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Konbaung dynasty

The Konbaung dynasty (Burmese: ကုန်းဘောင်မင်းဆက်, also known as Third Burmese Empire (တတိယမြန်မာနိုင်ငံတော်)[7] and formerly known as the Alompra dynasty (အလောင်းဘုရားမင်းဆက်, Alaungphra dynasty)[citation needed] was the last dynasty that ruled Burma/Myanmar from 1752 to 1885. It created the second-largest empire in Burmese history[8] and continued the administrative reforms begun by the Toungoo dynasty, laying the foundations of the modern state of Burma. The reforms, however, proved insufficient to stem the advance of the British, who defeated the Burmese in all three Anglo-Burmese Wars over a six-decade span (1824–1885) and ended the millennium-old Burmese monarchy in 1885.

Konbaung Empire
ကုန်းဘောင်ဧကရာဇ်နိုင်ငံတော်
1752–1885
Anthem: စံရာတောင်ကျွန်းလုံးသူ့ (The Whole Southern Island Belongs To Him) (c. 1805-1885)[6]
Konbaung Empire in April 1767
Konbaung Empire in 1824
CapitalShwebo (1752–1760)
Sagaing (1760–1765)
Ava (1765–1783, 1821–1842)
Amarapura (1783–1821, 1842–1859)
Mandalay (1859–1885)
Common languagesBurmese
Religion
Theravada Buddhism
Demonym(s)Burmese
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
Monarch 
• 1752–1760
Alaungpaya (first)
• 1878–1885
Thibaw (last)
LegislatureHluttaw
Historical eraEarly modern period
• Founding of dynasty
29 February 1752
• Reunification of Burma
1752–1757
1759–1812, 1849–1855
1765–1769
1824–1826, 1852, 1885
• End of dynasty
29 November 1885
Currencykyat (from 1852)

An expansionist dynasty, the Konbaung kings waged campaigns against Manipur, Arakan, Assam, the Mon kingdom of Pegu, Siam (Ayutthaya, Thonburi, Rattanakosin), and the Qing dynasty of China – thus establishing the Third Burmese Empire. Subject to later wars and treaties with the British, the modern state of Myanmar can trace its current borders to these events.

Throughout the Konbaung dynasty, the capital was relocated several times for religious, political, and strategic reasons.

History

Establishment

The dynasty was founded by a village chief, who later became known as Alaungpaya, in 1752 to challenge the Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom which had just toppled the Taungoo dynasty. By 1759, Alaungpaya's forces had reunited all of Burma (and Manipur) and driven out the French and the British who had provided arms to Hanthawaddy.[9]

 
Lion Throne in the throne hall of the royal palace of Amarapura (painting by Colesworthy Grant, 1855)

Alaungpaya's second son, Hsinbyushin, came to the throne after a short reign by his elder brother, Naungdawgyi (1760–1763). He continued his father's expansionist policy and finally took Ayutthaya in 1767, after seven years of fighting.

Relations with Siam

In 1760, Burma began a series of wars with Siam that would last well into the middle of the 19th century. By 1770, Alaungpaya's heirs had destroyed Ayutthaya Siam (1765–1767), subdued much of Laos (1765) and defeated four invasions by Qing China (1765–1769).[10] With the Burmese preoccupied for another two decades by another impending invasion by the Chinese,[11] Siam reunified by 1771, and went on to capture Lan Na by 1776.[12] Burma and Siam went to war until 1855 but after decades of war, the two countries exchanged Tenasserim (to Burma) and Lan Na (to Siam).

Relations with China

In the defence of its realm, the dynasty fought four wars successfully against the Qing dynasty of China which saw the threat of the expansion of Burmese power in the East. In 1770, despite his victory over the Chinese armies, King Hsinbyushin sued for peace with China and concluded a treaty to maintain bilateral trade with the Middle Kingdom which was very important for the dynasty at that time. The Qing dynasty then opened up its markets and restored trading with Burma in 1788 after reconciliation. Thenceforth peaceful and friendly relations prevailed between China and Burma for a long time.

Relations with Vietnam

In 1823, Burmese emissaries led by George Gibson, who was the son of an English mercenary, arrived in the Vietnamese city of Saigon. The Burmese king Bagyidaw was very keen to conquer Siam and hoped Vietnam might be a useful ally. Vietnam had then just annexed Cambodia. The Vietnamese emperor was Minh Mạng, who had just taken the throne after the death of his father, Gia Long (the founder of the Nguyen dynasty). A commercial delegation from Vietnam has recently been in Burma, eager to expand the trade in birds nests (tổ yến). Bagyidaw's interest in sending a return mission however was to secure a military alliance.[13][14]

Western expansion, First and Second Anglo-Burmese Wars

Faced with a powerful China and a resurgent Siam in the east, the Konbaung dynasty had ambitions to expand the Konbaung Empire westwards.

Bodawpaya acquired the western kingdoms of Arakan (1784), Manipur (1814), and Assam (1817), leading to a long ill-defined border with British India.[15] The Konbaung court had set its sights on potentially conquering British Bengal by the outbreak of the First Anglo-Burmese War.

Europeans began to set up trading posts in the Irrawaddy delta region during this period. Konbaung tried to maintain its independence by balancing between the French and the British. In the end it failed, the British severed diplomatic relations in 1811, and the dynasty fought and lost three wars against the British Empire, culminating in the total annexation of Burma by the British.

 
The Shwedagon Pagoda during the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–26)

The British defeated the Burmese in the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–1826) after huge losses on both sides, both in terms of manpower and financial assets. Burma had to cede Arakan, Manipur, Assam and Tenasserim, and pay a large indemnity of one million pounds.

In 1837, King Bagyidaw's brother, Tharrawaddy, seized the throne, put Bagyidaw under house arrest and executed the chief queen Me Nu and her brother. Tharrawaddy made no attempt to improve relations with Britain.

 
The last king, Thibaw Min (right), here with Queen Supayalat and her sister Junior Queen Supayalay, was forcibly deposed by the British following the Third Anglo-Burmese War in 1885.

His son Pagan, who became king in 1846, executed thousands – some sources say as many as 6,000 – of his wealthier and more influential subjects on trumped-up charges.[16] During his reign, relations with the British became increasingly strained. In 1852, the Second Anglo-Burmese War broke out. Pagan was succeeded by his younger brother, the progressive Mindon.

Reforms

Realising the need to modernise, the Konbaung rulers tried to enact various reforms with limited success. King Mindon with his able brother Crown Prince Kanaung established state-owned factories to produce modern weaponry and goods; in the end, these factories proved more costly than effective in staving off foreign invasion and conquest.

Konbaung kings extended administrative reforms begun in the Restored Toungoo dynasty period (1599–1752), and achieved unprecedented levels of internal control and external expansion. They tightened control in the lowlands and reduced the hereditary privileges of Shan chiefs. They also instituted commercial reforms that increased government income and rendered it more predictable. Money economy continued to gain ground. In 1857, the crown inaugurated a full-fledged system of cash taxes and salaries, assisted by the country's first standardised silver coinage.[17]

Mindon also tried to reduce the tax burden by lowering the heavy income tax and created a property tax, as well as duties on foreign exports. These policies had the reverse effect of increasing the tax burden, as the local elites used the opportunity to enact new taxes without lowering the old ones; they were able to do so as control from the centre was weak. In addition, the duties on foreign exports stifled the burgeoning trade and commerce.

Mindon attempted to bring Burma into greater contact with the outside world, and hosted the Fifth Great Buddhist Synod in 1872 at Mandalay, gaining the respect of the British and the admiration of his own people.

Mindon avoided annexation in 1875 by ceding the Karenni States.

Nonetheless, the extent and pace of reforms were uneven and ultimately proved insufficient to stem the advance of British colonialism.[18]

Third Anglo-Burmese War and dethronement of the monarchy

He died before he could name a successor, and Thibaw, a lesser prince, was manoeuvred onto the throne by Hsinbyumashin, one of Mindon's queens, together with her daughter, Supayalat. (Rudyard Kipling mentions her as Thibaw's queen, and borrows her name, in his poem "Mandalay") The new King Thibaw proceeded, under Supayalat's direction, to massacre all likely contenders to the throne. This massacre was conducted by the queen.[citation needed]

 
A traditional painting by Saya Chone depicts the abdication of King Thibaw.

The dynasty came to an end in 1885 with the forced abdication and exile of the king and the royal family to India. The British, alarmed by the consolidation of French Indochina, annexed the remainder of the country in the Third Anglo-Burmese War in 1885. The annexation was announced in the British parliament as a New Year gift to Queen Victoria on 1 January 1886.

Although the dynasty had conquered vast tracts of territory, its direct power was limited to its capital and the fertile plains of the Irrawaddy river valley. The Konbaung rulers enacted harsh levies and had a difficult time fighting internal rebellions. At various times, the Shan states paid tribute to the Konbaung dynasty, but unlike the Mon lands, were never directly controlled by the Burmese.

Pretenders

After the abolition of the monarchy, the title of Royal Householder of the Konbaung dynasty nominally passed to Myat Phaya Lat, Thibaw's second daughter, as the King's eldest daughter renounced her royal titles to be with an Indian commoner.[19]

Thibaw's third daughter Myat Phaya Galay returned to Burma and sought the return of the throne from the British in the 1920s. Her eldest son Taw Phaya Gyi was taken by Imperial Japan during the Second World War for his potential as a puppet king. Japan's efforts failed due to Taw Phaya Gyi's distaste of the Japanese and his assassination in 1948 by Communist insurgents.[20]

After the death of Myat Phaya Lat, her grandson-in-law Taw Phaya became the nominal Royal Householder. Taw Phaya was the son of Myat Phaya Galay, the brother of Taw Phaya Gyi and the husband of Myat Phaya Lat's granddaughter Hteik Su Gyi Phaya.[21] Upon Taw Phaya's death in 2019, it is unclear who serves as the Royal Householder. Soe Win, the eldest son of Taw Phaya Gyi is assumed to be the Royal Householder as there is little public information about Taw Phaya's children.[22]

Government

The Konbaung dynasty was an absolute monarchy. As in the rest of Southeast Asia, the traditional concept of kingship aspired to the Chakravartin (Universal Monarchs) creating their own mandala or field of power within the Jambudipa universe, along with the possession of the white elephant which allowed them to assume the title Hsinbyushin or Hsinbyumyashin (Lord of the White Elephants), played a significant role in their endeavours. Of more earthly importance was the historical threat of periodic raids and aiding of internal rebellions as well as invasion and imposition of overlordship from the neighbouring kingdoms of the Mon, Tai Shans and Manipuris.[23]

Administrative divisions

The kingdom was divided into provinces called myo (မြို့).[24][25] These provinces were administered by Myosa (မြို့စား), who were members of the royal family or the highest-ranking officials of the Hluttaw.[26] They collected revenue for the royal government, payable to the Shwedaik (Royal Treasury) in fixed instalments and retained whatever was left over.[26] Each myo was subdivided into districts called taik (တိုက်), which contained collections of villages called ywa (ရွာ).[24]

The kingdom's peripheral coastal provinces (Pegu, Tenasserim, Martaban and Arakan) were administered by a Viceroy called a Myowun, who was appointed by the king and possessed civil, judicial, fiscal and military powers.[26] Provincial councils (myoyon) consisted of myo saye (town scribes), nakhandaw (receivers of royal orders), sitke (chiefs of war), htaunghmu (jailer), ayatgaung (head of the quarter), and dagahmu (warden of the gates).[27] Each province was divided into districts called myo, each led by a myo ok (if appointed), or by a myo thugyi (if the office was hereditary).[27] The Viceroy of Pegu was assisted by several additional officials, including an akhunwun (revenue officer), akaukwun (customs collector), and a yewun (conservator of port).[28]

The outlying tributary fiefdoms on the edges of the kingdom were autonomous in practice and nominally administered by the king.[29] These included the Tai-speaking (what became the Shan States during British rule), Palaung, Kachin and Manipuri kingdoms. The tributary princes of these fiefdoms regularly pledged allegiance and offered tribute to the Konbaung kings (through rituals called gadaw pwedaw)[30] and were accorded with royal privileges and designated sawbwa (from Shan saopha, 'lord of the sky')[29][31] In particular, the families of Shan sawbwas regularly intermarried into Burmese aristocracy and had close contact with the Konbaung court.[29]

Royal agencies

The government was centrally administered by several advisory royal agencies, following a pattern established during the Taungoo dynasty.[32]

The Hluttaw (လွှတ်တော်, lit. "place of royal release," c.f. Council of State)[33] held legislative, ministerial and judicial functions, administering the royal government as delegated by the king.[33] Sessions at the Hluttaw were held for 6 hours daily, from 6 to 9 am, and from noon to 3 pm.[34] Listed by rank, the Hluttaw was composed of:

  • Head of the Council – the king, his heir apparent, or a high-ranking prince who presided over the Hluttaw as its nominal head.[35]
  • Wunshindaw (ဝန်ရှင်တော်, Prime Minister) – served as the Chief Minister of the Hluttaw, an office established during the reign of Mindon Min and most notably served by the Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung[35][36][37]
  • Four Wungyi (ဝန်ကြီး, Minister) – jointly administered the Hluttaw's administrative portfolio and shared joint responsibility for the kingdom's administration.[33][38]
    • Four Wundauk (ဝန်ထောက်, Deputy Minister) – served as deputies to the Wungyi
  • Myinzugyi Wun (မြင်းဇူးကြီးဝန်, lit. "Minister of the Cavalry Regiments") – as the highest regular army position, oversaw the Tatmadaw.[39]
  • Athi Wun (အသည်ဝန်, lit. "Minister of the Athi") – responsible for allocating corvée labour resources and mobilisation of taxpaying commoners, called athi, during wartime[33][39]

The Byedaik (ဗြဲတိုက်, lit. "Bachelor Chambers," with Bye stemming from Mon blai (Mon: ဗ္ကဲာ, "bachelor") served as the Privy Council by handling the court's internal affairs and also served as an interlocutor between the king and other royal agencies.[39] The Byedaik consisted of:

