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Mandalay Region

Mandalay Region (Burmese: မန္တလေးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး, pronounced [máɰ̃dəlé táiɰ̃ dèθa̰ dʑí]; formerly Mandalay Division) is an administrative division of Myanmar. It is located in the center of the country, bordering Sagaing Region and Magway Region to the west, Shan State to the east, and Bago Region and Kayin State to the south. The regional capital is Mandalay. To the south of the region lies the national capital of Naypyidaw. The division consists of eleven districts,[4] which are subdivided into 28 townships and 2,320 wards and village-tracts.

Mandalay Region
မန္တလေးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး
Myanma transcription(s)
 • Burmesemanta.le: tuing: desa. kri:
Location of Mandalay Region in Myanmar
Coordinates: 21°0′N 95°45′E / 21.000°N 95.750°E / 21.000; 95.750Coordinates: 21°0′N 95°45′E / 21.000°N 95.750°E / 21.000; 95.750
Country Myanmar
RegionCentral
CapitalMandalay
Government
 • Chief MinisterMaung Ko
 • CabinetMandalay Region Government
 • LegislatureMandalay Region Hluttaw
 • JudiciaryMandalay Region High Court
Area
 • Total37,945.6 km2 (14,650.9 sq mi)
 • Rank7th
Highest elevation
(Taungme)
2,302 m (7,552 ft)
Population
 • Total6,165,723
 • Rank3rd
 • Density160/km2 (420/sq mi)
DemonymMandalayan
Demographics
 • EthnicitiesBamar, Chinese, Shan, Chin, Kayin, South Asians
 • ReligionsBuddhism 95.70%, Islam 3.00%, Christianity 1.10%, and Hinduism 0.2%
Time zoneUTC+06:30 (MST)
HDI (2017)0.570[3]
medium · 5th
Websitewww.mandalayregion.gov.mm

Mandalay Region is important in Myanmar's economy, accounting for 15% of the national economy. It is under the administration of the Mandalay Region Government.

History

The history of Mandalay Region is the same as that of much of Upper Myanmar except that for much of Burmese history, the political power emanated out of royal capitals located in Mandalay Region. The country's present capital, Naypyidaw, and most former royal capitals of the Burmese nation—Bagan, Ava, Amarapura, Mandalay—are all located here.

 
Mandalay Region and Naypyidaw Union Territory

The Tibeto-Burman speaking Pyu were the first historical people to dominate the dry zone in central Myanmar that includes Mandalay Region as early as the 1st century AD. By the early 9th century, the Pyu were decimated in a series of wars with the Nanzhao kingdom from Yunnan. The Burmans, who had been migrating into the region from Yunnan in the 9th century, founded a city of their own, Pagan, in 849. The Pagan dynasty gradually came to dominate the central zone over the next two centuries, and by the late 11th century, all of present-day Myanmar. The Burmese language and script came to prominence with royal patronage of Pagan kings.

After the fall of Pagan to the Mongols in 1287, parts of central Myanmar came to be controlled by a series of rulers: the Mongols (1287-c.1303), Myinsaing (1298–1313), Pinya (1313–1364), and Sagaing (1315–1364). In 1364, Ava kingdom led by Burmanized Shan kings reunified all of central Myanmar. Central Myanmar was under Ava's control until 1527, and under the Shans of Monhyin (1527–1555). Burmese literature and culture came into its own during this era. Central Myanmar was part of the Taungoo kingdom from 1555 to 1752. Parts of the region fell briefly to the Mons of Pegu (Bago) (1752–1753). Konbaung dynasty ruled the region until December 1885 when it lost all of Upper Myanmar in the Third Anglo-Burmese War.

The British administration organized seven divisions in Upper Myanmar: Mandalay, Meiktila, Minbu, Sagaing, and the Federated Shan States (North and South). Mandalay Division included what is now Kachin State. Circa 1940, Meiktila Division was merged with Mandalay Division. Much of Upper Myanmar, including Mandalay Division, was under the Japanese rule during World War II between May 1942 and March 1945. When the country gained independence from the United Kingdom in January 1948, the Myikyina and Bhamo districts were carved out to form Kachin State.[5]

Administrative divisions

Before 2010, Mandalay Region consists of 8 districts. Later the Pyinmana district was formed as Union Territory under the direct administration of president. So Mandalay Region remains 28 townships organized into eleven districts.

