the British empire and was exiled to India.
With the complete annexation
of Myanmar by the British, an historical era came to an end. Theravada Buddhism
developed in Myanmar over more than two millennia. The visits of the Buddha
were the first brief illuminations in a country that was shrouded in darkness.
The worship of the Buddha that is thought to have resulted from these visits
and from the arrival of the hair relics, may have been merely part of a nature
religion. The pure religion could not endure for long in a country which was
yet on the brink of civilisation. Later, however, the teachings of the Buddha
were brought repeatedly to those lands by various people.
The visits of the Arahats
sent out after Emperor Asoka's council are historically more acceptable than
the visits of the Buddha. Their teachings were understood and perpetuated
possibly in Indian settlements along the coast and later in communities of
people from central Asia such as the Pyu. Through their contact with India,
these cultural centres of the Pyu and Mon could remain in contact with
Buddhism. At first the important centres of Theravada Buddhism were in northern
India and later in South India and then Sri Lanka. Through repeated contact
with orthodox bhikkhus abroad, the understanding of Buddhism grew ever stronger
in the minds of the people of Myanmar. The religion was distorted dozens of
times through ignorance and carelessness, but someone always appeared to
correct the teachings with the help of the mainstays of the Sasana abroad.
Gradually the role was reversed: instead of travelling abroad for advice, the
bhikkhus of Myanmar became the guardians of Theravada Buddhist teaching and
their authority was respected by all. Eventually, when Theravada Buddhism had
long been lost to India and its future was uncertain in Sri Lanka, it found a
secure home in Southeast Asia, especially in Myanmar.
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