  • Eight Atwinwun (အတွင်းဝန်, c.f. 'Ministers of the Interior')- communicated business affairs of the Hluttaw to the king, administered internal transactions of general affairs relating to the royal court.[40]
  • Thandawzin (သံတော်ဆင့်, "Heralds") – performed secretarial duties and attended king's audiences to note king's orders and forward them to Hluttaw for inscription.[41]
  • Simihtunhmu (ဆီမီးထွန်းမှူး, lit. "Lamp Lighters") – kept a list of all persons sleeping in the palace[42]
  • Hteindeinyanhmu (ထိန်းသိမ်းရေးမှူး, "caretakers of royal appointments") – performed menial tasks such as maintaining the palace furniture, draperies and other appointments[43]

The Shwedaik (ရွှေတိုက်) was the Royal Treasury, and as such, served as the repository of the state's precious metals and treasures.[44] Moreover, the Shwedaik retained the state's archives and maintained various records, including detailed genealogies of hereditary officials and census reports.[44][43] The Shwedaik was composed of:

  • Shwedaik Wun (ရွှေတိုက်ဝန်) – Chancellor of the Exchequer[43]
  • Shwedaik Saw (ရွှေတိုက်စော) – Governor of the Treasury[43]
  • Shwedaik Kyat (ရွှေတိုက်ကြပ်) – Superintendent[43]
  • Shwedaik Saye (ရွှေတိုက်စာရေး) – Clerk of the Treasury[43]
  • Shwedaik Thawkaing (ရွှေတိုက်သော့ကိုင်) – Keeper of the Treasury Key[43]

Royal service

 
A royal scribe, 1855

Each royal agency included a large retinue of middle and low level officials responsible for day-to-day affairs. These included the:

  • Nakhandaw (နားခံတော်) – charged with conveying communications to and from the King and Hluttaw.[45] Also served as intermediary between royal agencies and between king and ministers.[44] Collected, sorted, interpreted reports, read proclamations at official gatherings, transmitted orders to provincial councils.[44]
  • Sayedawgyi (စာရေးတော်ကြီး; great chief clerks) – performed executive level work and preliminary investigations for trials[45]
    • Saye (စာရေး; clerks)
  • Ameindawgyi (အမိန့်တော်ကြီး; writers of great orders) – prepared and issued royal orders after necessary preliminary steps had been taken.[45]
  • Athonsaye (အသုံးစာရေး; clerks of works) – oversaw construction and repairs of all public buildings[45]
  • Ahmadawye (အမှတ်တော်ကြီး; recorders of orders) – drafted orders and letters to be issued by Hluttaw[45]
  • Awayyauk (အဝေးရောက်; distant arrivals) – received and read letters coming from distance before submission to ministers[45]
  • Thandawgan (သံတော်ခံ) – ceremonial officers who received letters on behalf of the king[46]

and 3 classes of ceremonial officers:

  1. Letsaungsaye (clerks of presents) – read lists of offerings made to the King at royal functions[46]
  2. Yonzaw (master of ceremonies) – arranged royal functions and audiences of the King[46]
  3. Thissadawge (recorders of great oaths) – administered oaths of fealty to those entering the royal service[46]

Royal court

 
"Royal Audience," a traditional painting by Saya Chone

Konbaung society was centred on the king, who took many wives and fathered numerous children, creating a huge extended royal family which formed the power base of the dynasty and competed over influence at the royal court. It also posed problems of succession at the same time often resulting in royal massacres.

The Lawka Byuha Kyan (လောကဗျူဟာကျမ်း), also known as the Inyon Sadan (အင်းယုံစာတန်း), is the earliest extant work on Burmese court protocols and customs.[47] The work was written by the Inyon Wungyi Thiri Uzana, also known as the Inyon Ywaza, during the reign of Alaungpaya, the founder of the Konbaung dynasty.[48]

Royal court life in the Konbaung dynasty consisted of both codified rituals and ceremonies and those that were innovated with the progression of the dynasty. Many ceremonies were composed of Hindu ideas localised and adapted to existing traditions, both Burmese and Buddhist in origin. These rituals were also used to legitimise the rule of Burmese kings, as the Konbaung monarchs claimed descent from Maha Sammata through the Sakyan clan (of which Gotama Buddha was a member) and the House of Vijaya.[49] Life in the royal court was closely regulated. Eunuchs (မိန်းမဆိုး) oversaw the ladies of the royal household and apartments.[50] Inferior queens and concubines could not reside in the main palace buildings.[50]

 
The King and Queen observing a ceremony involving riders on horseback. From an 18th-century parabeik (picture book)

Brahmins, generally known as ponna (ပုဏ္ဏား) in Burmese, served as specialists for ritual ceremonies, astrology, and devotional rites to Hindu deities at the Konbaung court.[51] They played an essential role in king-making rituals, consecration and ablution ceremonies called abhiseka (ဗိဿိတ်).[52] Court Brahmins (ပုရောဟိတ်, parohita) were well embedded in daily life at the court, advising and consulting the king on various matters.[53] A social hierarchy among the Brahmins determined their respective duties and functions.[53] Astrologer Brahmins called huya (ဟူးရား) were responsible for determining astrological calculations, such as determining the auspicious moment for the foundation of a new capital, a new palace, pagoda, or assumption of the royal residence, announcing an appointment, leaving a place, visiting a pagoda or starting a military campaign.[54] They also established the religious calendar, prepared the almanac (သင်္ကြန်စာ), calculated upcoming solar and lunar eclipses, identified major festival days based on the lunar cycle, and communicated auspicious times and dates.[54] A special group of Brahmins who performed abhiseka rituals were also selected as pyinnya shi (ပညာရှိ), appointed royal counselors.[55]

Military

Royal rituals

Lavish affairs were also organised around the life ceremonies of royal family members.[56] Brahmins presided over many of these auspicious ceremonies, including the construction of a new royal capital; consecration of the new palace, the royal ploughing ceremony; the naming, first rice feeding and cradling ceremonies; the abhiseka head anointing rituals, and the King's participation in Burmese New Year (Thingyan) celebrations.[57] During Thingyan, a group of 8 Brahmins sprinkled water blessed by a group of 8 Buddhist monks, throughout the palace grounds, at the Hluttaw, various courts, the major city gates, and the 4 corners of the capital.[57] The king attended many of the ceremonies involving royal family members, from cradling ceremonies (ပုခက်မင်္ဂလာ) to ear-boring ceremonies, from marriages to funerals.[56]

Specific buildings in the royal palace served as the venue for various life ceremonies. For instance, the Great Audience Hall was where young princes underwent the shinbyu coming-of-age ceremony and were ordained as monk novices.[58] This was also the venue where young princes ceremonially had their hair tied in a topknot (သျှောင်ထုံး).[58] Elaborate Burmese New Year feasts took place at the Hmannandawgyi (Palace of Mirrors): on the third day of the New Year, the king and chief queen partook in Thingyan rice, cooked rice dipped in cold perfumed water, while seated on their throne.[59] Musical and dramatic performances and other feasts were also held in that complex.[59]

Consecration ceremonies (abhiseka)

 
A nineteenth-century watercolor painting by royal painters depicts a Konbaung abhiseka ceremony. The king and queen are respectively seated in the pavilion, surrounded by a retinue of Brahmins.

The most significant court functions of a king's reign were the abhiseka or consecratory rituals, held at various times throughout a king's reign, to reinforce his place as the patron of religion (Sasana) and righteousness.[56] Abhiseka rituals all involved the pouring of water from a conch on the candidate's (usually the king's) head, instructing him what to do or not to do for the love of his people and warning him that if he failed to oblige, he might suffer certain miseries.[57] Ablution rituals were the responsibility of a group of 8 elite Brahmins uniquely qualified to perform the ritual.[57] They were to remain chaste before the ceremony.[57] Another group of Brahmins was responsible for the consecration of the Crown Prince.[57]

There were 14 types of abhiseka ceremonies in total:[57]

  1. Rājabhiseka (ရာဇဘိသိက်) – coronation of the king
  2. Muddhabhiseka (မုဒ္ဓဘိသိက်) – formal vow by the king to work for the propagation of the Sasana (the Buddha's teachings); held five years after accession[60][57]
  3. Uparājabhiseka (ဥပရာဇဘိသေက) – installation of crown prince[60]
  4. Mahesībhiseka (မဟေသီဘိသေက) – coronation of chief queen[60]
  5. Maṅgalabhiseka (မင်္ဂလာဘိသေက) – held to celebrate the possession of white elephants[60]
  6. Siriyabhiseka (သီရိယဘိသေက) – held to renew the king's glory, held on occasion[60]
  7. Āyudighabhiseka (အာယုဒီဃဘိသေက) – held to gain longevity, held on occasion[60]
  8. Jayabhiseka (ဇေယျာဘိသေက) – held to ensure victory and success in war[60]
  9. Mahābhiseka (မဟာဘိသေက) – held to increase economic prosperity, held seven years after accession[60]
  10. Sakalabhiseka (သကလာဘိသေက) – held to ensure peace in the kingdom[60]
  11. Vijayabhiseka (ဝိဇယဘိသေက) – held to conquer enemies[57]
  12. Mandabhiseka (Manda beittheit) – held to marry the candidate to a queen of royal lineage.[61]
  13. Singabhiseka (Thenga beittheit) – held to recommit a king to abide by the laws, whereupon full powers for the government and administration of the country are conferred[61]

Coronation

Rajabhiseka (ရာဇဘိသိက်) – the Coronation of the king, which was presided over by Brahmins, was the most important ritual of the royal court.[60][62] The ceremony was typically held in the Burmese month of Kason, but did not necessarily occur during the beginning of a reign.[62][60] The Sasanalinkaya states that Bodawpaya, like his father, was crowned only after establishing control over the kingdom's administration and purifying the religious institutions.[62] The most important features of this ritual were: the fetching of the anointing water; the ceremonial bath; the anointment; and the king's oath.[63]

Elaborate preparations were made precisely for this ceremony. Three ceremonial pavilions (Sihasana or Lion Throne; Gajasana or Elephant Throne; and the Marasana or Peacock Throne) were constructed in a specifically designated plot of land (called the "peacock garden") for this occasion.[64] Offerings were also made to deities and Buddhist parittas were chanted.[60] Specially designated individuals, usually the daughters of dignitaries including merchants and Brahmins, were tasked with procuring anointing water midstream from a river.[65] The water was placed in the respective pavilions.[66]

At an auspicious moment, the king was dressed in the costume of a Brahma and the queen in that of a queen from devaloka.[67] The couple was escorted to the pavilions in procession, accompanied by a white horse or a white elephant.[68][67] The king first bathed his body in the Morasana pavilion, then his head in the Gajasana pavilion.[69] He then entered the Sihasana pavilion to assume his seat at the coronation throne, crafted to resemble a blooming lotus flower, made of figwood and applied gold leaf.[69] Brahmins handed him the five articles of coronation regalia (မင်းမြောက်တန်ဆာ, Min Myauk Taza):

  1. White umbrella (ထီးဖြူ, hti byu)[70]
  2. Crown, in the form of a crested headdress (မကိုဋ်, magaik)[70]
  3. Sceptre (သန်လျက်, thanlyet)[70]
  4. Sandals (ခြေနင်း, che nin)[70]
  5. Fly-whisk, made of yak tail (သားမြီးယပ်, thamyi yat)[70]

At his throne, eight princesses anointed the king by pouring specially procured water atop his head, each using a conch bedazzled with gems white solemnly adjuring him in formulae to rule justly.[69][68] Brahmins then raised a white umbrella over the king's head.[68] This anointment was repeated by eight pure-blooded Brahmins and eight merchants.[71] Afterward, the king repeated words ascribed to Buddha at birth: "I am foremost in all the world! I am most excellent in all the world! I am peerless in all the world!" and made invocation by pouring water from a golden ewer.[68] The ritual ended with the king taking refuge in the Three Jewels.[68]

As part of the coronation, prisoners were released.[71] The king and his pageant returned to the Palace, and the ceremonial pavilions were dismantled and cast into the river.[72] Seven days after the ceremony, the king and members of the royal family made an inaugural procession, circling the city moat on a gilt state barge, amid festive music and spectators.[61]

Installation of the Crown Prince

Uparājabhiseka (ဥပရာဇဘိသေက) – the Installation of the Uparaja (Crown Prince), in Burmese Einshe Min (အိမ်ရှေ့မင်း), was one of the most important rituals in the king's reign. The Installation Ceremony took place in the Byedaik (Privy Council).[73] The Crown Prince was invested, received appenages and insignias, and was bestowed a multitude of gifts.[74] The king also formally appointed a retinue of household staff to oversee the Prince's public and private affairs.[75] Afterward, the Crown Prince was paraded to his new Palace, commiserate with his new rank.[76] Preparations for a royal wedding with a princess, specially groomed to become the new king's consort, then commenced.[76]

Feeding of the first betel

Kun U Khun Mingala (ကွမ်းဦးခွံ့မင်္ဂလာ) – the Feeding of the First Betel ceremony was held about 75 days after the birth of a prince or princess to bolster the newborn child's health, prosperity and beauty.[77] The ceremony involved the feeding of betel, mixed with camphor and other ingredients. An appointed official (ဝန်) arranged the rituals preceding the ceremony.[77] These rituals included a specific set of offerings to the Buddha, indigenous spirits (yokkaso, akathaso, bhummaso, etc.), Guardians of the Sasana, and to the parents and grandparents of the child, all of which were arranged in the infant's chamber.[78] Additional offerings were made to the Hundred Phi (ပီတစ်ရာနတ်), a group of 100 Siamese spirits headed by Nandi (နန္ဒီနတ်သမီး), personified by a Brahmin figure made of kusa grass, which was ceremonially fed scoops of cooked rice with the left hand.[78][79]

Naming ceremony

Nāmakaraṇa (နာမကရဏ) – the naming ceremony took place 100 days after the birth of a prince or princess.[78] Food was also offered for the dignitaries and entertainers in attendance.[80] The infant's name was inscribed on a gold plate or on palm leaf.[80] The night before the ceremony, a pwe was held for the attendees.[80] The dawn of the ceremony, Buddhist monks delivered a sermon to the court.[79] Afterward, at the Chief Queen's apartment, the infant was seated on a divan with the Chief Queen, with respective attendees from the royal court seated according to rank.[81] A Minister of the Interior then presided over ceremonial offerings (ကုဗ္ဘီး) made to the Triple Gem, the 11 deva headed by Thagyamin, 9 Hindu deities, indigenous nat, and the 100 Phi.[82][81] A protective prayer was then recited.[83] After the prayer, a pyinnyashi prepared and 'fed' Nandi. At the auspicious moment calculated by astrologers, the name of the infant was read out thrice by the royal herald.[83] Afterward, another royal herald recited an inventory of presents offered by the dignitaries in attendance.[83] At the closing of the ceremony, a feast ensued, with attendees fed in the order of precedence.[83] Offerings to the Buddha were shuttled to the pagodas, and those to Nandi, to the sacrificial Brahmins.[83]

