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Inwa

Inwa (Burmese: အင်းဝမြို့; MLCTS: ang:wa.mrui., IPA: [ʔɪ́ɰ̃wa̰ mjo̰] or [ʔəwa̰ mjo̰]; also spelled Innwa; formerly known as Ava), located in Mandalay Region, Myanmar, is an ancient imperial capital of successive Burmese kingdoms from the 14th to 19th centuries. Throughout history, it was sacked and rebuilt numerous times. The capital city was finally abandoned after it was destroyed by a series of major earthquakes in March 1839. Though only a few traces of its former grandeur remain today, the former capital is a popular day-trip tourist destination from Mandalay.

Inwa
အင်းဝ
Ava
Inwa
Location of Ava
Coordinates: 21°51′28″N 95°59′06″E / 21.85778°N 95.98500°E / 21.85778; 95.98500
Country Myanmar
RegionMandalay Region
DistrictKyaukse District
Founded26 February 1365
Population
 • Ethnicities
Bamar
 • Religions
Theravada Buddhism
Time zoneUTC+6.30 (MST)

Etymology Edit

The name Inwa (အင်းဝ) literally means "mouth of the Lake", reflecting its geographical location at the mouth of lakes in the Kyaukse District. Another theory states that it is derived from Innawa (အင်းနဝ), meaning "nine lakes" in the area.[1] The city's classical name in Pali is Ratanapura (ရတနပုရ; "City of Gems").[2][3]

The modern standard Burmese pronunciation is Inwa (IPA: [ʔɪ́ɰ̃wa̰]), following the modern orthography. But the local Upper Burmese pronunciation is Awa ([ʔəwa̰]). Indeed, the spelling of the city in the royal records, all written prior to the modern Burmese spelling standardization drives, is အဝ (Awa), the phonetic spelling of the Upper Burmese usage.[4] The most common Western transcription Ava comes from Awa via Portuguese.

History Edit

 
Remains of the outer walls

Inwa was the capital of Myanmar (Burma) for nearly 360 years, on five separate occasions, from 1365 to 1842. So identified as the seat of power in Burma that Inwa (as the Kingdom of Ava, or the Court of Ava) was the name by which Burma was known to Europeans down to the 19th century.

Foundation Edit

Strategically located on the confluence of Irrawaddy, and Myitnge rivers, and in the main rice-growing Kyaukse District of Upper Burma, the location of Ava had been scouted as a possible capital site as early as 1310 by King Thihathu. Though Thihathu eventually built his new capital at Pinya a few miles east inland in 1313, Thihathu's great-grandson Thado Minbya, who unified the Sagaing and Pinya kingdoms in September 1364, chose the site of Inwa as his new capital.

Inwa was officially founded on 26 February 1365 (6th waxing of Tabaung 726 ME)[5] on a man-made island created by connecting the Irrawaddy on the north and the Myitnge on the east with a canal on the south and the west. The construction of the artificial island also involved filling in the swamplands and lakes (or Ins):[1]

  1. Shwekyabin In (ရွှေကြာပင် အင်း)
  2. Zani In (ဇနီ အင်း)
  3. Nyaungzauk In (ညောင်စောက် အင်း)
  4. Wetchi In (ဝက်ချေး အင်း)
  5. Ohnne In (အုန္နဲ အင်း)
  6. Inma In (အင်းမ အင်း)
  7. Linsan In (လင်းစံ အင်း)
  8. Bayme In (ဘေးမဲ့ အင်း)
  9. Wunbe In (ဝမ်းဘဲ အင်း)

Other records also include Kyaukmaw In (ကျောက်မော် အင်း), Ngagyi In (ငကျည်း အင်း) and Inbu In (အင်းဘူး အင်း).

The brick fortifications of Inwa do not follow the conventions of the earlier rectilinear city plans; Inwa's citadel is probably the only barrel shaped city in the world. Instead, the zigzagged outer walls are popularly thought to outline the figure of a seated lion – the Burmese Chinthe. The inner enclosure or citadel was laid out according to traditional cosmological principles and provided the requisite twelve gates. (The inner city was reconstructed on at least three occasions in 1597, 1763, and 1832.)[6] The design of Inwa, or at least the inner citadel, is designed to replicate the Buddhist universe in miniature. The palace was constructed in the very centre of the citadel, which according to traditional principles of Burmese city design, corresponds to the location of the Buddha, therefore directly associating the King with the Buddha himself.[7] This conferred upon the King a divine status and the palace as a religious centrepiece. The kingdom and its power emanated directly from the city as a mandala, encircling the entirety of the world (in theory) and therefore the city was a cosmological centre of a divinely ordained kingdom.[8]