Districts

 

Townships

Maha Aungmye District
 
Maha Aungmye Township  • Chanayethazan Township • Chanmyathazi Township • Pyigyidagun Township
Aungmyethazan District
 
Aungmyethazan Township • Patheingyi Township • Madaya Township
Amarapura District
 
Amarapura Township
Pyinoolwin District
 
Pyinoolwin Township
Thabeikkyin District
 
Thabeikkyin Township • Singu Township • Mogok Township
Kyaukse District
 
Kyaukse Township • Myittha Township • Sintgaing Township
Tada-U District
 
Tada-U Township • Ngazun Township
Meiktila District
 
Mahlaing Township • Meiktila Township • Thazi Township • Wundwin Township
Myingyan District
 
Myingyan Township • Natogyi Township • Taungtha Township
Nyaung-U District
 
Nyaung-U Township • Kyaukpadaung Township
Yamethin District
 
Pyawbwe Township • Yamethin Township

Towns

 
(30) cities and towns of Mandalay Region


  Region Capital
  District and Township Capital
  Township Capital
  Town

Government

Executive

During the ruling of junta, the region peace and development committee is the administrative body of Mandalay Region. In 2011, the new government form was introduced, and the Mandalay Region Government became the main administrative body of the region. The government is led by Chief Minister. The Government Office is located in Aungmyaythazan Township.

 
Regional Government Office

Legislature

In 2011, the State and Region Hluttaws were introduced in the new system. Each State and Region has a State Hluttaw or Regional Hluttaw made up of elected civilian members and unelected representatives of the Armed Forces. The number of seats in each State or Region Hluttaw depends on the number of townships (each township constituency has two MPs), as well as ethnic representatives. The Mandalay Region Hluttaw have 57 elected members (include one ethnic affairs minister) and 19 military representatives.[6]

 
Regional Hluttaw

Judiciary

Under the Mandalay Region High Court there are eight district courts, Mandalay, Pyin Oo Lwin, Kyaukse, Meithtila, Myingyan, Nyaung Oo, Yamethin and Dakina (for Union Territory). There are 35 township courts including the townships of Union Territory and 5 special courts.[7]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1973 3,668,493—    
1983 4,577,762+24.8%
2014 6,165,723+34.7%
Source: 2014 Myanmar census[2]

The majority of the population in Mandalay Region are Bamar (Burmans). In the Mandalay metropolitan area, however, a large community of Chinese, most of whom are recent immigrants from Yunnan, now nearly rival the Bamar population.[8] A large community of Indians also reside in Mandalay. A dwindling community of Anglo-Burmese still exists in both Pyinoolwin and Mandalay. A number of Shan people live along the eastern border of the region.

Burmese is the primary language of the division. However, Mandarin Chinese is increasingly spoken in Mandalay and the northern gem mining town of Mogok.

Religion

Religion in Mandalay (2015)[9]

  Buddhism (95.7%)
  Islam (3%)
  Christianity (1.1%)
  Hinduism (0.2%)

According to the 2014 Myanmar census, Buddhists make up 95.7% of Mandalay Region’s population, forming the largest religious community there.[10] Minority religious communities include Christians (1.1%), Muslims (3%), and Hindus (0.2%) who collectively comprise the remainder of Mandalay Region’s population.[10]

According to the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee’s 2016 statistics, 99,964 Buddhist monks were registered in Mandalay Region, comprising 18.7% of Myanmar's total Sangha membership, which includes both novice samanera and fully ordained bhikkhu.[11] Mandalay Region is home to Myanmar's largest bhikkhu community. The majority of monks belong to the Thudhamma Nikaya (92.3%), followed by Shwegyin Nikaya (7.1%), with the remainder of monks belonging to other small monastic orders.[11] 8,174 thilashin were registered in Mandalay Region, comprising 13.5% of Myanmar’s total thilashin community.[11]

Economy

Agriculture is the primary economical source of livelihood. Primary crops grown within Mandalay Region are rice, wheat, maize, peanut, sesame, cotton, legumes, tobacco, chili, and vegetables. Industry, including alcoholic breweries, textile factories, sugar mills, and gem mines also exists. Tourism now forms a substantial part of Mandalay Region's economy, as it contains many historical sites including Mandalay, Amarapura, Bagan, Pyin U Lwin, Mount Popa, and Ava. Hardwoods such as teak and thanaka are also harvested.