Royal Ploughing Ceremony

 
A depiction of the Royal Ploughing Ceremony by Saya Chone, a painter at the royal court

Lehtun Mingala (လယ်ထွန်မင်္ဂလာ)[84] – the Royal Ploughing Ceremony was an annual festival of breaking ground with ploughs in the royal fields east of the royal capital, to ensure sufficient rainfall for the year by propitiating the Moekhaung Nat, who was believed to control rain.[50][85] The ceremony was traditionally linked to an event in Gotama Buddha's life. During King Suddhodana's royal ploughing of the fields, the infant Buddha rose to stand, sat cross-legged and began to meditate, underneath the shade of a rose apple tree.[86]

The ceremony was held at the beginning of June, at the break of the southwest monsoon.[87] For the ceremony, the king, clad in state robes (a paso with the peacock emblem (daungyut)), a long silk surcoat or tunic encrusted with jewels, a spire-like crown (tharaphu), and 24 strings of the salwe across his chest, and a gold plate or frontlet over his forehead) and his audience made a procession to the leya (royal fields).[88] At the ledawgyi, a specially designated plot of land, milk-white oxen were attached to royal ploughs covered with gold leaf, stood ready for ploughing by ministers, princes and the kings.[89] The oxen were decorated with gold and crimson bands, reins bedecked with rubies and diamonds, and heavy gold tassels hung from the gilded horns.[89] The king initiated the ploughing, and shared this duty among himself, ministers and the princes.[90] After the ceremonial ploughing of the ledawgyi was complete, festivities sprung up throughout the royal capital.[90]

Head-washing ceremony

At Thingyan and at the end of the Buddhist lent, the king's head was ceremonially washed with water from Gaungsay Gyun (lit. Head Washing Island) between Martaban and Moulmein, near the mouth of the Salween River.[91] After the Second Anglo-Burmese War (which resulted in Gaungsay Gyun falling under British possession), purified water from Irrawaddy River was instead procured. This ceremony also preceded the earboring, headdressing, and marriage ceremonies of the royal family.[92]

Obeisance ceremony

The Obeisance ceremony was a grand ceremony held at the Great Audience Hall thrice a year where tributary princes and courtiers laid tribute, paid homage to their benefactor, the Konbaung king, and swore their allegiance to the monarchy.[50] The ceremony was held 3 times a year:

  1. Hnit Thit Gadaw (နှစ်သစ်ကန်တော့)[93] – Beginning of the Burmese New Year (April)[58]
  2. Wa-win Gadaw (ဝါဝင်ကန်တော့)[93] – Beginning of the Buddhist Lent (June or July) – required the attendance of princes, ministers and city officials[58]
  3. Wa-gyut Gadaw (ဝါကျွတ်ကန်တော့)[93]End of the Buddhist Lent (October) – required the attendance of provincial governors and tributary princes (sawbwa)[58]

During this ceremony, the king was seated at the Lion Throne, along with the chief queen, to his right.[58] The Crown Prince was seated immediately before the throne in a cradle-like seat, followed by princes of the blood (min nyi min tha).[58] Constituting the audience were courtiers and dignitaries from vassal states, who were seated according to rank, known in Burmese as Neya Nga Thwe (နေရာငါးသွယ်):[58]

  1. Taw Neya (တော်နေရာ);[94]
  2. Du Neya (ဒူးနေရာ);[94]
  3. Sani (စနည်း);[94]
  4. Atwin Bawaw (အတွင်းဘဝေါ);[94]
  5. Apyin Bawaw (အပြင်ဘဝေါ)[94]

There, the audience paid obeisance to the monarch and renewed their allegiance to the monarch.[58] Women, barring the chief queen, were not permitted to be seen during these ceremonies.[58] Lesser queens, ministers' wives and other officials were seated in a room behind the throne: the queens were seated in the centre within the railing surrounding the flight of steps, while the wives of ministers and others sat in the space without.[58]

Ancestor worship

Throughout the Konbaung dynasty, the royal family performed ancestral rites to honour their immediate ancestors. These rites were performed at the thrice a year at the Zetawunsaung (Jetavana Hall or "Hall of Victory"), which housed the Goose Throne (ဟင်္သာသနပလ္လင်), immediately preceding the Obeisance Ceremony.[95] On a platform in a room to the west of hall, the king and members of the royal family paid obeisance to images of monarchs and consorts of the Konbaung dynasty. Offerings and Pali prayers from a book of odes were also made to the images.[95] The images, which stood 6 to 24 inches (150 to 610 mm) tall, were made of solid gold.[96] Images were only made for Konbaung kings at their death (if he died on the throne) or for Konbaung queens (if she died while her consort was on throne), but not of a king who died after deposition or a queen who survived her husband.[96] Items used by the deceased personage (e.g. sword, spear, betel box) were preserved along with the associated image.[96] After the British conquest of Upper Burma, 11 images fell into the hands of the Superintendent at the Governor's Residence, Bengal, where they were melted down.[96]

Funerals

 
The tomb of King Mindon on the grounds of Mandalay Palace in 1903

When a king died, his royal white umbrella was broken and the great drum and gong at the palace's bell tower (at the eastern gate of the palace), was struck.[70] It was custom for members of the royal family, including the king, to be cremated: their ashes were put into a velvet bag and thrown into the river.[97] King Mindon Min was the first to break tradition; his remains were not cremated, but instead were buried intact, according to his wishes, at the place where his tomb now stands.[97] Before his burial, the King Mindon's body was laid in state before his throne at the Hmannandawgyi (Palace of Mirrors).[59][58]

Foundation sacrifice

The Foundation Sacrifice was a Burmese practice whereby human victims known as myosade (မြို့စတေး) were ceremonially sacrificed by burial during the foundation of a royal capital, to propitiate and appease the guardian spirits. to ensure impregnability of the capital city.[98] The victims were crushed to death underneath a massive teak post erected near each gateway, and at the four corners of the city walls, to render the city secure and impregnable.[99] Although this practice contradicted the fundamental tenets of Buddhism, it was in alignment with prevailing animistic beliefs, which dictated that the spirits of persons who suffered violent deaths became nats (spirits) and protective and possessive of their death sites.[99] The preferred sites for such executions were the city's corners and the gates, the most vulnerable defence points.[99]

The Konbaung monarchs followed ancient precedents and traditions to found the new royal city. Brahmins were tasked with planning these sacrificial ceremonies and determining the auspicious day according to astrological calculations and the signs of individuals best suited for sacrifice.[99] Usually, victims were selected from a spectrum of social classes, or unfortuitiously apprehended against will during the day of the sacrifice.[99] Women in the latter stages of pregnancy were preferred, as the sacrifice would yield two guardian spirits instead of one.[99]

Such sacrifices took place at the foundation of Wunbe In Palace in Ava in 1676 and may have taken place at the foundation of Mandalay in 1857.[98] Royal court officials at the time claimed that the tradition was dispensed altogether, with flowers and fruit offered in lieu of human victims.[99] Burmese chronicles and contemporary records only make mention of large jars of oil buried at the identified locations, which was, by tradition, to ascertain whether the spirits would continue to protect the city (i.e., so long as the oil remained intact, the spirits were serving their duty).[99] Shwe Yoe's The Burman describes 52 men, women and children buried, with 3 buried under the post near each of the twelve gates of the city walls, one at each corner of those walls, one at each corner of the teak stockade, one under each of the four entrances to the Palace, and four under the Lion Throne.[100] Taw Sein Ko's Annual Report for 1902–03 for the Archaeological Survey of India mentions only four victims buried at the corners of the city walls.

Devotional rituals

 
The Guardians of the Four Cardinal Directions (Lokapala) in Burmese depiction

Brahmins at the Konbaung court regularly performed a variety of grand devotional rituals to indigenous spirits (nat) and Hindu deities.[56] The following were the most important devotional cults:

  • Ganesha (Maha Peinne in Burmese) – During the Burmese month of Nadaw (November to December), a festival for Ganesha, the god of prudence and good policy, was held. Grain first reaped from the royal fields was sent to the Mahamuni Buddha Temple as an offering to Ganesha, in three huge containers in the shape of a buffalo, bullock and prawn, in which paddy, millet, and bulrush millet were respectively placed.[101] Ganesha, mounted on a peacock, was placed on a ceremonial procession and was then brought before the king, who after paying homage, scattered pieces of silver and clothes among the poor.[101][102] Ganesha occupied a prominent place in royal ceremonies, especially as he was considered a guardian deity of the elephants.[103] Offerings to Ganesha, made in the Burmese month of Tazaungmon were established during Bodawpaya's reign.[104]
  • Phaya Ko Zu (ဘုရားကိုးဆူ, lit. "Nine Deities") – This was a devotional rite performed by Khettara Brahmins. The deities referenced were either Buddhist: Buddha and the 8 arahats, or non-Buddhist: 5 Hindu deities, including Candi and Ganesha, and 4 nats).[105]
  • Skanda (Sakanta or Sakanta Tattika) – King Bodawpaya reformed the annual ceremonial procession to honour Ganesha to instead honour Skanda, the god of war (and a son of Shiva and Candi), following the advice of a Brahmin from Benares.[106][107] This procession was held in the Burmese month of Tabaung.[104] Skanda was closely linked with a deity called Citrabali-mara (Cittarapali-mar[a]), both of whom were connected to rituals mentioned in Rajamattan, a standard reference for ceremonies at the royal court compiled during Bodawphaya's reign.[104]
  • Hindu deities: Candi (Canni), Indra (Thagyamin), Shiva, Vishnu, Asuras and the 4 Lokapala – These deities were placed at specific locations, at the entrances of the capital city, the royal palace, or in temples, to ward off evil.[106]
  • Other spirits (nat): Planets, Sky, Sun, Moon, Hon (the fire spirit)[104][108]

Society and culture

 
Burmese court officials in 1795

Social classes

During the Konbaung dynasty, Burmese society was highly stratified. Loosely modelled on the four Hindu varnas, Konbaung society was divided into four general social classes (အမျိုးလေးပါး) by descent:[94]

  1. Rulers (မင်းမျိုး) or Khattiya (ခတ္တိယ)[109]
  2. Ritualists (ပုဏ္ဏားမျိုး) or Brahmana (ဗြာဟ္မဏ)[109]
  3. Merchants (သူဌေးမျိုး) or Vessa (ဝေဿ)[109]
  4. Commoners (ဆင်းရဲသားမျိုး) or Tudda (သုဒ္ဒ)[109]

Society also distinguished between the free and slaves (ကျွန်မျိုး), who were indebted persons or prisoners of war (including those brought back from military campaigns in Arakan, Ayuthaya, and Manipur), but could belong to one of the four classes. There was also distinction between taxpayers and non-taxpayers. Tax-paying commoners were called athi (အသည်), whereas non-taxpaying individuals, usually affiliated to the royal court or under government service, were called ahmuhtan (အမှုထမ်း).

Outside of hereditary positions, there were two primary paths to influence: joining the military (မင်းမှုထမ်း) and joining the Buddhist Sangha in the monasteries.

Sumptuary laws

Sumptuary laws called yazagaing dictated life and consumption for Burmese subjects in the Konbaung kingdom, everything from the style of one's house to clothing suitable to one's social standing from regulations concerning funerary ceremonies and the coffin to be used to usage of various speech forms based on rank and social status.[110][111][112] In particular, sumptuary laws in the royal capital were exceedingly strict and the most elaborate in character.[113]

For instance, sumptuary laws forbade ordinary Burmese subjects to build houses of stone or brick and dictated the number of tiers on the ornamental spired roof (called pyatthat) allowed above one's residence— the royal palace's Great Audience Hall and the 4 main gates of the royal capital, as well as monasteries, were allowed 9 tiers while those of the most powerful tributary princes (sawbwa) were permitted 7, at most.[114][115]

Sumptuary laws ordained 5 types of funerals and rites accorded to each: the king, royal family members, holders of ministerial offices, merchants and those who possessed titles, and peasants (who received no rites at death).[116]

Sumptuary regulations regarding dress and ornamentation were carefully observed. Designs with the peacock insignia were strictly reserved for the royal family and long-tailed hip-length jackets (ထိုင်မသိမ်းအင်္ကျီ) and surcoats were reserved for officials.[117] Velvet sandals (ကတ္တီပါဖိနပ်) were worn exclusively by royals.[118] Gold anklets were worn only by the royal children. [110] Silk cloth, brocaded with gold and silver flowers and animal figures were only permitted to be worn by members of the royal family and ministers’ wives. [110] Adornment with jewels and precious stones was similarly regulated. Usage of hinthapada (ဟင်္သပဒါး), a vermilion dye made from cinnabar was regulated.[110]

Demography

 
Konbaung era Myinkhin Thabin

Throughout the Konbaung dynasty, cultural integration continued. For the first time in history, the Burmese language and culture came to predominate the entire Irrawaddy valley, with the Mon language and ethnicity completely eclipsed by 1830. The nearer Shan principalities adopted more lowland norms.

 
An 1855 watercolour of a Kathe horseman from Manipur

Captives from various military campaigns in their hundreds and thousands were brought back to the kingdom and resettled as hereditary servants to royalty and nobility or dedicated to pagodas and temples; these captives added new knowledge and skills to Burmese society and enriched Burmese culture. They were encouraged to marry into the host community thus enriching the gene pool as well.[119] Captives from Manipur formed the cavalry called Kathè myindat (Cassay Horse) and also Kathè a hmyauk tat (Cassay Artillery) in the royal Burmese army. Even captured French soldiers, led by Chevalier Milard, were forced into the Burmese army.[120] The incorporated French troops with their guns and muskets played a key role in the later battles between the Burmese and the Mons. They became an elite corps, which was to play a role in the Burmese battles against the Siamese (attacks and capture of Ayutthaya from 1760 to 1765) and the Manchus (battles against the Chinese armies of the Qianlong Emperor from 1766 to 1769).[120] Muslim eunuchs from Arakan also served in the Konbaung court.[121][122][123][124][125]

A small community of foreign scholars, missionaries and merchants also lived in Konbaung society. Besides mercenaries and adventurers who had offered their services since the arrival of the Portuguese in the 16th century, a few Europeans served as ladies-in-waiting to the last queen Supayalat in Mandalay, a missionary established a school attended by Mindon's several sons including the last king Thibaw, and an Armenian had served as a king's minister at Amarapura.