Ava period (14th to 16th centuries) Edit

The kingdom Thado Minbya founded with the capital at Inwa became known as the Ava Kingdom, the main polity of Upper Burma until 1555. During this period, the city was the center of a flourishing literary scene in which Burmese literature "grew more confident, popular, and stylistically diverse, chiefly through the efforts of monks who chose to write in the vernacular rather than, or in addition to, in Pali."[9] The period also saw the second generation of Burmese law codes (dhammathats), which critiqued earlier compilations, new poetic genres, and the perfection of older verse forms as well as the earliest pan-Burma Burmese language chronicles.[9] The city got a new "exquisite golden palace" in February 1511 by which King Shwenankyawshin is posthumously remembered.[10]

During the reign of Swa Saw Ke, a council was convened at Ava which was attended by the King, members of the Sangha, Sinhalese monks, and Brahmins.[8] In one inscription the city was said to be as pleasant as Tavatimsa, the most important of the Buddhist heavens which also served as the model for the earthly realm of Burmese kingdoms.[11] Swa Saw Ke was known as an intellectual king who encouraged scholarly endeavours and the city was said to be full of intelligent conversation.[8]

During this period, the capital city was the target of the kingdom's rivals. It came under siege in 1401–1402 during the Forty Years' War. Over a century later, on 25 March 1527, the city finally fell to the repeated attacks by the Confederation of Shan States and the Prome Kingdom.[12] It then became the capital of the unruly and often disunited coalition until 22 January 1555 when it was captured by King Bayinnaung. The city's 190-year run as the capital of Upper Burma came to an end.

Toungoo and Konbaung periods (16th to 19th centuries) Edit

 
Stupa ruins

The city became the capital of all Burma during Toungoo and Konbaung periods (1599–1613, 1635–1752, 1765–1783, 1821–1842). The city was the base from which kings Nyaungyan and Anaukpetlun restored the kingdom which had temporarily disintegrated in December 1599. In January 1635, King Thalun moved the capital back to Ava from Pegu (Bago).[13] The city was sacked on 21–23 March 1752, and subsequently burned down on 3 January 1753 by the forces of Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom. King Hsinbyushin began the reconstruction of the city in March 1764, and moved the capital back to a newly rebuilt Ava on 23 July 1765.[14] King Bodawpaya moved the capital to Amarapura in May 1783 but his grandson King Bagyidaw moved it back to Ava in November 1821.

The end Edit

 
Me Nu Monastery

The end of the city came via a natural disaster. Starting on 22 March 1839 (7th waxing of Tagu 1201 ME) the Inwa–Amapura region was hit by a series of earthquakes. The main earthquake hit the region, as far west as Sagaing, the next day, at five o'clock in the morning on 23 March 1839, and many tremors followed for days afterwards. The entire region was left in shambles in their wake. The capital was hardest hit: everything was leveled; many people and livestock perished.[15] The city was not rebuilt. King Tharrawaddy chose instead to rebuild a new palace in Amarapura, and moved the seat of his government there in February 1842.[16]

Contemporary Inwa Edit

The former capital city site is a popular tourist day-trip destination from Mandalay. Tourists can still observe a few remnants of the capital, including Nanmadaw Me Nu Ok Kyaung, the Nanmyin Tower, the inner and outer brick city walls, etc.

Sights of interest Edit

Name Picture Built Sponsor(s) Notes
Ava Bridge   1934 The British This 16 span cantilever bridge was the only structure to span the Irrawaddy until recently. Although now superseded by a parallel 2005 road bridge, it is still in use for railway and local road traffic.
Ava Palace site   1821 King Bagyidaw The site of the deserted Palace of Ava is now marked by a solitary masonry 27 m (89 ft) high watchtower, an example of early 19th century Burmese architecture.[17] It is all that remains of the stately Palace reared by King Bagyidaw.[17]
Bagaya Monastery   1770s Maha Thiri Zeya Thinkhaya "Monastic college" where the royals were educated
Htihlaing Shin Pagoda A stupa built by King Kyansittha of Pagan Dynasty (late 11th century)
Judson Memorial A stone that marks the site of Let Ma Yun (lit. "no pulling punches") prison where the American missionary Adoniram Judson was incarcerated during the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–26)
Lawka Tharahpu Pagoda  
Maha Aungmye Bonzan Monastery   1822 Queen Me Nu Popularly known as Me Nu Ok Kyaung (lit. "Me Nu's Brick Monastery"), it was built in 1818 by Nanmadaw Me Nu, the famous Chief Queen of Bagyidaw, for the residence of her religious Preceptor, the Nyaunggan Sayadaw.[17] The earthquake of 1838, damaged it, and in 1873, it was restored by Sinbyumashin, Queen of Mindon, and a daughter of Nanmadaw Me Nu.[17] The building is markedly different from traditional Burmese monasteries, which are constructed with wood, not masonry.
Yadana Hsimi Pagodas   A group of small stupas in ruins (from the 1839 earthquakes)

