The Sacred Light of Bagan: An Investigation of Natural Light at Two Ancient Temples

Abstract

This study discusses the dynamic effect of daylight in the sacred atmosphere of famous temples in Bagan, Myanmar. Over 10 centuries, these remaining UNESCO monuments have stood still after surviving natural catastrophes and man-made disasters. A good preservation is needed to maintain these buildings. This topic arose from observations of the sacred areas lacking awareness of the value of daylight and ineffective artificial lighting. The research will investigate the daylight performance to restore the value of Bagan temples. This research will include case studies, comparative studies, and daylight simulation. In the past, monuments were taken as poor conservation work without understanding the value of Bagan. Existing artificial lighting is insufficient to cover the techniques from the past, resulting in decreased spatial quality of sacred spaces.


An investigation of the role of light and daylighting performance at sacred places has been performed by researchers to provide readers with a better understanding of the quality of light and spiritual experience at Bagan temples. This research indicates that religion impacts lighting treatments to create spiritual quality and increase devotee faith in sacred places. This research study aims to achieve three goals. First, to understand the critical role of religion in the lighting at a holy monument, and next, to examine the daylight performance of the main shrine and corridor of two Buddhist temples in Myanmar. Lastly, this research knowledge will be added as an essential reference to further studies for maintaining a spiritual quality at the place of worship when artificial lighting is developed. The research explores the daylighting technique in the two Buddhist temples built in the Bagan region of Myanmar. The temples are Ananda (Early 11th century AD) and That-Byin-Nyu (12th century AD), from two different periods of the Bagan Dynasty and comparable in size and popularity. The great Kings of the Bagan empire built these two monuments. The philosophy and religious perceptions of Kings themselves are reflected on these monuments.

Full text article

Generated from XML file

References

Banaei, M., Hatami, J., Yazdanfar, A., & Gramann, K. (2017). Walking through architectural spaces: The impact of interior forms on human brain dynamics. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 11(477), 1-14. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00477

Innes, M. (2012). Lighting for interior design. Laurence King Publishing.

Kyaw, L. (2010). Art and architecture of Bagan and historical background with data of important monuments. Yangon.

Kyaw, L. (2009). Evolution of Bagan temples in Myanmar. In Proceedings of the seminar of the Association of Myanmar Architects. Yangon.

Lechner, N. (1991). Heating, cooling, lighting (1st ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Lechner, N. (2000). Heating, cooling, lighting (2th ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Linn, S. (2017). The evolutionary development of temples from early style to later style (Myanmar style) in Bagan period. JARC-YU, 6(1 & 2), 83-95.

Mann, A. T. (1993). Sacred architecture. Element Inc.

Mukherji, A. (2001). A study of natural light in Hindu temples in the southern region of Tamil Nadu, India. [Master's thesis, Texas A&M University]. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2001-THESIS-M83

Thaung, H. M. (2021). Formal Basis and Timelessness of Ananda Temple along with Bagan, Myanmar. Sarasatr, 8(1), 32-51. https://so05.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/sarasatr/article/view/249219

Williamson, C. (1993). Light in dark places: Changes in the application of natural light in sacred Greek architecture. Pharos, 1, 3-37.

Authors

Lae Won Sundy
[email protected] (Primary Contact)
Chanyaporn Bstieler
Sundy, L., & Bstieler, C. (2025). The Sacred Light of Bagan: An Investigation of Natural Light at Two Ancient Temples. Resourceedings, 5(1), 32–45. https://doi.org/10.21625/resourceedings.v5i1.1150

Article Details

Received 2024-11-19
Accepted 2025-03-12
Published 2025-04-02