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1-19 of 19
- Having lived his whole life in an orphanage, Min embarks on a journey to a foreign land, seeking a brighter future, only to unravel a past he never imagined.
- A view of the religious tensions between Muslims and Buddhist through the portrait of the Buddhist monk Ashin Wirathu, leader of anti-Muslim movement in Myanmar.
- A general who sacrificed for secret historic bag on the night of November 1885 while Myanmar last federalist King Thibaw was exiled.Geroge J.Harlam an Anglo-Indian from England called George J Harlam who is interested in Myanmar ancient cultural heritages.George's adopted obedience son, Elvis.Htet Paing, who spent more than a decade of his life time in Europe becomes an accused criminal at one of the attorney offices on Pansodan St at Yangon.The daughter Saung Nanda who heritages the love and interest in ancient histories, abilities of discovering and collecting at ancient artifacts from her father.The girl who got the greatly power to be able to find historical treasure from her father as inheritances. Her name is Saung Nandar.
- "Music" never gets old and so does "Love". The story is telling that music and love are the most fundamental companions regardless of the time.
- In 802, as part of a diplomatic mission, Pyu Crown Prince Sunanda brings a troupe of musicians and dancers to the Chinese court in Tang Dynasty's capital Chang'an.
- 1. Worshipers entering the Shwe Dagon Temple. 2. Panorama of Inner Pagoda and Shrines. 3. The 777 Pagodas of Mandalay. 4. Open air School for Hindus. 5. Children's Chatti Race. 6. A Game of "Cock Fighting." 7. Burmese Game of Football. 8. The Persian Walls of Burmah. 9. Frolic of the Hindu Water Carriers. 10. Coolies transporting Crops across a Stream. 11. Carting Jungle Grass across the River Ravi.
- A team of doctors travel to Myanmar for medical intervention. Every year, for one week, since 2009 they operate children mostly suffering from orofacial clefts or burnings. The preconditions are different to western medicine countries so they face difficulties and circumstances inside and outside the emergency room, they have to deal with. Humanity. is the documentary film about the team's 2016 mission.
- In this film we show how the World Share Australia volunteer teams, who travel from developed countries to many exotic developing locations around the world. We follow the teams who help the indigenous people by partnering with them to improve different areas of daily life such as education, health care, sanitation and housing.
- Vast Vineyards of California: The grape is the oldest of cultivated fruits. Its culture in California was begun by the Spanish missionaries about 1770. The grapes are picked by hand, placed in boxes and hauled to the wine presses. When grapes come to the winery they are run through a machine which crushes the grapes but not the seeds. Juice is strained from the pulp and placed in reservoirs. Here's some choice fruit. The American Rattlesnake: The rattlesnake of Southwestern America is one of the most deadly of poisonous serpents, ready to defend itself, it seldom leads an attack. It feeds on rats, squirrels and rabbits. The Clay Industry: The clay used is a hydrous aluminum silicate, and is formed from the decomposition of aluminous rocks. Women are employed to cast small statues. Toy animals cast from clay. Casting vases. A statuette sculptor. The Buddhists Pagodas of Burma: About nine-tenths of the total population of Burma are Buddhists. Although banished from Hindustan, Buddhism prevails in China, Siam, Mongolia and Japan, and its adherents are said to number 147,000,000. The Shoay-Dagon at Rangoon, Burma, is the most venerable Buddhist Pagoda in the world, 970 feet high and supposed to have been built 585 B.C. The Pagoda and surrounding shrines are covered with gold leaf. A Pagoda contains some relic of Buddha, or one of his disciples, such as a bone, a tooth, or a hair. Pagodas at Mandalay, India.
- "Ancient Capitals"; 25 minutes; © 2019 Mandalay - Somehow I dreamed one day to go to Mandalay, wherever that would be. Maybe it was like the Shangri-La, an aspiration never to be reached. The name 'Mandalay', mentioned in the famous poem of Rudyard Kipling, is perhaps the most evocative of any destination in Myanmar. However, Kipling never stepped into the city.
- 2019–20207.8 (16)TV EpisodeTony Robinson travels across India and Burma, beginning in Delhi, where he visits one of the city's oldest markets, before taking a ride on the Himalayan Mountain Railway and being taught the proper way to imbibe at the Glenburn Tea Estate. He then crosses the Bay of Bengal into Burma, trying his hand at pottery and learning about toddy palm wine, finishing at the ancient city of Bagan.
- With the slight relaxation of control by the government of Myanmar, Tony is finally able to explore one of the most beautiful areas of Asia.
- TV and radio presenter Chris Tarrant journeys by rail through some of the world's most challenging terrain, beginning with a trip from Bangkok in Thailand to Mandalay in Myanmar. Chris traces the route of the notorious Burma-Siam Railway, a 250-mile long line built by the Japanese during World War Two using enslaved Asian workers and Allied Prisoners of War, visiting the famous site of the Bridge on the River Kwai along the way.
- Simon meets members of different groups in Burma including the majority Buddhist (monks) as well as minorities Christian Ming and persecuted Muslim Rohingya and investigates the tensions between these groups.
- Simon travels to a jade market in the old Royal capital Mandalay. In the mountains he attends the fire balloon festival and meets a Shan minority rebel army who have been fighting the Burmese military. He also visits an elephant sanctuary and an primitive oil mine.
- Captain Allen must undergo a journey to an alien temple that may change his life forever!