| Ananda Phaya (အာနန္ဒာဘုရား) 
Burmese.
‘Temple of Joy’ 
or  
‘Pagoda
of Bliss’. 
Name of a Buddhist temple in   
		      
		      Bagan.  
The name
is often wrongly thought to derive from 
		      
		      Ananda (fig.),
the
cousin 
of 
Siddhartha  
Gautama and chief 
disciple of the 
Buddha. 
However, 
the name actually comes from the Burmese term Ananda Pyinnya, in Pali known as 
Ananta Panna. Whereas the word Ananda means ‘Infinite’, Pyinnya translates as 
‘Wisdom’, and together it refers to the Infinite Wisdom of the Buddha, one of 
his attributes. The name of the temple in full would hence be
the ‘Temple of Infinite Wisdom’. 
The temple 
was built in 1105 AD, during the reign of —and according to legend, also by— 
King 
						
						Kyansittha 
						
(fig.), 
in pinkish-white sandstone and 
topped with 
a gilded tower. The layout of the temple is 
in the
jaturamuk 
style, i.e. with four entrances, one for each point of the compass. Past each of 
these entrances stands a large Buddha statue, each representing a specific
		      buddha, 
i.e.
              Kassapa 
facing South (fig.), 
 
Kakusandha facing North (fig.), 
 
Konagamana facing East (fig.), 
and  
          Gautama
facing West 
(fig.), 
						 
						reminiscent of the 
						
						
						lokapala. 
Each gate has a number of 
dvarapala, i.e. door or 
temple 
guardians, both on the inside watching over the inner sanctum (fig.) 
and 
wearing a golden belt decorated with
						
						kala faces, 
used as an ornament to 
drive away evil (fig.), 
and also found elsewhere in this temple, i.e. in
a 
		      
		      
		      bas-relief 
of two 
						
			simha (lions)
	
	that are sitting back-to-back, while their heads are 
facing each other. 
The top part of this relief is made in such 
a manner that is can be viewed separately as a balu face (fig.), 
which is reminiscent of 
						
						
						Rahu 
						(fig.), 
and similar to
						
						Taotie
						(fig.) 
and 
	
						
						
	kirtimukha
						(fig.), 
i.e. a 
						
						
						kala
						face 
						(fig.). 
On 
the outside, where at the outermost corners of the building and on the roof 
are also several stone statues of 
		      
		      
              chintha, 
Burmese-style mythical 
lions, 
believed to be the protectors of the 
              
		      dhamma (fig.).
Beneath 
the peak, on the terraces surrounding the upper parts of the  
façades, as well as on the lower part of the façades, near the base, 
are 
hundreds of 
glazed 
terracotta 
tiles of a dark greyish-green colour. 
Those plaques, embedded in all four of the exterior sides, portray scenes of the 
                
                
                
              jataka, as well as
 episodes from the 
life of the 
Buddha. 
Inside, there are 
parallel corridors that surround the centre of the  
edifice, each 
with high walls that are decorated with  
	      niches 
containing 
		      
		      
              Buddha images 
in various poses and countless 
		      
bas-reliefs, again 
depicting episodes from the life of the Buddha, as well as from the 
                
                
              jataka. 
At the main entrance is a large 
	
	lotus 
pedestal with two 
		      
		      
		      Buddhapada 
(fig.), 
i.e. giant footprints of the Buddha. The original 
exquisiteness 
and splendor
of the 
building was once again revealed during the temple's outer renovations in 2016 (fig.). 
According to legend,
after completion of the temple's construction, the 
ecclesiastic architects were killed, supposedly buried alive on the orders of 
King 
						Kyansittha (fig.), 
in order to retain the uniqueness of the temple and to ensure that no copies of 
it would be built elsewhere, though according to another source they were killed 
in order to let the architects become 
	      
          nats, 
i.e. guardian spirits, of the temple. See also
Phaya, as well as 
MAP and 
TRAVEL PICTURES.
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