Transport Edit

Inwa is located 21 km (13 mi) south of Mandalay. It is on the way from the Mandalay International Airport to Mandalay. Cars can go up to the Myitnge river. It takes a 3-minute boat ride to cross over to the former capital site. On the Inwa side, a number of horse-drawn carts await the tourist business.

Gallery Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b Khin Khin Aye 2007: 60
  2. ^ ဦးဟုတ်စိန်. "Entry for ratana". ပါဠိ မြန်မာ အဘိဓာန် (Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary) (in Burmese). Pali Canon E-Dictionary Version 1.94. from the original on 15 February 2015. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  3. ^ ဦးဟုတ်စိန်. "Entry for pura". ပါဠိ မြန်မာ အဘိဓာန် (Pāḷi-Myanmar Dictionary) (in Burmese). Pali Canon E-Dictionary Version 1.94. from the original on 15 February 2015. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  4. ^ See Hmannan Yazawin, for example.
  5. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 396
  6. ^ Cooler 2003: Chapter 4, Part 1
  7. ^ Hla, U Kan (1978). "Traditional Town Planning in Burma". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 37 (2): 92–104. doi:10.2307/989177. ISSN 0037-9808. JSTOR 989177.
  8. ^ a b c Aung-Thwin, Michael (2017). Myanmar in the fifteenth century : a tale of two kingdoms. Honolulu. pp. 53–70. ISBN 978-0824874117. OCLC 990802695.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ a b Lieberman 2003: 134
  10. ^ Khin Khin Aye 2007: 61
  11. ^ Aung-Thwin, Michael (2017). Myanmar in the fifteenth century : a tale of two kingdoms. Honolulu. pp. 53–70. ISBN 978-0824874117. OCLC 990802695.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 137
  13. ^ Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 223
  14. ^ Maung Maung Tin Vol. 1 2004: 278
  15. ^ Maung Maung Tin Vol. 2 2004: 394
  16. ^ Maung Maung Tin Vol. 3 2004: 33
  17. ^ a b c d Report 1907, p. 16.

References Edit

  • Report of the Superintendent, Archaeological Survey, Burma. Rangoon: Office of the Superintendent, Government Printing, Burma. 1907.
  • Royal Historical Commission of Burma (1829–1832). Hmannan Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 1–3 (2003 ed.). Yangon: Ministry of Information, Myanmar.
  • Cooler, Richard M. (2002). "The Post Pagan Period – 14th to 20th Centuries – Part I". Northern Illinois University.
  • Khin Khin Aye (January 2007). "Inscription record of Shwenankyawshin Narapati's Ava Palace construction". Myanmar Vista Research Magazine (in Burmese). Yangon. 1 (1).
  • Lieberman, Victor B. (2003). Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c. 800–1830, volume 1, Integration on the Mainland. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521804967.
  • Maung Maung Tin, U (1905). Konbaung Hset Maha Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 1–3 (2004 ed.). Yangon: Department of Universities History Research, University of Yangon.

External links Edit

  • "Ava" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. III (9th ed.). 1878. p. 143.
  • Inwa – a short story by Theippan Maung Wa 1931 inc. audio
  • Exploring old monasteries in ancient capital Inwa 2018-04-29 at the Wayback Machine
Inwa
Preceded by Capital of Ava Kingdom
26 February 1365 – 22 January 1555
Succeeded by
Preceded by Capital of Burma
19 December 1599 – 14 May 1613
Succeeded by
Preceded by Capital of Burma
25 January 1635 – 23 March 1752
Succeeded by
Preceded by Capital of Burma
23 July 1765 – 13 May 1783
Succeeded by
Preceded by Capital of Burma
22 November 1821 – 10 February 1842
Succeeded by

