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Kheng_Hock_Keong Latitude and Longitude:

16°46′21.32″N 96°8′55.27″E / 16.7725889°N 96.1486861°E / 16.7725889; 96.1486861
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kheng Hock Keong
Kheng Hock Keong in 2013
Religion
Affiliation Chinese folk religion, Mazuism
Location
Location426-432 Strand Road, Yangon
Country Myanmar
Kheng Hock Keong is located in Myanmar
Kheng Hock Keong
Shown within Myanmar
Geographic coordinates 16°46′21.32″N 96°8′55.27″E / 16.7725889°N 96.1486861°E / 16.7725889; 96.1486861
Architecture
Completed1863; 161 years ago (1863)
Kheng Hock Keong
Traditional Chinese
Burmese name
Burmeseခိန့်ဟုတ်ဗုဒ္ဓဘာသာဘုရားကျောင်း

The Kheng Hock Temple, also known as the Kheng Hock Keong (慶福宮), is the largest and oldest temple to the Chinese sea-goddess Mazu in Yangon, Burma. It is located on the corner of Sintodan Street and Strand Road in Latha Township. Kheng Hock Keong is maintained by a Hokkien Chinese clan association. [1] The temple attracts mostly Hokkien and Hakka worshipers, while the other temple in Latha Township, called the Guanyin Gumiao Temple, attracts Cantonese worshipers.

Establishment

It was originally built as a wooden temple in 1861 and completed in 1863, built in the Fujian style, on a tax-exempt plot of land granted by the British authorities. [2] [3] The founding Kheng Hock Keong Trust Committee was composed of Rangoon's largest Hokkien clans, representing the Chan- Khoo, Lim, Tan, Yeo, Lee, and Su clans. [3] At the temple's founding, the primary deity was Guanyin. A new brick building was completed in 1903, costing over 153,000 rupees. [2]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ "Kheng Hock Keong".
  2. ^ a b Chen, Yi-Sein (1966). "The Chinese in Rangoon during the 18th and 19th Centuries". Essays Offered to G. H. Luce by His Colleagues and Friends in Honour of His Seventy-Fifth Birthday. Volume 1: Papers on Asian History, Religion, Languages, Literature, Music Folklore, and Anthropology. 23. Artibus Asiae Publishers: 107–111. doi: 10.2307/1522640. JSTOR  1522640.
  3. ^ a b Li, Yi (2017-02-25). Chinese in Colonial Burma: A Migrant Community in A Multiethnic State. Springer. ISBN  9781137519009.

See also