Among the most visible non-Burmans of the royal court were Brahmins. They typically originated from one of four locales:

  • Manipur – acquired with the conquest of Manipur; perhaps from Bengal, since Manipur was Hinduised by Bengali Brahmins in the 1700s[126]
  • Arakan – acquired with the conquest of Arakan in 1785 by King Bodawpaya's son, Thado Minsaw[126]
  • Sagaing – long-established lines of Brahmins at Burman and Mon royal courts, who traced their origins to ninth century Sri Ksetra or 14th century Sagaing[126]
  • Benares – Indian Brahmins from Benares who arrived in upper Burma between the late 1700s to early 1800s.[127]

Literature and arts

The evolution and growth of Burmese literature and theatre continued, aided by an extremely high adult male literacy rate for the era (half of all males and 5% of females).[128] Foreign observers such as Michael Symes remarked on widespread literacy among commoners, from peasants to watermen.[119]

The Siamese captives carried off from Ayutthaya as part of the Burmese–Siamese War (1765–67) went on to have an outsize influence on traditional Burmese theatre and dance. In 1789, a Burmese royal commission consisting of Princes and Ministers was charged with translating Siamese and Javanese dramas from Thai to Burmese. With the help of Siamese artists captured from Ayutthaya in 1767, the commission adapted two important epics from Thai to Burmese: the Siamese Ramayana and the Enao, the Siamese version of Javanese Panji tales into Burmese Yama Zattaw and Enaung Zattaw.[129] One classical Siamese dance, called Yodaya Aka (lit. Ayutthaya-style dance) is considered one of the most delicate of all traditional Burmese dances.

Architecture

Burmese dynasties had a long history of building regularly planned cities along the Irawaddy valley between the 14th to 19th century. Town planning in pre-modern Burma reached its climax during the Konbaung period with cities such as Mandalay. Alaungpaya directed many town planning initiatives. He built many small fortified towns with major defences. One of these, Rangoon, was founded in 1755 as a fortress and sea harbor. The city had an irregular plan with stockades made of teak logs on a ground rampart. Rangoon had six city gates with each gate flanked by massive brick towers with typical merlons with cross-shaped embrasures. The stupa of Shwedagon, Sule and Botataung were located outside the city walls. The city had main roads paved with bricks and drains along the sides.[130]

Religion

Monastic and lay elites around the Konbaung kings, particularly from Bodawpaya's reign, launched a major reformation of Burmese intellectual life and monastic organisation and practice known as the Sudhamma Reformation. It led to, amongst other things, Burma's first proper state histories.[131]

Rulers

No Title Literal meaning Lineage Reign Notes
1 Alaungpaya Future Buddha-King village chief 1752–1760 Founder of the dynasty and the Third Burmese Empire, invaded Ayutthaya.
2 Naungdawgyi Royal Elder Brother son 1760–1763 Invaded Ayutthaya with his father.
3 Hsinbyushin Lord of the White Elephant brother 1763–1776 Invaded and sacked Ayutthaya, invaded Chiang Mai and Laos, invaded Manipur,
successfully repulsed four Chinese invasions.
4 Singu King Singu son 1776–1781
5 Phaungka Younger Brother (Lord of Phaungka) cousin (son of Naungdawgyi) 1782 The shortest reign in Konbaung history of just over one week.
6 Bodawpaya Royal Lord Grandfather uncle (son of Alaungpaya) 1782–1819 Invaded and annexed Arakan, invaded Rattanakosin (Bangkok).
7 Bagyidaw Royal Elder Uncle grandson 1819–1837 Invaded Ayutthaya with his grandfather, invaded Assam and Manipur, defeated in
the First Anglo-Burmese War.
8 Tharrawaddy King Tharrawaddy brother 1837–1846 Fought in the First Anglo-Burmese War as Prince of Tharrawaddy.
9 Pagan King Pagan son 1846–1853 Overthrown by Mindon after his defeat in the Second Anglo-Burmese War.
10 Mindon King Mindon half-brother 1853–1878 Sued for peace with the British; had a very narrow escape in a palace rebellion by
two of his sons but his brother Crown Prince Ka Naung was killed.
11 Thibaw King Thibaw son 1878–1885 The last king of Burma, forced to abdicate and exiled to India after his defeat in the
Third Anglo-Burmese War.

Note: Naungdawgyi was the eldest brother of Hsinbyushin and Bodawpaya who was the grandfather of Bagyidaw who was Mindon's elder uncle. They were known by these names to posterity, although the formal titles at their coronation by custom ran to some length in Pali; Mintayagyi paya (Lord Great King) was the equivalent of Your/His Majesty whereas Hpondawgyi paya (Lord Great Glory) would be used by the royal family.

Family tree

1
Alaungpaya
(1752–1760)
Yun San
362
Me HlaHsinbyushin
(1763–1776)
Bodawpaya
(1782–1819)
Naungdawgyi
(1760–1763)
Shin Hpo U
45
Singu Min
(1776–1781)
Thado MinsawPhaungka
(1782)
78
Bagyidaw
(1819–1837)
Tharrawaddy
(1837–1846)
910
Pagan[N 1]
(1846–1853)
Mindon[N 2]
(1853–1878)
Laungshe Mibaya
11
Thibaw
(1878–1885)
Royal house
Konbaung dynasty
Founding year: 1752
Deposition: 1885
Preceded by Dynasty of Burma
29 February 1752 – 29 November 1885
Vacant

See also

Citations

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  47. ^ Working People's Daily 1988.
  48. ^ Myint-U 2001, p. 70.
  49. ^ The Glass Palace Chronicle of the Kings of Burma (PDF). Translated by Pe Maung Tin; Luce, G . H . London: Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press. 1923.
  50. ^ a b c d Nisbet 1901, p. 205.
  51. ^ Leider 2005, p. 160-161.
  52. ^ Leider 2005, p. 159.
  53. ^ a b Leider 2005, p. 168.
  54. ^ a b Leider 2005, p. 169.
  55. ^ Leider 2005, p. 177.
  56. ^ a b c d Myint-U 2001, p. 57.
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h i Leider 2005, p. 175.
  58. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l DAS 1963, p. 27.
  59. ^ a b c DAS 1963, p. 29.
  60. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Yi 1982, p. 136.
  61. ^ a b c Scott 1882, p. 450.
  62. ^ a b c Leider 2005, p. 174.
  63. ^ Yi 1982, p. 147.
  64. ^ Yi 1982, p. 137.
  65. ^ Yi 1982, p. 137-138.
  66. ^ Yi 1982, p. 138.
  67. ^ a b Yi 1982, p. 139.
  68. ^ a b c d e Harvey 1925, p. 325.
  69. ^ a b c Yi 1982, p. 140.
  70. ^ a b c d e f Nisbet 1901, p. 204.
  71. ^ a b Yi 1982, p. 141.
  72. ^ Yi 1982, p. 142.
  73. ^ Yi 1982, p. 129.
  74. ^ Yi 1982, p. 129-135.
  75. ^ Yi 1982, p. 131-135.
  76. ^ a b Yi 1982, p. 135.
  77. ^ a b Yi 1982, p. 105.
  78. ^ a b c Yi 1982, p. 106.
  79. ^ a b Yi 1982, p. 108.
  80. ^ a b c Yi 1982, p. 107.
  81. ^ a b Yi 1982, p. 109.
  82. ^ Yi 1982, p. 106-7.
  83. ^ a b c d e Yi 1982, p. 110.
  84. ^ Also known as Mingala Ledaw (လယ်တော်မင်္ဂလာ) or Ledwin Mingala.
  85. ^ Scott 1882, p. 257.
  86. ^ Scott 1882, p. 257-258.
  87. ^ Scott 1882, p. 258.
  88. ^ Scott 1882, p. 259.
  89. ^ a b Scott 1882, p. 260.
  90. ^ a b Scott 1882, p. 261.
  91. ^ Nisbet 1901, p. 206.
  92. ^ Yi 1982, p. 124.
  93. ^ a b c Scott 1900, p. 94.
  94. ^ a b c d e f MLC 1993.
  95. ^ a b DAS 1963, p. 28.
  96. ^ a b c d Harvey 1925, p. 327-328.
  97. ^ a b DAS 1963, p. 23.
  98. ^ a b Harvey 1925, p. 321.
  99. ^ a b c d e f g h DAS 1963, p. 19.
  100. ^ Scott 1882, p. 482.
  101. ^ a b DAS 1963, p. 34.
  102. ^ Scott 1900, p. 103.
  103. ^ Leider 2005, p. 171.
  104. ^ a b c d Leider 2005, p. 173.
  105. ^ Leider 2005, p. 170-171.
  106. ^ a b Leider 2005, p. 172.
  107. ^ Said Brahmin had the following issue: by the Govinda-maharajinda-aggamahadhammarajaguru.
  108. ^ Leider 2005, p. 170.
  109. ^ a b c d Myint-U 2001, p. 31.
  110. ^ a b c d Scott 1882, p. 411.
  111. ^ Scott 1882, p. 406-407.
  112. ^ Andrus 1947, p. x.
  113. ^ Scott 1882, p. 406.
  114. ^ Nisbet 1901, p. 15.
  115. ^ Cocks 1919, p. 161.
  116. ^ Scott 1882, p. 411-412.
  117. ^ Scott 1882, p. 409.
  118. ^ Scott 1882, p. 409-10.
  119. ^ a b Symes 1800.
  120. ^ a b Findlay & O'Rourke 2007, p. 277.
  121. ^ Myint-U 2006, p. 126.
  122. ^ Yegar 1972, p. 10.
  123. ^ MHRJ 2007, p. 57.
  124. ^ Fleischmann 1981, p. 49.
  125. ^ Peletz 2007, p. 73.
  126. ^ a b c Leider 2005, p. 178.
  127. ^ Leider 2005, p. 182.
  128. ^ Lieberman 2003, p. 202–206.
  129. ^ Brandon, p. 27
  130. ^ Hla, U Kan (1978). "Traditional Town Planning in Burma". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 37 (2): 92, 97–98. doi:10.2307/989177. ISSN 0037-9808. JSTOR 989177.
  131. ^ Charney 2006: 96–107

Notes

  1. ^ The seal titled as "Seal of the State of Myanmar" stamped on the royal orders issued by King Thibaw
  2. ^ A swallowtail with white field charged with a peacock biting a flower branch on a red disk in the centre of the field
  1. ^ Half brother of Mindon, son of Princess Me Myat Shwe.
  2. ^ Half brother of Pagan.

References

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  • Charney, Michael W. (2006). Powerful Learning: Buddhist Literati and the Throne in Burma's Last Dynasty, 1752–1885. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan.
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  • Dai, Yingcong (2004). "A Disguised Defeat: The Myanmar Campaign of the Qing Dynasty". Modern Asian Studies. Cambridge University Press. 38: 145–189. doi:10.1017/s0026749x04001040. S2CID 145784397.
  • Findlay, Ronald; O'Rourke, Kevin H. (2007). Power and Plenty: Trade, War, and the World Economy in the Second Millennium. ISBN 9780691118543.
  • Fleischmann, Klaus (1981). Arakan, Konfliktregion zwischen Birma und Bangladesh: Vorgeschichte und Folgen des Flüchtlingsstroms von 1978 (in German). Vol. 121. Institut für Asienkunde Hamburg: Mitteilungen des Instituts für Asienkunde. ISBN 9783921469804.
  • Hall, D.G.E. (1960). Burma (3rd ed.). Hutchinson University Library. ISBN 978-1-4067-3503-1.
  • Harvey, G. E. (1925). History of Burma: From the Earliest Times to 10 March 1824. London: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.
  • Htin Aung, Maung (1967). A History of Burma. New York and London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Koenig, William J. (1990). "The Burmese Polity, 1752–1819: Politics, Administration, and Social Organization in the early Kon-baung Period". Michigan Papers on South and Southeast Asia. 1990 (34).
  • Leider, Jacques P. (2009). King Alaungmintaya's Golden Letter to King George II (7 May 1756) (PDF). Hannover: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek.
  • Leider, Jacques P. (2005). "Specialists for Ritual, Magic and Devotion: The Court Brahmins of the Konbaung Kings" (PDF). The Journal of Burma Studies. 10: 159–180. doi:10.1353/jbs.2005.0004. S2CID 162305789.
  • Lieberman, Victor B. (1996). "Political Consolidation in Burma Under the Early Konbaung Dynasty, 1752-c. 1820". Journal of Asian History. 30 (2): 152–168. JSTOR 41931038.
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External links