inwa, other, uses, disambiguation, burmese, အင, ဝမ, mlcts, mrui, ʔɪ, ʔəwa, also, spelled, innwa, formerly, known, located, mandalay, region, myanmar, ancient, imperial, capital, successive, burmese, kingdoms, from, 14th, 19th, centuries, throughout, history, s. For other uses see Inwa disambiguation Inwa Burmese အင ဝမ MLCTS ang wa mrui IPA ʔɪ ɰ wa mjo or ʔewa mjo also spelled Innwa formerly known as Ava located in Mandalay Region Myanmar is an ancient imperial capital of successive Burmese kingdoms from the 14th to 19th centuries Throughout history it was sacked and rebuilt numerous times The capital city was finally abandoned after it was destroyed by a series of major earthquakes in March 1839 Though only a few traces of its former grandeur remain today the former capital is a popular day trip tourist destination from Mandalay Inwa အင ဝAvaInwaLocation of AvaCoordinates 21 51 28 N 95 59 06 E 21 85778 N 95 98500 E 21 85778 95 98500Country MyanmarRegionMandalay RegionDistrictKyaukse DistrictFounded26 February 1365Population EthnicitiesBamar ReligionsTheravada BuddhismTime zoneUTC 6 30 MST This article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Foundation 2 2 Ava period 14th to 16th centuries 2 3 Toungoo and Konbaung periods 16th to 19th centuries 2 4 The end 2 5 Contemporary Inwa 3 Sights of interest 4 Transport 5 Gallery 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEtymology EditThe name Inwa အင ဝ literally means mouth of the Lake reflecting its geographical location at the mouth of lakes in the Kyaukse District Another theory states that it is derived from Innawa အင နဝ meaning nine lakes in the area 1 The city s classical name in Pali is Ratanapura ရတနပ ရ City of Gems 2 3 The modern standard Burmese pronunciation is Inwa IPA ʔɪ ɰ wa following the modern orthography But the local Upper Burmese pronunciation is Awa ʔewa Indeed the spelling of the city in the royal records all written prior to the modern Burmese spelling standardization drives is အဝ Awa the phonetic spelling of the Upper Burmese usage 4 The most common Western transcription Ava comes from Awa via Portuguese History Edit nbsp Remains of the outer wallsInwa was the capital of Myanmar Burma for nearly 360 years on five separate occasions from 1365 to 1842 So identified as the seat of power in Burma that Inwa as the Kingdom of Ava or the Court of Ava was the name by which Burma was known to Europeans down to the 19th century Foundation Edit Strategically located on the confluence of Irrawaddy and Myitnge rivers and in the main rice growing Kyaukse District of Upper Burma the location of Ava had been scouted as a possible capital site as early as 1310 by King Thihathu Though Thihathu eventually built his new capital at Pinya a few miles east inland in 1313 Thihathu s great grandson Thado Minbya who unified the Sagaing and Pinya kingdoms in September 1364 chose the site of Inwa as his new capital Inwa was officially founded on 26 February 1365 6th waxing of Tabaung 726 ME 5 on a man made island created by connecting the Irrawaddy on the north and the Myitnge on the east with a canal on the south and the west The construction of the artificial island also involved filling in the swamplands and lakes or Ins 1 Shwekyabin In ရ က ပင အင Zani In ဇန အင Nyaungzauk In ည င စ က အင Wetchi In ဝက ခ အင Ohnne In အ န န အင Inma In အင မ အင Linsan In လင စ အင Bayme In ဘ မ အင Wunbe In ဝမ ဘ အင Other records also include Kyaukmaw In က က မ အင Ngagyi In ငက ည အင and Inbu In အင ဘ အင The brick fortifications of Inwa do not follow the conventions of the earlier rectilinear city plans Inwa s citadel is probably the only barrel shaped city in the world Instead the zigzagged outer walls are popularly thought to outline the figure of a seated lion the Burmese Chinthe The inner enclosure or citadel was laid out according to traditional cosmological principles and provided the requisite twelve gates The inner city was reconstructed on at least three occasions in 1597 1763 and 1832 6 The design of Inwa or at least the inner citadel is designed to replicate the Buddhist universe in miniature The palace was constructed in the very centre of the citadel which according to traditional principles of Burmese city design corresponds to the location of the Buddha therefore directly associating the King with the Buddha himself 7 This conferred upon the King a divine status and the palace as a religious centrepiece The kingdom and its power emanated directly from the city as a mandala encircling the