Education

Educational opportunities in Myanmar are extremely limited outside the main cities of Yangon and Mandalay. According to official statistics, over 1 million students were enrolled in the division's 4,467 primary and secondary schools in 2005.[1] Of the total, the vast majority, about 4,000, were primary schools. Only about 13% of primary school students make it to high school.[12]

AY 2002–2003 Primary Middle High
Schools 4,011 231 113
Teachers 19,000 7,200 2,500
Students 690,000 259,000 91,000

The region has some of the best institutions of higher education in Myanmar. As medical, engineering and computer studies are the most sought after in Myanmar, the University of Medicine, Mandalay, the University of Dental Medicine, Mandalay, Mandalay Technological University, and the University of Computer Studies, Mandalay are among the most selective universities in Myanmar. Other highly selective schools are Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University and military academies in Pyinoolwin: Defence Services Academy and Defence Services Technological Academy.

Health care

The general state of health care in Myanmar is poor. The military government spends between 0.5% to 3% of the country's GDP on health care, consistently ranking among the lowest in the world.[13][14] Although health care is nominally free, in reality patients have to pay for medicine and treatment even in public clinics and hospitals. Public hospitals lack many of the basic facilities and equipment. The following is a summary of the public health system in the division, in the fiscal year 2002–2003.[15]

2002–2003 # Hospitals # Beds
Specialist hospitals 7 1,725
General hospitals with specialist services 5 1,650
General hospitals 30 1,260
Health clinics 43 688
Total 85 5,323

In 2005, Mandalay Region's public health care system had slightly over 1,000 doctors and about 2,000 nurses working in 44 hospitals and 44 health clinics. Over 30 of the hospitals had less than 100 beds.[1] Since almost all of large public hospitals and private hospitals, and doctors are located in Mandalay, these low numbers for a division with 7.7 million are actually even worse in the rest of the division, though these figures are believed to have improved by the advent of Naypyidaw as the nation's capital in 2006 although the level of improvement remains unreported. The well-to-do bypass the public health system and go to private clinics in Mandalay or Yangon in order to receive quicker medical attention and high-quality service.[16] The wealthy routinely go abroad (usually Bangkok or Singapore) for treatment.[17]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Thiha Aung (2005-02-13). "Mandalay Division marching to new golden land of unity and amity". The New Light of Myanmar.
  2. ^ a b Census Report. The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census. Vol. 2. Naypyitaw: Ministry of Immigration and Population. May 2015. p. 17.
  3. ^ "Sub-national HDI – Area Database – Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 2018-09-13.
  4. ^ "မန္တလေးတိုင်းဒေသကြီးအတွင်းရှိ ခရိုင်အမည်များ တိုးချဲ့ပြင်ဆင်ဖွဲ့စည်းခြင်း" (in Burmese).
  5. ^ "Myanmar Divisions". Statoids. Retrieved 2009-04-10.
  6. ^ "About". Mandalay Region Hluttaw.
  7. ^ "မန္တလေးတိုင်းတရားလွှတ်တော်အကြောင်း". Mandalay Region Government.
  8. ^ Stephen Mansfield (1999-05-13). "Myanmar's Chinese connection". The Japan Times.
  9. ^ Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population MYANMAR (July 2016). The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Census Report Volume 2-C. Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population MYANMAR. pp. 12–15.
  10. ^ a b The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Census Report Volume 2-C (PDF). Department of Population Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population. July 2016. pp. 12–15.
  11. ^ a b c "The Account of Wazo Monks and Nuns in 1377 (2016 year)". State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee. 2016. Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  12. ^ . Myanmar Central Statistical Organization. Archived from the original on 2008-05-24. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  13. ^ . 2007-01-17. Archived from the original on 2008-02-05.
  14. ^ Yasmin Anwar (2007-06-28). 06.28.2007 "Burma junta faulted for rampant diseases". UC Berkeley News. {{cite news}}: Check |url= value (help)
  15. ^ . Myanmar Central Statistical Organization. Archived from the original on 2011-04-30. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  16. ^ Aye Lei Tun (2007-06-11). . The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on 2008-07-20. Retrieved 2009-01-24.
  17. ^ Thein Win Nyo (2007-06-11). . The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on 2008-07-20.