  • Forty Years in Burma John Ebenezer Marks, London: Hutchinson & Co., 1917
  • Kenneth Champeon, The Irrawaddy, July 2003
  • Before and after the wheel: Pre-colonial and colonial states and transportation in mainland Southeast Asia and West Africa Michael Charney, HumaNetten 37 2016.
  • Min Zin, The Irrawaddy, August 2000
  • The Daily Telegraph, 26 February 2008
  • Myanmar's last royal laments a crumbling nation Reuters, 10 March 2008

konbaung, dynasty, burmese, မင, ဆက, also, known, third, burmese, empire, တတ, ယမ, formerly, known, alompra, dynasty, အလ, မင, ဆက, alaungphra, dynasty, citation, needed, last, dynasty, that, ruled, burma, myanmar, from, 1752, 1885, created, second, largest, empir. The Konbaung dynasty Burmese က န ဘ င မင ဆက also known as Third Burmese Empire တတ ယမ န မ န င င တ 7 and formerly known as the Alompra dynasty အလ င ဘ ရ မင ဆက Alaungphra dynasty citation needed was the last dynasty that ruled Burma Myanmar from 1752 to 1885 It created the second largest empire in Burmese history 8 and continued the administrative reforms begun by the Toungoo dynasty laying the foundations of the modern state of Burma The reforms however proved insufficient to stem the advance of the British who defeated the Burmese in all three Anglo Burmese Wars over a six decade span 1824 1885 and ended the millennium old Burmese monarchy in 1885 Konbaung Empireက န ဘ င ဧကရ ဇ န င င တ 1752 1885National flag b 2 3 4 5 State seal a 1 Anthem စ ရ တ င က န လ သ The Whole Southern Island Belongs To Him c 1805 1885 6 Konbaung Empire in April 1767Konbaung Empire in 1824CapitalShwebo 1752 1760 Sagaing 1760 1765 Ava 1765 1783 1821 1842 Amarapura 1783 1821 1842 1859 Mandalay 1859 1885 Common languagesBurmeseReligionTheravada BuddhismDemonym s BurmeseGovernmentAbsolute monarchyMonarch 1752 1760Alaungpaya first 1878 1885Thibaw last LegislatureHluttawHistorical eraEarly modern period Founding of dynasty29 February 1752 Reunification of Burma1752 1757 Burmese Siamese Wars1759 1812 1849 1855 Qing invasion of Burma1765 1769 Anglo Burmese Wars1824 1826 1852 1885 End of dynasty29 November 1885Currencykyat from 1852 Preceded by Succeeded byToungoo dynastyRestored Hanthawaddy KingdomMrauk U KingdomAhom kingdomKachari kingdomLan Na KingdomAyutthaya KingdomQing dynasty British RajBritish rule in BurmaKingdom of Chiang MaiThis article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script An expansionist dynasty the Konbaung kings waged campaigns against Manipur Arakan Assam the Mon kingdom of Pegu Siam Ayutthaya Thonburi Rattanakosin and the Qing dynasty of China thus establishing the Third Burmese Empire Subject to later wars and treaties with the British the modern state of Myanmar can trace its current borders to these events Throughout the Konbaung dynasty the capital was relocated several times for religious political and strategic reasons Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment 1 2 Relations with Siam 1 3 Relations with China 1 4 Relations with Vietnam 1 5 Western expansion First and Second Anglo Burmese Wars 1 5 1 Reforms 1 6 Third Anglo Burmese War and dethronement of the monarchy 2 Government 2 1 Administrative divisions 2 2 Royal agencies 2 3 Royal service 2 4 Royal court 2 5 Military 2 6 Royal rituals 2 6 1 Consecration ceremonies abhiseka 2 6 2 Coronation 2 6 3 Installation of the Crown Prince 2 6 4 Feeding of the first betel 2 6 5 Naming ceremony 2 6 6 Royal Ploughing Ceremony 2 6 7 Head washing ceremony 2 6 8 Obeisance ceremony 2 6 9 Ancestor worship 2 6 10 Funerals 2 6 11 Foundation sacrifice 2 6 12 Devotional rituals 3 Society and culture 3 1 Social classes 3 2 Sumptuary laws 3 3 Demography 3 4 Literature and arts 3 5 Architecture 3 6 Religion 4 Rulers 4 1 Family tree 5 See also 6 Citations 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditEstablishment Edit The dynasty was founded by a village chief who later became known as Alaungpaya in 1752 to challenge the Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom which had just toppled the Taungoo dynasty By 1759 Alaungpaya s forces had reunited all of Burma and Manipur and driven out the French and the British who had provided arms to Hanthawaddy 9 Lion Throne in the throne hall of the royal palace of Amarapura painting by Colesworthy Grant 1855 Alaungpaya s second son Hsinbyushin came to the throne after a short reign by his elder brother Naungdawgyi 1760 1763 He continued his father s expansionist policy and finally took Ayutthaya in 1767 after seven years of fighting Relations with Siam Edit In 1760 Burma began a series of wars with Siam that would last well into the middle of the 19th century By 1770 Alaungpaya s heirs had destroyed Ayutthaya Siam 1765 1767 subdued much of Laos 1765 and defeated four invasions by Qing China 1765 1769 10 With the Burmese preoccupied for another two decades by another impending invasion by the Chinese 11 Siam reunified by 1771 and went on to capture Lan Na by 1776 12 Burma and Siam went to war until 1855 but after decades of war the two countries exchanged Tenasserim to Burma and Lan Na to Siam Relations with China Edit In the defence of its realm the dynasty fought four wars successfully against the Qing dynasty of China which saw the threat of the expansion of Burmese power in the East In 1770 despite his victory over the Chinese armies King Hsinbyushin sued for peace with China and concluded a treaty to maintain bilateral trade with the Middle Kingdom which was very important for the dynasty at that time The Qing dynasty then opened up its markets and restored trading with Burma in 1788 after reconciliation Thenceforth peaceful and friendly relations prevailed between China and Burma for a long time Relations with Vietnam Edit In 1823 Burmese emissaries led by George Gibson who was the son of an English mercenary arrived in the Vietnamese city of Saigon The Burmese king Bagyidaw was very keen to conquer Siam and hoped Vietnam might be a useful ally Vietnam had then just annexed Cambodia The Vietnamese emperor was Minh Mạng who had just taken the throne after the death of his father Gia Long the founder of the Nguyen dynasty A commercial delegation from Vietnam has recently been in Burma eager to expand the trade in birds nests tổ yến Bagyidaw s interest in sending a return mission however was to secure a military alliance 13 14 Western expansion First and Second Anglo Burmese Wars Edit Faced with a powerful China and a resurgent Siam in the east the Konbaung dynasty had ambitions to expand the Konbaung Empire westwards Bodawpaya acquired the western kingdoms of Arakan 1784 Manipur 1814 and Assam 1817 leading to a long ill defined border with British India 15 The Konbaung court had set its sights on potentially conquering British Bengal by the outbreak of the First Anglo Burmese War Europeans began to set up trading posts in the Irrawaddy delta region during this period Konbaung tried to maintain its independence by balancing between the French and the British In the end it failed the British severed diplomatic relations in 1811 and the dynasty fought and lost three wars against the British Empire culminating in the total annexation of Burma by the British The Shwedagon Pagoda during the First Anglo Burmese War 1824 26 The British defeated the Burmese in the First Anglo Burmese War 1824 1826 after huge losses on both sides both in terms of manpower and financial assets Burma had to cede Arakan Manipur Assam and Tenasserim and pay a large indemnity of one million pounds In 1837 King Bagyidaw s brother Tharrawaddy seized the throne put Bagyidaw under house arrest and executed the chief queen Me Nu and her brother Tharrawaddy made no attempt to improve relations with Britain The last king Thibaw Min right here with Queen Supayalat and her sister Junior Queen Supayalay was forcibly deposed by the British following the Third Anglo Burmese War in 1885 His son Pagan who became king in 1846 executed thousands some sources say as many as 6 000 of his wealthier and more influential subjects on trumped up charges 16 During his reign relations with the British became increasingly strained In 1852 the Second Anglo Burmese War broke out Pagan was succeeded by his younger brother the progressive Mindon Reforms Edit Realising the need to modernise the Konbaung rulers tried to enact various reforms with limited success King Mindon with his able brother Crown Prince Kanaung established state owned factories to produce modern weaponry and goods in the end these factories proved more costly than effective in staving off foreign invasion and conquest Konbaung kings extended administrative reforms begun in the Restored Toungoo dynasty period 1599 1752 and achieved unprecedented levels of internal control and external expansion They tightened control in the lowlands and reduced the hereditary privileges of Shan chiefs They also instituted commercial reforms that increased government income and rendered it more predictable Money economy continued to gain ground In 1857 the crown inaugurated a full fledged system of cash taxes and salaries assisted by the country s first standardised silver coinage 17 Mindon also tried to reduce the tax burden by lowering the heavy income tax and created a property tax as well as duties on foreign exports These policies had the reverse effect of increasing the tax burden as the local elites used the opportunity to enact new taxes without lowering the old ones they were able to do so as control from the centre was weak In addition the duties on foreign exports stifled the burgeoning trade and commerce Mindon attempted to bring Burma into greater contact with the outside world and hosted the Fifth Great Buddhist Synod in 1872 at Mandalay gaining the respect of the British and the admiration of his own people Mindon avoided annexation in 1875 by ceding the Karenni States Nonetheless the extent and pace of reforms were uneven and ultimately proved insufficient to stem the advance of British colonialism 18 Third Anglo Burmese War and dethronement of the monarchy Edit He died before he could name a successor and Thibaw a lesser prince was manoeuvred onto the throne by Hsinbyumashin one of Mindon s queens together with her daughter Supayalat Rudyard Kipling mentions her as Thibaw s queen and borrows her name in his poem Mandalay The new King Thibaw proceeded under Supayalat s direction to massacre all likely contenders to the throne This massacre was conducted by the queen citation needed A traditional painting by Saya Chone depicts the abdication of King Thibaw The dynasty came to an end in 1885 with the forced abdication and exile of the king and the royal family to India The British alarmed by the consolidation of French Indochina annexed the remainder of the country in the Third Anglo Burmese War in 1885 The annexation was announced in the British parliament as a New Year gift to Queen Victoria on 1 January 1886 Although the dynasty had conquered vast tracts of territory its direct power was limited to its capital and the fertile plains of the Irrawaddy river valley The Konbaung rulers enacted harsh levies and had a difficult time fighting internal rebellions At various times the Shan states paid tribute to the Konbaung dynasty but unlike the Mon lands were never directly controlled by the Burmese PretendersAfter the abolition of the monarchy the title of Royal Householder of the Konbaung dynasty nominally passed to Myat Phaya Lat Thibaw s second daughter as the King s eldest daughter renounced her royal titles to be with an Indian commoner 19 Thibaw s third daughter Myat Phaya Galay returned to Burma and sought the return of the throne from the British in the 1920s Her eldest son Taw Phaya Gyi was taken by Imperial Japan during the Second World War for his potential as a puppet king Japan s efforts failed due to Taw Phaya Gyi s distaste of the Japanese and his assassination in 1948 by Communist insurgents 20 After the death of Myat Phaya Lat her grandson in law Taw Phaya became the nominal Royal Householder Taw Phaya was the son of Myat Phaya Galay the brother of Taw Phaya Gyi and the husband of Myat Phaya Lat s granddaughter Hteik Su Gyi Phaya 21 Upon Taw Phaya s death in 2019 it is unclear who serves as the Royal Householder Soe Win the eldest son of Taw Phaya Gyi is assumed to be the Royal Householder as there is little public information about Taw Phaya s children 22 Government EditThe Konbaung dynasty was an absolute monarchy As in the rest of Southeast Asia the traditional concept of kingship aspired to the Chakravartin Universal Monarchs creating their own mandala or field of power within the Jambudipa universe along with the possession of the white elephant which allowed them to assume the title Hsinbyushin or Hsinbyumyashin Lord of the White Elephants played a significant role in their endeavours Of more earthly importance was the historical threat of periodic raids and aiding of internal rebellions as well as invasion and imposition of overlordship from the neighbouring kingdoms of the Mon Tai Shans and Manipuris 23 Administrative divisions Edit The kingdom was divided into provinces called myo မ 24 25 These provinces were administered by Myosa မ စ who were members of the royal family or the highest ranking officials of the Hluttaw 26 They collected revenue for the royal government payable to the Shwedaik Royal Treasury in fixed instalments and retained whatever was left over 26 Each myo was subdivided into districts called taik တ က which contained collections of villages called ywa ရ 24 The kingdom s peripheral coastal provinces Pegu Tenasserim Martaban and Arakan were administered by a Viceroy called a Myowun who was appointed by the king and possessed civil judicial fiscal and military powers 26 Provincial councils myoyon consisted of myo saye town scribes nakhandaw receivers of royal orders sitke chiefs of war htaunghmu jailer ayatgaung head of the quarter and dagahmu warden of the gates 27 Each province was divided into districts called myo each led by a myo ok if appointed or by a myo thugyi if the office was hereditary 27 The Viceroy of Pegu was assisted by several additional officials including an akhunwun revenue officer akaukwun customs collector and a yewun conservator of port 28 The outlying tributary fiefdoms on the edges of the kingdom were autonomous in practice and nominally administered by the king 29 These included the Tai speaking what became the Shan States during British rule Palaung Kachin and Manipuri kingdoms The tributary princes of these fiefdoms regularly pledged allegiance and offered tribute to the Konbaung kings through rituals called gadaw pwedaw 30 and were accorded with royal privileges and designated sawbwa from Shan saopha lord of the sky 29 31 In particular the families of Shan sawbwas regularly intermarried into Burmese aristocracy and had close contact with the Konbaung court 29 Royal agencies Edit The government was centrally administered by several advisory royal agencies following a pattern established during the Taungoo dynasty 32 The Hluttaw လ တ တ lit place of royal release c f Council of State 33 held legislative ministerial and judicial functions administering the royal government as delegated by the king 33 Sessions at the Hluttaw were held for 6 hours daily from 6 to 9 am and from noon to 3 pm 34 Listed by rank the Hluttaw was composed of Head of the Council the king his heir apparent