entirety of the world in theory and therefore the city was a cosmological centre of a divinely ordained kingdom 8 Ava period 14th to 16th centuries Edit The kingdom Thado Minbya founded with the capital at Inwa became known as the Ava Kingdom the main polity of Upper Burma until 1555 During this period the city was the center of a flourishing literary scene in which Burmese literature grew more confident popular and stylistically diverse chiefly through the efforts of monks who chose to write in the vernacular rather than or in addition to in Pali 9 The period also saw the second generation of Burmese law codes dhammathats which critiqued earlier compilations new poetic genres and the perfection of older verse forms as well as the earliest pan Burma Burmese language chronicles 9 The city got a new exquisite golden palace in February 1511 by which King Shwenankyawshin is posthumously remembered 10 During the reign of Swa Saw Ke a council was convened at Ava which was attended by the King members of the Sangha Sinhalese monks and Brahmins 8 In one inscription the city was said to be as pleasant as Tavatimsa the most important of the Buddhist heavens which also served as the model for the earthly realm of Burmese kingdoms 11 Swa Saw Ke was known as an intellectual king who encouraged scholarly endeavours and the city was said to be full of intelligent conversation 8 During this period the capital city was the target of the kingdom s rivals It came under siege in 1401 1402 during the Forty Years War Over a century later on 25 March 1527 the city finally fell to the repeated attacks by the Confederation of Shan States and the Prome Kingdom 12 It then became the capital of the unruly and often disunited coalition until 22 January 1555 when it was captured by King Bayinnaung The city s 190 year run as the capital of Upper Burma came to an end Toungoo and Konbaung periods 16th to 19th centuries Edit nbsp Stupa ruinsThe city became the capital of all Burma during Toungoo and Konbaung periods 1599 1613 1635 1752 1765 1783 1821 1842 The city was the base from which kings Nyaungyan and Anaukpetlun restored the kingdom which had temporarily disintegrated in December 1599 In January 1635 King Thalun moved the capital back to Ava from Pegu Bago 13 The city was sacked on 21 23 March 1752 and subsequently burned down on 3 January 1753 by the forces of Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom King Hsinbyushin began the reconstruction of the city in March 1764 and moved the capital back to a newly rebuilt Ava on 23 July 1765 14 King Bodawpaya moved the capital to Amarapura in May 1783 but his grandson King Bagyidaw moved it back to Ava in November 1821 The end Edit Main article 1839 Ava earthquake nbsp Me Nu MonasteryThe end of the city came via a natural disaster Starting on 22 March 1839 7th waxing of Tagu 1201 ME the Inwa Amapura region was hit by a series of earthquakes The main earthquake hit the region as far west as Sagaing the next day at five o clock in the morning on 23 March 1839 and many tremors followed for days afterwards The entire region was left in shambles in their wake The capital was hardest hit everything was leveled many people and livestock perished 15 The city was not rebuilt King Tharrawaddy chose instead to rebuild a new palace in Amarapura and moved the seat of his government there in February 1842 16 Contemporary Inwa Edit The former capital city site is a popular tourist day trip destination from Mandalay Tourists can still observe a few remnants of the capital including Nanmadaw Me Nu Ok Kyaung the Nanmyin Tower the inner and outer brick city walls etc Sights of interest EditName Picture Built Sponsor s NotesAva Bridge nbsp 1934 The British This 16 span cantilever bridge was the only structure to span the Irrawaddy until recently Although now superseded by a parallel 2005 road bridge it is still in use for railway and local road traffic Ava Palace site nbsp 1821 King Bagyidaw The site of the deserted Palace of Ava is now marked by a solitary masonry 27 m 89 ft high watchtower an example of early 19th century Burmese architecture 17 It is all that remains of the stately Palace reared by King Bagyidaw 17 Bagaya Monastery nbsp 1770s Maha Thiri Zeya Thinkhaya Monastic college where the royals were educatedHtihlaing Shin Pagoda A stupa built by King Kyansittha of Pagan Dynasty late 11th century Judson Memorial A stone that marks the site of Let Ma Yun lit no pulling punches prison where the American missionary