Pitakataik
Pitakataik (Burmese: ပိဋကတ်တိုက်; also spelt bidagat taik and pitaka taik) refers to a library of Buddhist scriptures, including the Tipiṭaka, found in pre-colonial Burmese kingdoms.
According to an extant British account in 1795, the Pitakataik at Amarapura was described as the largest library between the Danube and China.[1] In founding the royal capital, the pitakataik was one of the seven integral structures whose foundations had to be laid, demonstrating its importance.[2]
The Pitakataik was one of 8 structures ceremonially established by King Mindon Min in the founding of Mandalay as a royal capital.[3] In October 2013, the Sitagu Sayadaw announced a donation to rebuild the Pitakataik, along with the Thudhamma Zayat and Maha Pahtan Ordination Hall, with the consultation of Tampawaddy U Win Maung.[4]
See also
- Pitakataik (Bagan)
- Pitakataik (Mrauk U)
- Pitakataik (Thaton)
- Pitakataik (Mandalay)
- Pitakataik (Shwebo)
- Ho trai
References
- ↑ Harris, Ian (2013). William M. Johnston, ed. Encyclopedia of Monasticism. Routledge. p. 757. ISBN 9781136787157.
- ↑ U Thaw Kaung: The Learned Librarian of Myanmar. Myanmar Book Centre. 2005. p. 50.
- ↑ မင်းထက်အောင်(မန်းကိုယ်ပွား). "ရတနာပုံမန္တလေးရွှေမြို့တော်ကြီး သမိုင်းစာမျက်နှာသစ်ဖွင့်လှစ်နိုင်ခဲ့ပြီ". News and Periodical Enterprise (in Burmese). Ministry of Information. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
- ↑ ခင် ဆုဝေ (27 February 2013). "သတ်တဌာန နရောတောျသုံးခုအား ရှေးမူမပကြျ ပွုပွငျမညျ". Myanmar Times (in Burmese). Retrieved 12 July 2015.