External links

  • Official website

mandalay, region, burmese, မန, တလ, သက, pronounced, máɰ, dəlé, táiɰ, dèθa, dʑí, formerly, mandalay, division, administrative, division, myanmar, located, center, country, bordering, sagaing, region, magway, region, west, shan, state, east, bago, region, kayin, . Mandalay Region Burmese မန တလ တ င ဒ သက pronounced maɰ dele taiɰ de8a dʑi formerly Mandalay Division is an administrative division of Myanmar It is located in the center of the country bordering Sagaing Region and Magway Region to the west Shan State to the east and Bago Region and Kayin State to the south The regional capital is Mandalay To the south of the region lies the national capital of Naypyidaw The division consists of eleven districts 4 which are subdivided into 28 townships and 2 320 wards and village tracts Mandalay Region မန တလ တ င ဒ သက RegionMyanma transcription s Burmesemanta le tuing desa kri FlagSealLocation of Mandalay Region in MyanmarCoordinates 21 0 N 95 45 E 21 000 N 95 750 E 21 000 95 750 Coordinates 21 0 N 95 45 E 21 000 N 95 750 E 21 000 95 750Country MyanmarRegionCentralCapitalMandalayGovernment Chief MinisterMaung Ko CabinetMandalay Region Government LegislatureMandalay Region Hluttaw JudiciaryMandalay Region High CourtArea 1 Total37 945 6 km2 14 650 9 sq mi Rank7thHighest elevation Taungme 2 302 m 7 552 ft Population 2014 2 Total6 165 723 Rank3rd Density160 km2 420 sq mi DemonymMandalayanDemographics EthnicitiesBamar Chinese Shan Chin Kayin South Asians ReligionsBuddhism 95 70 Islam 3 00 Christianity 1 10 and Hinduism 0 2 Time zoneUTC 06 30 MST HDI 2017 0 570 3 medium 5thWebsitewww wbr mandalayregion wbr gov wbr mmMandalay Region is important in Myanmar s economy accounting for 15 of the national economy It is under the administration of the Mandalay Region Government Contents 1 History 2 Administrative divisions 2 1 Districts 2 2 Townships 2 3 Towns 3 Government 3 1 Executive 3 2 Legislature 3 3 Judiciary 4 Demographics 4 1 Religion 5 Economy 6 Education 7 Health care 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditThe history of Mandalay Region is the same as that of much of Upper Myanmar except that for much of Burmese history the political power emanated out of royal capitals located in Mandalay Region The country s present capital Naypyidaw and most former royal capitals of the Burmese nation Bagan Ava Amarapura Mandalay are all located here Mandalay Region and Naypyidaw Union Territory The Tibeto Burman speaking Pyu were the first historical people to dominate the dry zone in central Myanmar that includes Mandalay Region as early as the 1st century AD By the early 9th century the Pyu were decimated in a series of wars with the Nanzhao kingdom from Yunnan The Burmans who had been migrating into the region from Yunnan in the 9th century founded a city of their own Pagan in 849 The Pagan dynasty gradually came to dominate the central zone over the next two centuries and by the late 11th century all of present day Myanmar The Burmese language and script came to prominence with royal patronage of Pagan kings After the fall of Pagan to the Mongols in 1287 parts of central Myanmar came to be controlled by a series of rulers the Mongols 1287 c 1303 Myinsaing 1298 1313 Pinya 1313 1364 and Sagaing 1315 1364 In 1364 Ava kingdom led by Burmanized Shan kings reunified all of central Myanmar Central Myanmar was under Ava s control until 1527 and under the Shans of Monhyin 1527 1555 Burmese literature and culture came into its own during this era Central Myanmar was part of the Taungoo kingdom from 1555 to 1752 Parts of the region fell briefly to the Mons of Pegu Bago 1752 1753 Konbaung dynasty ruled the region until December 1885 when it lost all of Upper Myanmar in the Third Anglo Burmese War The British administration organized seven divisions in Upper Myanmar Mandalay Meiktila Minbu Sagaing and the Federated Shan States North and South Mandalay Division included what is now Kachin State Circa 1940 Meiktila Division was merged with Mandalay Division Much of Upper Myanmar including Mandalay Division was under the Japanese rule during World War II between May 1942 and March 1945 When the country gained independence from the United Kingdom in January 1948 the Myikyina and Bhamo districts were carved out to form Kachin State 5 Administrative divisions EditBefore 2010 Mandalay Region consists of 8 districts Later the Pyinmana district was formed as Union Territory under the direct administration of president So Mandalay Region remains 28 townships organized into eleven districts Districts Edit Aungmyethazan District Maha Aungmye District Amarapura District Pyinoolwin District Thabeikkyin District Kyaukse District Tada U District Myingyan District Nyaung U District Meiktila District Yamethin District Townships Edit Maha Aungmye District Maha Aungmye Township Chanayethazan