Adoniram Judson was incarcerated during the First Anglo Burmese War 1824 26 Lawka Tharahpu Pagoda nbsp Maha Aungmye Bonzan Monastery nbsp 1822 Queen Me Nu Popularly known as Me Nu Ok Kyaung lit Me Nu s Brick Monastery it was built in 1818 by Nanmadaw Me Nu the famous Chief Queen of Bagyidaw for the residence of her religious Preceptor the Nyaunggan Sayadaw 17 The earthquake of 1838 damaged it and in 1873 it was restored by Sinbyumashin Queen of Mindon and a daughter of Nanmadaw Me Nu 17 The building is markedly different from traditional Burmese monasteries which are constructed with wood not masonry Yadana Hsimi Pagodas nbsp A group of small stupas in ruins from the 1839 earthquakes Transport EditInwa is located 21 km 13 mi south of Mandalay It is on the way from the Mandalay International Airport to Mandalay Cars can go up to the Myitnge river It takes a 3 minute boat ride to cross over to the former capital site On the Inwa side a number of horse drawn carts await the tourist business Gallery Edit nbsp Bagaya Monastery the monastic college for the royals during the Konbaung period nbsp Bagaya Monastery back nbsp Wooden doors at the Bagaya nbsp Second level outer walls as seen across the former moat nbsp Outer walls nbsp The Ava Palace site as seen from the Nanmyin Watchtower nbsp Palace watchtower in 1907 nbsp Royal Pool for Princesses also at the Ava Palace site nbsp Yadana Hsimi Pagodas nbsp Yadana Hsimi closeup nbsp Me Nu Ok Kyaung interior hallway nbsp Foundation pillars and chambers of Me Nu Ok Kyaung nbsp Old Ava BridgeNotes Edit a b Khin Khin Aye 2007 60 ဦ ဟ တ စ န Entry for ratana ပ ဠ မ န မ အဘ ဓ န Paḷi Myanmar Dictionary in Burmese Pali Canon E Dictionary Version 1 94 Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2015 ဦ ဟ တ စ န Entry for pura ပ ဠ မ န မ အဘ ဓ န Paḷi Myanmar Dictionary in Burmese Pali Canon E Dictionary Version 1 94 Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2015 See Hmannan Yazawin for example Hmannan Vol 1 2003 396 Cooler 2003 Chapter 4 Part 1 Hla U Kan 1978 Traditional Town Planning in Burma Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 37 2 92 104 doi 10 2307 989177 ISSN 0037 9808 JSTOR 989177 a b c Aung Thwin Michael 2017 Myanmar in the fifteenth century a tale of two kingdoms Honolulu pp 53 70 ISBN 978 0824874117 OCLC 990802695 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Lieberman 2003 134 Khin Khin Aye 2007 61 Aung Thwin Michael 2017 Myanmar in the fifteenth century a tale of two kingdoms Honolulu pp 53 70 ISBN 978 0824874117 OCLC 990802695 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hmannan Vol 2 2003 137 Hmannan Vol 3 2003 223 Maung Maung Tin Vol 1 2004 278 Maung Maung Tin Vol 2 2004 394 Maung Maung Tin Vol 3 2004 33 a b c d Report 1907 p 16 References EditReport of the Superintendent Archaeological Survey Burma Rangoon Office of the Superintendent Government Printing Burma 1907 Royal Historical Commission of Burma 1829 1832 Hmannan Yazawin in Burmese Vol 1 3 2003 ed Yangon Ministry of Information Myanmar Cooler Richard M 2002 The Post Pagan Period 14th to 20th Centuries Part I Northern Illinois University Khin Khin Aye January 2007 Inscription record of Shwenankyawshin Narapati s Ava Palace construction Myanmar Vista Research Magazine in Burmese Yangon 1 1 Lieberman Victor B 2003 Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 volume 1 Integration on the Mainland Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521804967 Maung Maung Tin U 1905 Konbaung Hset Maha Yazawin in Burmese Vol 1 3 2004 ed Yangon Department of Universities History Research University of Yangon External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Inwa Ava Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol III 9th ed 1878 p 143 Inwa a short story by Theippan Maung Wa 1931 inc audio Exploring old monasteries in ancient capital Inwa Archived 2018 04 29 at the Wayback MachineInwaPreceded byPinya Capital of Ava Kingdom26 February 1365 22 January 1555 Succeeded byPeguPreceded byPegu Capital of Burma19 December 1599 14 May 1613 Succeeded byPeguPreceded byPegu Capital of Burma25 January 1635 23 March 1752 Succeeded byShweboPreceded bySagaing Capital of Burma23 July 1765 13 May 1783 Succeeded byAmarapuraPreceded byAmarapura Capital of Burma22 November 1821 10 February 1842 Succeeded byAmarapura Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inwa amp oldid 1180371650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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