or a high ranking prince who presided over the Hluttaw as its nominal head 35 Wunshindaw ဝန ရ င တ Prime Minister served as the Chief Minister of the Hluttaw an office established during the reign of Mindon Min and most notably served by the Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung 35 36 37 Four Wungyi ဝန က Minister jointly administered the Hluttaw s administrative portfolio and shared joint responsibility for the kingdom s administration 33 38 Four Wundauk ဝန ထ က Deputy Minister served as deputies to the Wungyi Myinzugyi Wun မ င ဇ က ဝန lit Minister of the Cavalry Regiments as the highest regular army position oversaw the Tatmadaw 39 Athi Wun အသည ဝန lit Minister of the Athi responsible for allocating corvee labour resources and mobilisation of taxpaying commoners called athi during wartime 33 39 The Byedaik ဗ တ က lit Bachelor Chambers with Bye stemming from Mon blai Mon ဗ က bachelor served as the Privy Council by handling the court s internal affairs and also served as an interlocutor between the king and other royal agencies 39 The Byedaik consisted of Eight Atwinwun အတ င ဝန c f Ministers of the Interior communicated business affairs of the Hluttaw to the king administered internal transactions of general affairs relating to the royal court 40 Thandawzin သ တ ဆင Heralds performed secretarial duties and attended king s audiences to note king s orders and forward them to Hluttaw for inscription 41 Simihtunhmu ဆ မ ထ န မ lit Lamp Lighters kept a list of all persons sleeping in the palace 42 Hteindeinyanhmu ထ န သ မ ရ မ caretakers of royal appointments performed menial tasks such as maintaining the palace furniture draperies and other appointments 43 The Shwedaik ရ တ က was the Royal Treasury and as such served as the repository of the state s precious metals and treasures 44 Moreover the Shwedaik retained the state s archives and maintained various records including detailed genealogies of hereditary officials and census reports 44 43 The Shwedaik was composed of Shwedaik Wun ရ တ က ဝန Chancellor of the Exchequer 43 Shwedaik Saw ရ တ က စ Governor of the Treasury 43 Shwedaik Kyat ရ တ က က ပ Superintendent 43 Shwedaik Saye ရ တ က စ ရ Clerk of the Treasury 43 Shwedaik Thawkaing ရ တ က သ က င Keeper of the Treasury Key 43 Royal service Edit A royal scribe 1855 Each royal agency included a large retinue of middle and low level officials responsible for day to day affairs These included the Nakhandaw န ခ တ charged with conveying communications to and from the King and Hluttaw 45 Also served as intermediary between royal agencies and between king and ministers 44 Collected sorted interpreted reports read proclamations at official gatherings transmitted orders to provincial councils 44 Sayedawgyi စ ရ တ က great chief clerks performed executive level work and preliminary investigations for trials 45 Saye စ ရ clerks Ameindawgyi အမ န တ က writers of great orders prepared and issued royal orders after necessary preliminary steps had been taken 45 Athonsaye အသ စ ရ clerks of works oversaw construction and repairs of all public buildings 45 Ahmadawye အမ တ တ က recorders of orders drafted orders and letters to be issued by Hluttaw 45 Awayyauk အဝ ရ က distant arrivals received and read letters coming from distance before submission to ministers 45 Thandawgan သ တ ခ ceremonial officers who received letters on behalf of the king 46 and 3 classes of ceremonial officers Letsaungsaye clerks of presents read lists of offerings made to the King at royal functions 46 Yonzaw master of ceremonies arranged royal functions and audiences of the King 46 Thissadawge recorders of great oaths administered oaths of fealty to those entering the royal service 46 Royal court Edit Royal Audience a traditional painting by Saya Chone Konbaung society was centred on the king who took many wives and fathered numerous children creating a huge extended royal family which formed the power base of the dynasty and competed over influence at the royal court It also posed problems of succession at the same time often resulting in royal massacres The Lawka Byuha Kyan လ ကဗ ဟ က မ also known as the Inyon Sadan အင ယ စ တန is the earliest extant work on Burmese court protocols and customs 47 The work was written by the Inyon Wungyi Thiri Uzana also known as the Inyon Ywaza during the reign of Alaungpaya the founder of the Konbaung dynasty 48 Royal court life in the Konbaung dynasty consisted of both codified rituals and ceremonies and those that were innovated with the progression of the dynasty Many ceremonies were composed of Hindu ideas localised and adapted to existing traditions both Burmese and Buddhist in origin These rituals were also used to legitimise the rule of Burmese kings as the Konbaung monarchs claimed descent from Maha Sammata through the Sakyan clan of which Gotama Buddha was a member and the House of Vijaya 49 Life in the royal court was closely regulated Eunuchs မ န မဆ oversaw the ladies of the royal household and apartments 50 Inferior queens and concubines could not reside in the main palace buildings 50 The King and Queen observing a ceremony involving riders on horseback From an 18th century parabeik picture book Brahmins generally known as ponna ပ ဏ ဏ in Burmese served as specialists for ritual ceremonies astrology and devotional rites to Hindu deities at the Konbaung court 51 They played an essential role in king making rituals consecration and ablution ceremonies called abhiseka ဗ ဿ တ 52 Court Brahmins ပ ရ ဟ တ parohita were well embedded in daily life at the court advising and consulting the king on various matters 53 A social hierarchy among the Brahmins determined their respective duties and functions 53 Astrologer Brahmins called huya ဟ ရ were responsible for determining astrological calculations such as determining the auspicious moment for the foundation of a new capital a new palace pagoda or assumption of the royal residence announcing an appointment leaving a place visiting a pagoda or starting a military campaign 54 They also established the religious calendar prepared the almanac သင က န စ calculated upcoming solar and lunar eclipses identified major festival days based on the lunar cycle and communicated auspicious times and dates 54 A special group of Brahmins who performed abhiseka rituals were also selected as pyinnya shi ပည ရ appointed royal counselors 55 Military Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2013 Royal rituals Edit Lavish affairs were also organised around the life ceremonies of royal family members 56 Brahmins presided over many of these auspicious ceremonies including the construction of a new royal capital consecration of the new palace the royal ploughing ceremony the naming first rice feeding and cradling ceremonies the abhiseka head anointing rituals and the King s participation in Burmese New Year Thingyan celebrations 57 During Thingyan a group of 8 Brahmins sprinkled water blessed by a group of 8 Buddhist monks throughout the palace grounds at the Hluttaw various courts the major city gates and the 4 corners of the capital 57 The king attended many of the ceremonies involving royal family members from cradling ceremonies ပ ခက မင ဂလ to ear boring ceremonies from marriages to funerals 56 Specific buildings in the royal palace served as the venue for various life ceremonies For instance the Great Audience Hall was where young princes underwent the shinbyu coming of age ceremony and were ordained as monk novices 58 This was also the venue where young princes ceremonially had their hair tied in a topknot သ င ထ 58 Elaborate Burmese New Year feasts took place at the Hmannandawgyi Palace of Mirrors on the third day of the New Year the king and chief queen partook in Thingyan rice cooked rice dipped in cold perfumed water while seated on their throne 59 Musical and dramatic performances and other feasts were also held in that complex 59 Consecration ceremonies abhiseka Edit A nineteenth century watercolor painting by royal painters depicts a Konbaung abhiseka ceremony The king and queen are respectively seated in the pavilion surrounded by a retinue of Brahmins The most significant court functions of a king s reign were the abhiseka or consecratory rituals held at various times throughout a king s reign to reinforce his place as the patron of religion Sasana and righteousness 56 Abhiseka rituals all involved the pouring of water from a conch on the candidate s usually the king s head instructing him what to do or not to do for the love of his people and warning him that if he failed to oblige he might suffer certain miseries 57 Ablution rituals were the responsibility of a group of 8 elite Brahmins uniquely qualified to perform the ritual 57 They were to remain chaste before the ceremony 57 Another group of Brahmins was responsible for the consecration of the Crown Prince 57 There were 14 types of abhiseka ceremonies in total 57 Rajabhiseka ရ ဇဘ သ က coronation of the king Muddhabhiseka မ ဒ ဓဘ သ က formal vow by the king to work for the propagation of the Sasana the Buddha s teachings held five years after accession 60 57 Uparajabhiseka ဥပရ ဇဘ သ က installation of crown prince 60 Mahesibhiseka မဟ သ ဘ သ က coronation of chief queen 60 Maṅgalabhiseka မင ဂလ ဘ သ က held to celebrate the possession of white elephants 60 Siriyabhiseka သ ရ ယဘ သ က held to renew the king s glory held on occasion 60 Ayudighabhiseka အ ယ ဒ ဃဘ သ က held to gain longevity held on occasion 60 Jayabhiseka ဇ ယ ဘ သ က held to ensure victory and success in war 60 Mahabhiseka မဟ ဘ သ က held to increase economic prosperity held seven years after accession 60 Sakalabhiseka သကလ ဘ သ က held to ensure peace in the kingdom 60 Vijayabhiseka ဝ ဇယဘ သ က held to conquer enemies 57 Mandabhiseka Manda beittheit held to marry the candidate to a queen of royal lineage 61 Singabhiseka Thenga beittheit held to recommit a king to abide by the laws whereupon full powers for the government and administration of the country are conferred 61 Coronation Edit Further information Coronation of the Burmese monarch Rajabhiseka ရ ဇဘ သ က the Coronation of the king which was presided over by Brahmins was the most important ritual of the royal court 60 62 The ceremony was typically held in the Burmese month of Kason but did not necessarily occur during the beginning of a reign 62 60 The Sasanalinkaya states that Bodawpaya like his father was crowned only after establishing control over the kingdom s administration and purifying the religious institutions 62 The most important features of this ritual were the fetching of the anointing water the ceremonial bath the anointment and the king s oath 63 Elaborate preparations were made precisely for this ceremony Three ceremonial pavilions Sihasana or Lion Throne Gajasana or Elephant Throne and the Marasana or Peacock Throne were constructed in a specifically designated plot of land called the peacock garden for this occasion 64 Offerings were also made to deities and Buddhist parittas were chanted 60 Specially designated individuals usually the daughters of dignitaries including merchants and Brahmins were tasked with procuring anointing water midstream from a river 65 The water was placed in the respective pavilions 66 At an auspicious moment the king was dressed in the costume of a Brahma and the queen in that of a queen from devaloka 67 The couple was escorted to the pavilions in procession accompanied by a white horse or a white elephant 68 67 The king first bathed his body in the Morasana pavilion then his head in the Gajasana pavilion 69 He then entered the Sihasana pavilion to assume his seat at the coronation throne crafted to resemble a blooming lotus flower made of figwood and applied gold leaf 69 Brahmins handed him the five articles of coronation regalia မင မ က တန ဆ Min Myauk Taza White umbrella ထ ဖ hti byu 70 Crown in the form of a crested headdress မက ဋ magaik 70 Sceptre သန လ က thanlyet 70 Sandals ခ နင che nin 70 Fly whisk made of yak tail သ မ ယပ thamyi yat 70 At his throne eight princesses anointed the king by pouring specially procured water atop his head each using a conch bedazzled with gems white solemnly adjuring him in formulae to rule justly 69 68 Brahmins then raised a white umbrella over the king s head 68 This anointment was repeated by eight pure blooded Brahmins and eight merchants 71 Afterward the king repeated words ascribed to Buddha at birth I am foremost in all the world I am most excellent in all the world I am peerless in all the world and made invocation by pouring water from a golden ewer 68 The ritual ended with the king taking refuge in the Three Jewels 68 As part of the coronation prisoners were released 71 The king and his pageant returned to the Palace and the ceremonial pavilions were dismantled and cast into the river 72 Seven days after the ceremony the king and members of the royal family made an inaugural procession circling the city moat on a gilt state barge amid festive music and spectators 61 Installation of the Crown Prince Edit Uparajabhiseka ဥပရ ဇဘ သ က the Installation of the Uparaja Crown Prince in Burmese Einshe Min အ မ ရ မင was one of the most important rituals in the king s reign The Installation Ceremony took place in the Byedaik Privy Council 73 The Crown Prince was invested received appenages and insignias and was bestowed a multitude of gifts 74 The king also formally appointed a retinue of household staff to oversee the Prince s public and private affairs 75 Afterward the Crown Prince was paraded to his new Palace commiserate with his new rank 76 Preparations for a royal wedding with a princess specially groomed to become the new king s consort then commenced 76 Feeding of the first betel Edit Kun U Khun Mingala က မ ဦ ခ မင ဂလ the Feeding of the First Betel ceremony was held about 75 days after the birth of a prince or princess to bolster the newborn child s health prosperity and beauty 77 The ceremony involved the feeding of betel mixed with camphor and other ingredients An appointed official ဝန arranged the rituals preceding the ceremony 77 These rituals included a specific set of offerings to the Buddha indigenous spirits yokkaso akathaso bhummaso etc Guardians of the Sasana and to the parents and grandparents of the child all of which were arranged in the infant s chamber 78 Additional offerings were made to the Hundred Phi ပ တစ ရ နတ a group of 100 Siamese spirits headed by Nandi နန ဒ နတ သမ personified by a Brahmin figure made of kusa grass which was ceremonially fed scoops of cooked rice with the left hand 78 79 Naming ceremony Edit Namakaraṇa န မကရဏ the naming ceremony took place 100 days after the birth of a prince or princess 78 Food was also offered for the dignitaries and entertainers in attendance 80 The infant s name was inscribed on a gold plate or on palm leaf 80 The night before the ceremony a pwe was held for the attendees 80 The dawn of the ceremony Buddhist monks delivered a sermon to the court 79 Afterward at the Chief Queen s apartment the infant was seated on a divan with the Chief Queen with respective attendees from the royal court seated according to rank 81 A Minister of the Interior then presided over ceremonial offerings က ဗ ဘ made to the Triple Gem the 11 deva headed by Thagyamin 9 Hindu deities indigenous nat and the 100 Phi 82 81 A protective prayer was then recited 83 After the prayer a pyinnyashi prepared and fed Nandi At the auspicious moment calculated by astrologers the