Township Chanmyathazi Township Pyigyidagun TownshipAungmyethazan District Aungmyethazan Township Patheingyi Township Madaya TownshipAmarapura District Amarapura TownshipPyinoolwin District Pyinoolwin TownshipThabeikkyin District Thabeikkyin Township Singu Township Mogok TownshipKyaukse District Kyaukse Township Myittha Township Sintgaing TownshipTada U District Tada U Township Ngazun TownshipMeiktila District Mahlaing Township Meiktila Township Thazi Township Wundwin TownshipMyingyan District Myingyan Township Natogyi Township Taungtha TownshipNyaung U District Nyaung U Township Kyaukpadaung TownshipYamethin District Pyawbwe Township Yamethin TownshipTowns Edit 30 cities and towns of Mandalay Region Region Capital District and Township Capital Township Capital Town Mandalay Amarapura Pyinoolwin Thabeikkyin Tada U Kyaukse Myingyan Meiktila Nyaung U Yamethin Patheingyi Madaya Mogok Singu Ngazun Myittha Sintgaing Natogyi Taungtha Thazi Wundwin Mahlaing Kyaukpadaung Pyawbwe Myitnge Tagaung Kume Bagan Semekon NgathayoutGovernment EditExecutive Edit See also Mandalay Region Government During the ruling of junta the region peace and development committee is the administrative body of Mandalay Region In 2011 the new government form was introduced and the Mandalay Region Government became the main administrative body of the region The government is led by Chief Minister The Government Office is located in Aungmyaythazan Township Regional Government Office Legislature Edit See also Mandalay Region Hluttaw In 2011 the State and Region Hluttaws were introduced in the new system Each State and Region has a State Hluttaw or Regional Hluttaw made up of elected civilian members and unelected representatives of the Armed Forces The number of seats in each State or Region Hluttaw depends on the number of townships each township constituency has two MPs as well as ethnic representatives The Mandalay Region Hluttaw have 57 elected members include one ethnic affairs minister and 19 military representatives 6 Regional Hluttaw Judiciary Edit Under the Mandalay Region High Court there are eight district courts Mandalay Pyin Oo Lwin Kyaukse Meithtila Myingyan Nyaung Oo Yamethin and Dakina for Union Territory There are 35 township courts including the townships of Union Territory and 5 special courts 7 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 19733 668 493 19834 577 762 24 8 20146 165 723 34 7 Source 2014 Myanmar census 2 The majority of the population in Mandalay Region are Bamar Burmans In the Mandalay metropolitan area however a large community of Chinese most of whom are recent immigrants from Yunnan now nearly rival the Bamar population 8 A large community of Indians also reside in Mandalay A dwindling community of Anglo Burmese still exists in both Pyinoolwin and Mandalay A number of Shan people live along the eastern border of the region Burmese is the primary language of the division However Mandarin Chinese is increasingly spoken in Mandalay and the northern gem mining town of Mogok Religion Edit Religion in Mandalay 2015 9 Buddhism 95 7 Islam 3 Christianity 1 1 Hinduism 0 2 According to the 2014 Myanmar census Buddhists make up 95 7 of Mandalay Region s population forming the largest religious community there 10 Minority religious communities include Christians 1 1 Muslims 3 and Hindus 0 2 who collectively comprise the remainder of Mandalay Region s population 10 According to the State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee s 2016 statistics 99 964 Buddhist monks were registered in Mandalay Region comprising 18 7 of Myanmar s total Sangha membership which includes both novice samanera and fully ordained bhikkhu 11 Mandalay Region is home to Myanmar s largest bhikkhu community The majority of monks belong to the Thudhamma Nikaya 92 3 followed by Shwegyin Nikaya 7 1 with the remainder of monks belonging to other small monastic orders 11 8 174 thilashin were registered in Mandalay Region comprising 13 5 of Myanmar s total thilashin community 11 Economy EditAgriculture is the primary economical source of livelihood Primary crops grown within Mandalay Region are rice wheat maize peanut sesame cotton legumes tobacco chili and vegetables Industry including alcoholic breweries textile factories sugar mills and gem mines also exists Tourism now forms a substantial part of Mandalay Region s economy as it contains many historical sites including Mandalay Amarapura Bagan Pyin U Lwin Mount Popa and Ava Hardwoods such as teak and thanaka are also harvested Education EditSee also List of universities in Mandalay Region Educational opportunities in Myanmar are extremely limited outside the main cities of Yangon and Mandalay According to official statistics over 1 million students were enrolled in the division s 4 467 primary and secondary schools in 2005 1 Of the total the vast majority about 