This statue Immortifies one of Burmas most famous and respected Kings: King Bayinnaung. The local guys who were showing me around proudly told me his story.
The Guff: King Bayinnaung inherited the throne in 1550 and re-established Burman control over Lower Burma. Between 1552-1555 he destroyed the power of the Shan states and laid the foundations of the Second Burmese Empire. But Bayinnaung was not content to stop there and turned his attention to neighbouring Siam. He captured Chiang Mai, then set his sights on Ayutthaya. The King of Ayutthaya was known to have 4 white elephants which Bayinnaung coveted. On the pretext of a manufactured border dispute, King Bayinnaung launched a successful attack on the Siamese capital in 1564.
The Siamese king, queen and youngest son were taken prisoner and the heir to the throne was left to govern as a tributary king. However after the return of his mother the Siamese tributary king re-asserted his independence. Bayinnaung was furious and launched a fresh Burmese invasion of Siam. He left with 200,000 troops, many of whom died during the subsequent 7-month siege of Ayutthaya. The Burmese finally captured the city however and the belligerent King Bayinnaung went on to attack Vientiane in Laos. But had a hard time of it.
For all his warmongering, Bayinnaung seems to have been a model Buddhist: he forbade the sacrificing of slaves, horses and elephants and sent brooms of his own hair (and that of his wives) to sweep the Temple of the Sacred Tooth in Kandy, Ceylon. He eventually died in 1581, apparently leaving 97 children, (a fact my guides delighted in telling me especially since they were to nearly as many wives) and was succeeded by the eldest, Nandanaung, who ruled from 1581-1599.
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Address: The hill dircetly south of Kawthoung Township.
Directions: Get on a Moto-taxi and check it out. It has a good view of the town, surrounding temples and of Snake Island. The Moto Taxi will only cost about $10 US for half a day.
Website: http://asiatours.net/burma/info/history02.html