Shin Uttarajiva

Shin Uttarajiva
ရှင်ဥတ္တရဇီဝ
Religion Buddhism
School Theravada
Lineage Mahavihara
Dharma name(s)
Personal
Nationality Burmese
Born Dagon
Died c. 1191
553 ME[1]
Pagan
Senior posting
Based in Pagan
Title Sayadaw
Predecessor Shin Panthagu
Successor Shin Siha Maha Upali[2]
Religious career
Teacher Shin Ariyawuntha
Students Shin Chapata

The Venerable Shin Uttarajiva (Burmese: ရှင်ဥတ္တရဇီဝ, pronounced [ʃɪ̀ɴ ʔouʔtəɹa̯ zìwa̯]; died 1191) was primate of Pagan Kingdom during the reigns of three kings Narathu, Naratheinkha and Narapatisithu from 1167 to 1191. The Theravada Buddhist monk presided over the realignment of Burmese Buddhism with the Mahavihara school of Ceylon, away from the Conjeveram-Thaton school of Shin Arahan.[3]

The primate, who was of Mon descent, and a group of Burmese monks visited Ceylon on a religious mission in 1180.[3][4] (Some Sri Lankan sources state the year of the visit was more likely circa 1171-1173.)[5] He also brought a few young monks, including a 19-year-old Shin Chapata.[6] Over the course of visit, Shin Uttarajiva decided to realign Burmese Theravada Buddhism, which probably came from Conjeveram in South India via Thaton, to the Mahavihara school. The returning monks refused to accept the validity of Thaton-Buddhism ordination.

The quarrel became a schism: those who derived their ordination from Shin Arahan were known as the Former Order; those who derived it from Ceylon as the Latter Order. The king supported the new movement. More and more monks were sent to Ceylon where they received ordination at the ancient Mahavihara Monastery.[4] Shin Uttarajiva died in late 1191 (right before the end of Buddhist Lent). By then, the Mahavihara school became the predominant school of Burmese Buddhism.[3] Shin Chapata also returned from Ceylon right after his teacher's death, and carried on his teacher's reformation effort.[1] (But the old order did not yield easily. The schism lasted two centuries before Conjeveram Buddhism finally died out.)[4]

Shin Uttarajiva was succeeded by Shin Siha Maha Upali as primate.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "Pagan Dynasty" (in Burmese). Hmannan Yazawin. 1 (2003 ed.). Yangon: Ministry of Information, Myanmar. 1829. p. 321. 
  2. ^ a b GE Harvey (1925). History of Burma. London: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.. p. 606. 
  3. ^ a b c GE Harvey (1925). History of Burma. London: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.. pp. 55–56. 
  4. ^ a b c DGE Hall (1960). Burma (3rd edition ed.). Hutchinson University Library. p. 23. ISBN 978-1406735031. 
  5. ^ W. M. Sirisena (1978). Sri Lanka and South-East Asia: political, religious and cultural relations from A.D. c. 1000 to c. 1500. Brill Archive. p. 67. ISBN 9004056602, 9789004056602. 
  6. ^ Hmannan, p. 320
Buddhist titles
Preceded by
Shin Panthagu
Primate of Pagan Kingdom
1167–1191
Succeeded by
Shin Siha Maha Upali
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