name of the infant was read out thrice by the royal herald 83 Afterward another royal herald recited an inventory of presents offered by the dignitaries in attendance 83 At the closing of the ceremony a feast ensued with attendees fed in the order of precedence 83 Offerings to the Buddha were shuttled to the pagodas and those to Nandi to the sacrificial Brahmins 83 Royal Ploughing Ceremony Edit Further information Royal Ploughing Ceremony A depiction of the Royal Ploughing Ceremony by Saya Chone a painter at the royal court Lehtun Mingala လယ ထ န မင ဂလ 84 the Royal Ploughing Ceremony was an annual festival of breaking ground with ploughs in the royal fields east of the royal capital to ensure sufficient rainfall for the year by propitiating the Moekhaung Nat who was believed to control rain 50 85 The ceremony was traditionally linked to an event in Gotama Buddha s life During King Suddhodana s royal ploughing of the fields the infant Buddha rose to stand sat cross legged and began to meditate underneath the shade of a rose apple tree 86 The ceremony was held at the beginning of June at the break of the southwest monsoon 87 For the ceremony the king clad in state robes a paso with the peacock emblem daungyut a long silk surcoat or tunic encrusted with jewels a spire like crown tharaphu and 24 strings of the salwe across his chest and a gold plate or frontlet over his forehead and his audience made a procession to the leya royal fields 88 At the ledawgyi a specially designated plot of land milk white oxen were attached to royal ploughs covered with gold leaf stood ready for ploughing by ministers princes and the kings 89 The oxen were decorated with gold and crimson bands reins bedecked with rubies and diamonds and heavy gold tassels hung from the gilded horns 89 The king initiated the ploughing and shared this duty among himself ministers and the princes 90 After the ceremonial ploughing of the ledawgyi was complete festivities sprung up throughout the royal capital 90 Head washing ceremony Edit At Thingyan and at the end of the Buddhist lent the king s head was ceremonially washed with water from Gaungsay Gyun lit Head Washing Island between Martaban and Moulmein near the mouth of the Salween River 91 After the Second Anglo Burmese War which resulted in Gaungsay Gyun falling under British possession purified water from Irrawaddy River was instead procured This ceremony also preceded the earboring headdressing and marriage ceremonies of the royal family 92 Obeisance ceremony Edit The Obeisance ceremony was a grand ceremony held at the Great Audience Hall thrice a year where tributary princes and courtiers laid tribute paid homage to their benefactor the Konbaung king and swore their allegiance to the monarchy 50 The ceremony was held 3 times a year Hnit Thit Gadaw န စ သစ ကန တ 93 Beginning of the Burmese New Year April 58 Wa win Gadaw ဝ ဝင ကန တ 93 Beginning of the Buddhist Lent June or July required the attendance of princes ministers and city officials 58 Wa gyut Gadaw ဝ က တ ကန တ 93 End of the Buddhist Lent October required the attendance of provincial governors and tributary princes sawbwa 58 During this ceremony the king was seated at the Lion Throne along with the chief queen to his right 58 The Crown Prince was seated immediately before the throne in a cradle like seat followed by princes of the blood min nyi min tha 58 Constituting the audience were courtiers and dignitaries from vassal states who were seated according to rank known in Burmese as Neya Nga Thwe န ရ င သ ယ 58 Taw Neya တ န ရ 94 Du Neya ဒ န ရ 94 Sani စနည 94 Atwin Bawaw အတ င ဘဝ 94 Apyin Bawaw အပ င ဘဝ 94 There the audience paid obeisance to the monarch and renewed their allegiance to the monarch 58 Women barring the chief queen were not permitted to be seen during these ceremonies 58 Lesser queens ministers wives and other officials were seated in a room behind the throne the queens were seated in the centre within the railing surrounding the flight of steps while the wives of ministers and others sat in the space without 58 Ancestor worship Edit Throughout the Konbaung dynasty the royal family performed ancestral rites to honour their immediate ancestors These rites were performed at the thrice a year at the Zetawunsaung Jetavana Hall or Hall of Victory which housed the Goose Throne ဟင သ သနပလ လင immediately preceding the Obeisance Ceremony 95 On a platform in a room to the west of hall the king and members of the royal family paid obeisance to images of monarchs and consorts of the Konbaung dynasty Offerings and Pali prayers from a book of odes were also made to the images 95 The images which stood 6 to 24 inches 150 to 610 mm tall were made of solid gold 96 Images were only made for Konbaung kings at their death if he died on the throne or for Konbaung queens if she died while her consort was on throne but not of a king who died after deposition or a queen who survived her husband 96 Items used by the deceased personage e g sword spear betel box were preserved along with the associated image 96 After the British conquest of Upper Burma 11 images fell into the hands of the Superintendent at the Governor s Residence Bengal where they were melted down 96 Funerals Edit See also Konbaung tombs The tomb of King Mindon on the grounds of Mandalay Palace in 1903 When a king died his royal white umbrella was broken and the great drum and gong at the palace s bell tower at the eastern gate of the palace was struck 70 It was custom for members of the royal family including the king to be cremated their ashes were put into a velvet bag and thrown into the river 97 King Mindon Min was the first to break tradition his remains were not cremated but instead were buried intact according to his wishes at the place where his tomb now stands 97 Before his burial the King Mindon s body was laid in state before his throne at the Hmannandawgyi Palace of Mirrors 59 58 Foundation sacrifice Edit Main article Hitobashira The Foundation Sacrifice was a Burmese practice whereby human victims known as myosade မ စတ were ceremonially sacrificed by burial during the foundation of a royal capital to propitiate and appease the guardian spirits to ensure impregnability of the capital city 98 The victims were crushed to death underneath a massive teak post erected near each gateway and at the four corners of the city walls to render the city secure and impregnable 99 Although this practice contradicted the fundamental tenets of Buddhism it was in alignment with prevailing animistic beliefs which dictated that the spirits of persons who suffered violent deaths became nats spirits and protective and possessive of their death sites 99 The preferred sites for such executions were the city s corners and the gates the most vulnerable defence points 99 The Konbaung monarchs followed ancient precedents and traditions to found the new royal city Brahmins were tasked with planning these sacrificial ceremonies and determining the auspicious day according to astrological calculations and the signs of individuals best suited for sacrifice 99 Usually victims were selected from a spectrum of social classes or unfortuitiously apprehended against will during the day of the sacrifice 99 Women in the latter stages of pregnancy were preferred as the sacrifice would yield two guardian spirits instead of one 99 Such sacrifices took place at the foundation of Wunbe In Palace in Ava in 1676 and may have taken place at the foundation of Mandalay in 1857 98 Royal court officials at the time claimed that the tradition was dispensed altogether with flowers and fruit offered in lieu of human victims 99 Burmese chronicles and contemporary records only make mention of large jars of oil buried at the identified locations which was by tradition to ascertain whether the spirits would continue to protect the city i e so long as the oil remained intact the spirits were serving their duty 99 Shwe Yoe s The Burman describes 52 men women and children buried with 3 buried under the post near each of the twelve gates of the city walls one at each corner of those walls one at each corner of the teak stockade one under each of the four entrances to the Palace and four under the Lion Throne 100 Taw Sein Ko s Annual Report for 1902 03 for the Archaeological Survey of India mentions only four victims buried at the corners of the city walls Devotional rituals Edit The Guardians of the Four Cardinal Directions Lokapala in Burmese depiction Brahmins at the Konbaung court regularly performed a variety of grand devotional rituals to indigenous spirits nat and Hindu deities 56 The following were the most important devotional cults Ganesha Maha Peinne in Burmese During the Burmese month of Nadaw November to December a festival for Ganesha the god of prudence and good policy was held Grain first reaped from the royal fields was sent to the Mahamuni Buddha Temple as an offering to Ganesha in three huge containers in the shape of a buffalo bullock and prawn in which paddy millet and bulrush millet were respectively placed 101 Ganesha mounted on a peacock was placed on a ceremonial procession and was then brought before the king who after paying homage scattered pieces of silver and clothes among the poor 101 102 Ganesha occupied a prominent place in royal ceremonies especially as he was considered a guardian deity of the elephants 103 Offerings to Ganesha made in the Burmese month of Tazaungmon were established during Bodawpaya s reign 104 Phaya Ko Zu ဘ ရ က ဆ lit Nine Deities This was a devotional rite performed by Khettara Brahmins The deities referenced were either Buddhist Buddha and the 8 arahats or non Buddhist 5 Hindu deities including Candi and Ganesha and 4 nats 105 Skanda Sakanta or Sakanta Tattika King Bodawpaya reformed the annual ceremonial procession to honour Ganesha to instead honour Skanda the god of war and a son of Shiva and Candi following the advice of a Brahmin from Benares 106 107 This procession was held in the Burmese month of Tabaung 104 Skanda was closely linked with a deity called Citrabali mara Cittarapali mar a both of whom were connected to rituals mentioned in Rajamattan a standard reference for ceremonies at the royal court compiled during Bodawphaya s reign 104 Hindu deities Candi Canni Indra Thagyamin Shiva Vishnu Asuras and the 4 Lokapala These deities were placed at specific locations at the entrances of the capital city the royal palace or in temples to ward off evil 106 Other spirits nat Planets Sky Sun Moon Hon the fire spirit 104 108 Society and culture Edit Burmese court officials in 1795 Social classes Edit During the Konbaung dynasty Burmese society was highly stratified Loosely modelled on the four Hindu varnas Konbaung society was divided into four general social classes အမ လ ပ by descent 94 Rulers မင မ or Khattiya ခတ တ ယ 109 Ritualists ပ ဏ ဏ မ or Brahmana ဗ ဟ မဏ 109 Merchants သ ဌ မ or Vessa ဝ ဿ 109 Commoners ဆင ရ သ မ or Tudda သ ဒ ဒ 109 Society also distinguished between the free and slaves က န မ who were indebted persons or prisoners of war including those brought back from military campaigns in Arakan Ayuthaya and Manipur but could belong to one of the four classes There was also distinction between taxpayers and non taxpayers Tax paying commoners were called athi အသည whereas non taxpaying individuals usually affiliated to the royal court or under government service were called ahmuhtan အမ ထမ Outside of hereditary positions there were two primary paths to influence joining the military မင မ ထမ and joining the Buddhist Sangha in the monasteries Sumptuary laws Edit Sumptuary laws called yazagaing dictated life and consumption for Burmese subjects in the Konbaung kingdom everything from the style of one s house to clothing suitable to one s social standing from regulations concerning funerary ceremonies and the coffin to be used to usage of various speech forms based on rank and social status 110 111 112 In particular sumptuary laws in the royal capital were exceedingly strict and the most elaborate in character 113 For instance sumptuary laws forbade ordinary Burmese subjects to build houses of stone or brick and dictated the number of tiers on the ornamental spired roof called pyatthat allowed above one s residence the royal palace s Great Audience Hall and the 4 main gates of the royal capital as well as monasteries were allowed 9 tiers while those of the most powerful tributary princes sawbwa were permitted 7 at most 114 115 Sumptuary laws ordained 5 types of funerals and rites accorded to each the king royal family members holders of ministerial offices merchants and those who possessed titles and peasants who received no rites at death 116 Sumptuary regulations regarding dress and ornamentation were carefully observed Designs with the peacock insignia were strictly reserved for the royal family and long tailed hip length jackets ထ င မသ မ အင က and surcoats were reserved for officials 117 Velvet sandals ကတ တ ပ ဖ နပ were worn exclusively by royals 118 Gold anklets were worn only by the royal children 110 Silk cloth brocaded with gold and silver flowers and animal figures were only permitted to be worn by members of the royal family and ministers wives 110 Adornment with jewels and precious stones was similarly regulated Usage of hinthapada ဟင သပဒ a vermilion dye made from cinnabar was regulated 110 Demography Edit Konbaung era Myinkhin Thabin Throughout the Konbaung dynasty cultural integration continued For the first time in history the Burmese language and culture came to predominate the entire Irrawaddy valley with the Mon language and ethnicity completely eclipsed by 1830 The nearer Shan principalities adopted more lowland norms An 1855 watercolour of a Kathe horseman from Manipur Captives from various military campaigns in their hundreds and thousands were brought back to the kingdom and resettled as hereditary servants to royalty and nobility or dedicated to pagodas and temples these captives added new knowledge and skills to Burmese society and enriched Burmese culture They were encouraged to marry into the host community thus enriching the gene pool as well 119 Captives from Manipur formed the cavalry called Kathe myindat Cassay Horse and also Kathe a hmyauk tat Cassay Artillery in the royal Burmese army Even captured French soldiers led by Chevalier Milard were forced into the Burmese army 120 The incorporated French troops with their guns and muskets played a key role in the later battles between the Burmese and the Mons They became an elite corps which was to play a role in the Burmese battles against the Siamese attacks and capture of Ayutthaya from 1760 to 1765 and the Manchus battles against the Chinese armies of the Qianlong Emperor from 1766 to 1769 120 Muslim eunuchs from Arakan also served in the Konbaung court 121 122 123 124 125 A small community of foreign scholars missionaries and merchants also lived in Konbaung society Besides mercenaries and adventurers who had offered their services since the arrival of the Portuguese in the 16th century a few Europeans served as ladies in waiting to the last queen Supayalat in Mandalay a missionary established a school attended by Mindon s several sons including the last king Thibaw and an Armenian had served as a king s minister at Amarapura Among the most visible non Burmans of the royal court were Brahmins They typically originated from one of four locales Manipur