| Alodawpyi Phaya (အလိုတော်ပြည့်ဘုရား) 
Burmese.
‘Fulfilling of Wishes Pagoda’ 
or
‘Full Will of God’. 
Name of a Buddhist temple
in  
		      
Bagan
						
						
						(fig.), 
built in 1194 AD, in a style between that of Bagan's early and intermediate 
periods. Its builder is unknown. It shows elements that can be traced back to 
the 
                    
                    Pyu
culture and has a pyramidal 
			      
stupa, including a 
circular ornament with horizontal radiating beams (fig.) 
that resembles and is named  after the flower of the
Star Flower Tree (fig.),
placed on top of the superstructure, a style 
that preceded the arrival of the 
			      
			sikhara (fig.) 
from North India, 
yet reminiscent of the 931 AD 
Nathlaung Kyaung 
 
			(fig.), a 
		      
		      
              Hindu
temple dedicated to the god 
                
                
              	Vishnu
which originated more than two 
centuries earlier. This structure with a simple layout has its entrance in the 
East. The sanctuary is square with windows on the North and South, while the 
passage between the hall and the sanctuary is very flat, like most earlier 
monuments made during the reign of 
King 
						
						Kyansittha 
(fig.). 
The inner walls are decorated with murals showing the 
		      
		      
		      Buddha 
with a 
dhammachakka 
mudra and flanked 
by a disciple on either side.
See also 
MAP.
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