4 000 were primary schools Only about 13 of primary school students make it to high school 12 AY 2002 2003 Primary Middle HighSchools 4 011 231 113Teachers 19 000 7 200 2 500Students 690 000 259 000 91 000The region has some of the best institutions of higher education in Myanmar As medical engineering and computer studies are the most sought after in Myanmar the University of Medicine Mandalay the University of Dental Medicine Mandalay Mandalay Technological University and the University of Computer Studies Mandalay are among the most selective universities in Myanmar Other highly selective schools are Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University and military academies in Pyinoolwin Defence Services Academy and Defence Services Technological Academy Health care EditSee also List of hospitals in Mandalay The general state of health care in Myanmar is poor The military government spends between 0 5 to 3 of the country s GDP on health care consistently ranking among the lowest in the world 13 14 Although health care is nominally free in reality patients have to pay for medicine and treatment even in public clinics and hospitals Public hospitals lack many of the basic facilities and equipment The following is a summary of the public health system in the division in the fiscal year 2002 2003 15 2002 2003 Hospitals BedsSpecialist hospitals 7 1 725General hospitals with specialist services 5 1 650General hospitals 30 1 260Health clinics 43 688Total 85 5 323In 2005 Mandalay Region s public health care system had slightly over 1 000 doctors and about 2 000 nurses working in 44 hospitals and 44 health clinics Over 30 of the hospitals had less than 100 beds 1 Since almost all of large public hospitals and private hospitals and doctors are located in Mandalay these low numbers for a division with 7 7 million are actually even worse in the rest of the division though these figures are believed to have improved by the advent of Naypyidaw as the nation s capital in 2006 although the level of improvement remains unreported The well to do bypass the public health system and go to private clinics in Mandalay or Yangon in order to receive quicker medical attention and high quality service 16 The wealthy routinely go abroad usually Bangkok or Singapore for treatment 17 Gallery Edit Thaungthaman Lake Sunset from Mandalay Hill Monks at Buddhist Temple Sunset from U Bain bridge Mt Popa Mandalay Hill Moat Pyin Oo Lwin National Kandawgyi Garden BaganSee also Edit Myanmar portalReferences Edit a b c Thiha Aung 2005 02 13 Mandalay Division marching to new golden land of unity and amity The New Light of Myanmar a b Census Report The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Vol 2 Naypyitaw Ministry of Immigration and Population May 2015 p 17 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 2018 09 13 မန တလ တ င ဒ သက အတ င ရ ခရ င အမည မ တ ခ ပ င ဆင ဖ စည ခ င in Burmese Myanmar Divisions Statoids Retrieved 2009 04 10 About Mandalay Region Hluttaw မန တလ တ င တရ လ တ တ အက င Mandalay Region Government Stephen Mansfield 1999 05 13 Myanmar s Chinese connection The Japan Times Department of Population Ministry of Labour Immigration and Population MYANMAR July 2016 The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Census Report Volume 2 C Department of Population Ministry of Labour Immigration and Population MYANMAR pp 12 15 a b The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Census Report Volume 2 C PDF Department of Population Ministry of Labour Immigration and Population July 2016 pp 12 15 a b c The Account of Wazo Monks and Nuns in 1377 2016 year State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee 2016 Retrieved 2021 01 19 Education statistics by level and by State and Division Myanmar Central Statistical Organization Archived from the original on 2008 05 24 Retrieved 2009 04 09 PPI Almost Half of All World Health Spending is in the United States 2007 01 17 Archived from the original on 2008 02 05 Yasmin Anwar 2007 06 28 06 28 2007 Burma junta faulted for rampant diseases UC Berkeley News a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Check url value help Hospitals and Dispensaries by State and Division Myanmar Central Statistical Organization Archived from the original on 2011 04 30 Retrieved 2009 04 11 Aye Lei Tun 2007 06 11 Mandalay continues to play vital role as healthcare centre for the upper north The Myanmar Times Archived from the original on 2008 07 20 Retrieved 2009 01 24 Thein Win Nyo 2007 06 11 Medical tourism gives patients options The Myanmar Times Archived from the original on 2008 07 20 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mandalay Region Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mandalay Region amp oldid 1138157738, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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