acquired with the conquest of Manipur perhaps from Bengal since Manipur was Hinduised by Bengali Brahmins in the 1700s 126 Arakan acquired with the conquest of Arakan in 1785 by King Bodawpaya s son Thado Minsaw 126 Sagaing long established lines of Brahmins at Burman and Mon royal courts who traced their origins to ninth century Sri Ksetra or 14th century Sagaing 126 Benares Indian Brahmins from Benares who arrived in upper Burma between the late 1700s to early 1800s 127 Literature and arts Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2013 The evolution and growth of Burmese literature and theatre continued aided by an extremely high adult male literacy rate for the era half of all males and 5 of females 128 Foreign observers such as Michael Symes remarked on widespread literacy among commoners from peasants to watermen 119 The Siamese captives carried off from Ayutthaya as part of the Burmese Siamese War 1765 67 went on to have an outsize influence on traditional Burmese theatre and dance In 1789 a Burmese royal commission consisting of Princes and Ministers was charged with translating Siamese and Javanese dramas from Thai to Burmese With the help of Siamese artists captured from Ayutthaya in 1767 the commission adapted two important epics from Thai to Burmese the Siamese Ramayana and the Enao the Siamese version of Javanese Panji tales into Burmese Yama Zattaw and Enaung Zattaw 129 One classical Siamese dance called Yodaya Aka lit Ayutthaya style dance is considered one of the most delicate of all traditional Burmese dances Architecture Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2013 The royal palace of MandalayBurmese dynasties had a long history of building regularly planned cities along the Irawaddy valley between the 14th to 19th century Town planning in pre modern Burma reached its climax during the Konbaung period with cities such as Mandalay Alaungpaya directed many town planning initiatives He built many small fortified towns with major defences One of these Rangoon was founded in 1755 as a fortress and sea harbor The city had an irregular plan with stockades made of teak logs on a ground rampart Rangoon had six city gates with each gate flanked by massive brick towers with typical merlons with cross shaped embrasures The stupa of Shwedagon Sule and Botataung were located outside the city walls The city had main roads paved with bricks and drains along the sides 130 Religion Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2013 Monastic and lay elites around the Konbaung kings particularly from Bodawpaya s reign launched a major reformation of Burmese intellectual life and monastic organisation and practice known as the Sudhamma Reformation It led to amongst other things Burma s first proper state histories 131 Rulers EditNo Title Literal meaning Lineage Reign Notes1 Alaungpaya Future Buddha King village chief 1752 1760 Founder of the dynasty and the Third Burmese Empire invaded Ayutthaya 2 Naungdawgyi Royal Elder Brother son 1760 1763 Invaded Ayutthaya with his father 3 Hsinbyushin Lord of the White Elephant brother 1763 1776 Invaded and sacked Ayutthaya invaded Chiang Mai and Laos invaded Manipur successfully repulsed four Chinese invasions 4 Singu King Singu son 1776 17815 Phaungka Younger Brother Lord of Phaungka cousin son of Naungdawgyi 1782 The shortest reign in Konbaung history of just over one week 6 Bodawpaya Royal Lord Grandfather uncle son of Alaungpaya 1782 1819 Invaded and annexed Arakan invaded Rattanakosin Bangkok 7 Bagyidaw Royal Elder Uncle grandson 1819 1837 Invaded Ayutthaya with his grandfather invaded Assam and Manipur defeated inthe First Anglo Burmese War 8 Tharrawaddy King Tharrawaddy brother 1837 1846 Fought in the First Anglo Burmese War as Prince of Tharrawaddy 9 Pagan King Pagan son 1846 1853 Overthrown by Mindon after his defeat in the Second Anglo Burmese War 10 Mindon King Mindon half brother 1853 1878 Sued for peace with the British had a very narrow escape in a palace rebellion bytwo of his sons but his brother Crown Prince Ka Naung was killed 11 Thibaw King Thibaw son 1878 1885 The last king of Burma forced to abdicate and exiled to India after his defeat in theThird Anglo Burmese War Note Naungdawgyi was the eldest brother of Hsinbyushin and Bodawpaya who was the grandfather of Bagyidaw who was Mindon s elder uncle They were known by these names to posterity although the formal titles at their coronation by custom ran to some length in Pali Mintayagyi paya Lord Great King was the equivalent of Your His Majesty whereas Hpondawgyi paya Lord Great Glory would be used by the royal family Family tree Edit See also Burmese monarchs family tree 1Alaungpaya 1752 1760 Yun San362Me HlaHsinbyushin 1763 1776 Bodawpaya 1782 1819 Naungdawgyi 1760 1763 Shin Hpo U45Singu Min 1776 1781 Thado MinsawPhaungka 1782 78Bagyidaw 1819 1837 Tharrawaddy 1837 1846 910Pagan N 1 1846 1853 Mindon N 2 1853 1878 Laungshe Mibaya11Thibaw 1878 1885 Royal house Konbaung dynastyFounding year 1752Deposition 1885Preceded byTaungoo dynasty Dynasty of Burma29 February 1752 29 November 1885 VacantMonarchy abolishedBritish ruleSee also EditHistory of BurmaCitations Edit တက ကသ လ စ န တင June 2005 သ ပ ဘ ရင န င စ ဖ ရ လတ King Thibaw and Supayalat Mister Maung Hmaing 1914 ဒ င ဋ က Peacock Details ဝရဇ န ဆရ စ မ September 2011 မ န မ သမ င ဝင အလ မ န င မ န မ ခ င ဆ င မ Myanmar s Historical Flags And Myanmar Leaders Page 6 Archived 21 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Part 2 Treatise about State Seals and State Flags Used Through Successive Periods In Myanmar Presenter Yi Yi Nyunt Director Nationalities Youth Resources Development Degree College Sagaing Department of Education and Practising Ministry of Border Affairs Republic of the Union of Myanmar 5 February 2014 ဗန မ တင အ င in Burmese မ န မ န င င တ သမ င Myanmar State History စ ရ တ င က န မ သည မ မ င ဝ ကင သ Archived from the original on 25 October 2022 Retrieved 25 October 2022 Scott Paul 8 July 2022 Property and the Prerogative at the End of Empire Burmah Oil in Retrospect papers ssrn com doi 10 2139 ssrn 4157391 Ni Lee Bih 2013 Brief History of Myanmar and Thailand Universiti Malaysi Sabah p 7 ISBN 9781229124791 Phayre 1883 p 153 Lieberman 2003 p 184 187 Dai 2004 p 145 189 Wyatt 2003 p 125 Lost Footsteps Diplomatic relations between Burma and Vietnam Charney Michael W 2000 Chinese Business in Penang and Tenasserim Burma in the 1820s A Glimpse from a Vietnamese Travelogue PDF Journal of the South Seas Society 55 48 60 Myint U 2006 p 109 Sanderson Beck Burma Malaya and Siam 1800 1950 Retrieved 22 April 2007 Lieberman 1996 p 184 187 Myint U 2001 The Second Princess daughter of King Thibaw Lost Foot Steps in Burmese Thant Myint U In memory of Taw Paya Galay a prince of a man The Myanmar Times 30 July 2012 Jim Pollard 10 February 2018 The right to remember Myanmar s last king Asia Times Zuzakar Kalaung 2 November 2017 We Were Kings Burma s lost royal family The Myanmar Times Surakiat 2006 p 8 11 25 a b Bird 1897 p 104 Seekins 2006 p 51 a b c Nisbet 1901 p 153 a b Nisbet 1901 p 154 Nisbet 1901 p 154 155 a b c Myint U 2001 p 77 Philips 1951 p 117 121 Scott 1882 p 102 Seekins 2006 p 50 a b c d Nisbet 1901 p 152 Taw 1913 p 47 a b Nisbet 1901 p 156 Myint U 2001 p 157 158 Myint U 2001 p 133 Myint U 2001 p 65 a b c Myint U 2001 p 66 Nisbet 1901 p 159 Nisbet 1901 p 160 Nisbet 1901 p 160 161 a b c d e f g Nisbet 1901 p 161 a b c d Myint U 2001 p 67 a b c d e f Nisbet 1901 p 157 a b c d Nisbet 1901 p 158 Working People s Daily 1988 Myint U 2001 p 70 The Glass Palace Chronicle of the Kings of Burma PDF Translated by Pe Maung Tin Luce G H London Humphrey Milford Oxford University Press 1923 a b c d Nisbet 1901 p 205 Leider 2005 p 160 161 Leider 2005 p 159 a b Leider 2005 p 168 a b Leider 2005 p 169 Leider 2005 p 177 a b c d Myint U 2001 p 57 a b c d e f g h i Leider 2005 p 175 a b c d e f g h i j k l DAS 1963 p 27 a b c DAS 1963 p 29 a b c d e f g h i j k l Yi 1982 p 136 a b c Scott 1882 p 450 a b c Leider 2005 p 174 Yi 1982 p 147 Yi 1982 p 137 Yi 1982 p 137 138 Yi 1982 p 138 a b Yi 1982 p 139 a b c d e Harvey 1925 p 325 a b c Yi 1982 p 140 a b c d e f Nisbet 1901 p 204 a b Yi 1982 p 141 Yi 1982 p 142 Yi 1982 p 129 Yi 1982 p 129 135 Yi 1982 p 131 135 a b Yi 1982 p 135 a b Yi 1982 p 105 a b c Yi 1982 p 106 a b Yi 1982 p 108 a b c Yi 1982 p 107 a b Yi 1982 p 109 Yi 1982 p 106 7 a b c d e Yi 1982 p 110 Also known as Mingala Ledaw လယ တ မင ဂလ or Ledwin Mingala Scott 1882 p 257 Scott 1882 p 257 258 Scott 1882 p 258 Scott 1882 p 259 a b Scott 1882 p 260 a b Scott 1882 p 261 Nisbet 1901 p 206 Yi 1982 p 124 a b c Scott 1900 p 94 a b c d e f MLC 1993 a b DAS 1963 p 28 a b c d Harvey 1925 p 327 328 a b DAS 1963 p 23 a b Harvey 1925 p 321 a b c d e f g h DAS 1963 p 19 Scott 1882 p 482 a b DAS 1963 p 34 Scott 1900 p 103 Leider 2005 p 171 a b c d Leider 2005 p 173 Leider 2005 p 170 171 a b Leider 2005 p 172 Said Brahmin had the following issue by the Govinda maharajinda aggamahadhammarajaguru Leider 2005 p 170 a b c d Myint U 2001 p 31 a b c d Scott 1882 p 411 Scott 1882 p 406 407 Andrus 1947 p x Scott 1882 p 406 Nisbet 1901 p 15 Cocks 1919 p 161 Scott 1882 p 411 412 Scott 1882 p 409 Scott 1882 p 409 10 a b Symes 1800 a b Findlay amp O Rourke 2007 p 277 Myint U 2006 p 126 Yegar 1972 p 10 MHRJ 2007 p 57 Fleischmann 1981 p 49 Peletz 2007 p 73 a b c Leider 2005 p 178 Leider 2005 p 182 Lieberman 2003 p 202 206 Brandon p 27 Hla U Kan 1978 Traditional Town Planning in Burma Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 37 2 92 97 98 doi 10 2307 989177 ISSN 0037 9808 JSTOR 989177 Charney 2006 96 107Notes Edit The seal titled as Seal of the State of Myanmar stamped on the royal orders issued by King Thibaw A swallowtail with white field charged with a peacock biting a flower branch on a red disk in the centre of the field Half brother of Mindon son of Princess Me Myat Shwe Half brother of Pagan References Edit Burma Press Summary Working People s Daily 3 March 1988 Retrieved 1 November 2013 Andrus James Russell 1947 Burmese Economic Life Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804703154 Bird George W 1897 Wanderings in Burma F J Bright amp Sons Charney Michael W 2006 Powerful Learning Buddhist Literati and the Throne in Burma s Last Dynasty 1752 1885 Ann Arbor University of Michigan Cocks Samuel William 1919 A Short History of Burma Macmillan and Company limited The Mandalay Palace PDF Rangoon Directorate of Archaeological Survey 1963 Archived from the original PDF on 28 January 2018 Retrieved 29 October 2013 Dai Yingcong 2004 A Disguised Defeat The Myanmar Campaign of the Qing Dynasty Modern Asian Studies Cambridge University Press 38 145 189 doi 10 1017 s0026749x04001040 S2CID 145784397 Findlay Ronald O Rourke Kevin H 2007 Power and Plenty Trade War and the World Economy in the Second Millennium ISBN 9780691118543 Fleischmann Klaus 1981 Arakan Konfliktregion zwischen Birma und Bangladesh Vorgeschichte und Folgen des Fluchtlingsstroms von 1978 in German Vol 121 Institut fur Asienkunde Hamburg Mitteilungen des Instituts fur Asienkunde ISBN 9783921469804 Hall D G E 1960 Burma 3rd ed Hutchinson University Library ISBN 978 1 4067 3503 1 Harvey G E 1925 History of Burma From the Earliest Times to 10 March 1824 London Frank Cass amp Co Ltd Htin Aung Maung 1967 A History of Burma New York and London Cambridge University Press Koenig William J 1990 The Burmese Polity 1752 1819 Politics Administration and Social Organization in the early Kon baung Period Michigan Papers on South and Southeast Asia 1990 34 Leider Jacques P 2009 King Alaungmintaya s Golden Letter to King George II 7 May 1756 PDF Hannover Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek Leider Jacques P 2005 Specialists for Ritual Magic and Devotion The Court Brahmins of the Konbaung Kings PDF The Journal of Burma Studies 10 159 180 doi 10 1353 jbs 2005 0004 S2CID 162305789 Lieberman Victor B 1996 Political Consolidation in Burma Under the Early Konbaung Dynasty 1752 c 1820 Journal of Asian History 30 2 152 168 JSTOR 41931038 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 0 521 80496 7 Letwe Nawrahta and Twinthin Taikwun 1770 Hla Thamein ed Alaungpaya Ayedawbon in Burmese 1961 ed Ministry of Culture Union of Burma Maung Maung Tin U 1905 Konbaung Hset Maha Yazawin က န ဘ င ဆက မဟ ရဇဝင in Burmese Vol 1 3 2004 ed Yangon Department of Universities History Research University of Yangon SEAlang Library Burmese Lexicography Myanmar English Dictionary Myanmar Language Commission 1993 ISBN 1 881265 47 1 Myint U Thant 2001 The Making of Modern Burma Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521799140 Myint U Thant 2006 The River of Lost Footsteps Histories of Burma Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 16342 6 Nisbet John 1901 Burma Under British Rule and Before Vol 1 Archbald Constable amp Company Peletz Michael G 2007 Gender Pluralism Southeast Asia Since Early Modern Times Routledge ISBN 9780203880043 Phayre Arthur P 1883 History of Burma 1967 ed London Susil Gupta Pollak Oliver B 1976 Dynasticism and Revolt Crisis of Kingship in Burma 1837 1851 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 7 2 187 196 doi 10 1017 s0022463400015009 Surakiat Pamaree March 2006 The Changing Nature of Conflict between Burma and Siam as seen from the Growth and Development of Burmese States from the 16th to the 19th centuries PDF Asia Research Institute pp 8 11 25 Archived from the original PDF on 2 July 2015 Philips Cyril Henry 1951 Handbook of Oriental History Vol 6 University of London School of Oriental and African Studies pp 117 121 ISBN 9780901050168 Scott James George 1882 The Burman His Life and Notions London Macmillan Scott J George 1900 Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan states PDF Vol 2 Superintendent Government Printing Taw Sein Ko 1913 Burmese Sketches British Burma Press Seekins Donald M 2006 Historical Dictionary of Burma Myanmar Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810864863 Symes Michael 1800 An Account of an Embassy to the Kingdom of Ava sent by the Governor General of India in the year 1795 PDF London SOAS Spring 2006 Wyatt David K 2003 History of Thailand 2 ed Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08475 7 Myanmar historical research journal Myanmar Historical Research Journal in Burmese တက ကသ လ မ သမ င သ တ သနဌ န 19 2007 Yegar Moshe 1972 The Muslims of Burma Otto Harrassowitz ISBN 9783447013574 Yi Yi 1982 Life at the Burmese Court under the Konbaung Kings PDF Silver Jubilee Publication င ရတ သဘင အထ မ အမ တ စ စ င Rangoon Historical Research Department 100 147 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Konbaung dynasty Forty Years in Burma John Ebenezer Marks London Hutchinson amp Co 1917 The Last Queen of Burma Kenneth Champeon The Irrawaddy July 2003 Before and after the wheel Pre colonial and colonial states and transportation in mainland Southeast Asia and West Africa Michael Charney HumaNetten 37 2016 Ayutthaya and the End of History Thai Views of Burma Revisted Min Zin The Irrawaddy August 2000 A rare meeting with the last of Burma s royals The Daily Telegraph 26 February 2008 Myanmar s last royal laments a crumbling nation Reuters 10 March 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Konbaung dynasty amp oldid 1151956319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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