Bago Medaw

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Bago Medaw also known as the Buffalo Mother or Lady Buffalo
A shrine of Bago Medaw at Hintha Gon Pagoda in Bago.

Bago Medaw (also known as the Buffalo Mother or Lady Buffalo; Burmese: ပဲခူးမယ်တော်, IPA: [bəɡó mɛ̀dɔ̀] or Nakkarai Medaw နံကရိုင်းမယ်တော်, IPA: [nàɰ̃kəɹáiɰ̃ mɛ̀dɔ̀]) is a Burmese nat commonly venerated in the vicinity of Bago (although worship is seen throughout Lower Burma).[1] Bago Medaw is depicted as a maiden wearing a water buffalo skull, representing a female water buffalo named Nakkarai (Burmese: နံကရိုင်း), who nursed Prince Ashakuma, the son of Thamala, the traditional founder of Hanthawaddy (now Bago).[2][3][4] She is believed to protect the family and home, and grant wishes to those she favors.[4]

She is believed to be a goddess of the Mon people, representing the Mon cultural identity and the history of Bago, which was once the Mon capital of Hanthawaddy. In Mon People Call Her Name “Minangkarai (Mon: မိနံကရိုင်)”[5][6]

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