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Minkhaung I

Minkhaung I of Ava (Burmese: ပထမ မင်းခေါင် [pətʰəma̰ mɪ́ɰ̃ɡàʊɰ̃]; also spelled Mingaung; 1373–1421) was king of Ava from 1400 to 1421. He is best remembered in Burmese history for his epic struggles against King Razadarit of Hanthawaddy Pegu in the Forty Years' War (1385–1424). As king, Minkhaung continued his father Swa Saw Ke's policy to restore the Pagan Empire. Under the military leadership of his eldest son Minye Kyawswa, Ava nearly succeeded. While he ultimately failed to conquer Hanthawaddy and Launggyet Arakan, he was able to bring in most of cis-Salween Shan states to the Ava orbit.

Minkhaung I
ပထမ မင်းခေါင်
King of Ava
Reign25 November 1400 – c. October 1421
PredecessorTarabya
SuccessorThihathu
Chief MinisterMin Yaza
Governor of Pyinzi
Reignc. April 1385 – 25 November 1400
Predecessornew office
SuccessorNandathingyan
Born13 September 1373
Tuesday, 12th waning of Thadingyut 735 ME
Gazun Neint, Ava Kingdom
Diedc. October 1421 (aged 48)
c. Nadaw 783 ME
Ava (Inwa), Ava Kingdom
ConsortShin Saw
Saw Khway
Min Pyan
Shin Mi-Nauk
Shin Bo-Me
Issue
among others...
Minye Kyawswa
Saw Pyei Chantha
Thihathu
Minye Kyawhtin
Saw Nant-Tha
HouseAva
FatherSwa Saw Ke
MotherSaw Beza
ReligionTheravada Buddhism

Early life Edit

 
Swe's childhood rival Tarabya portrayed as Mintara nat

The future king was born in a small village called Gazun-Nyeint (present-day northern Sagaing Region) on 13 September 1373.[note 1] His father King Swa Saw Ke of Ava had met his commoner mother Saw Beza earlier in the year during a military campaign against Mohnyin.[1][2] Chronicles say that after giving birth to the child, Beza showed up at the Ava palace to present the male son, as instructed to by the king. The child was named Min Swe (မင်းဆွေ [mɪ́ɴ sʰwè]). The king made Beza a junior queen, and had two more children with her: Theiddat and Thupaba Dewi.[1][2]

Min Swe grew up in Ava (Inwa) until he was eight. His life at the palace was not all well. Their older half-brother Tarabya, who was born to a senior queen, constantly bullied both Swe and Theiddat. The bullying became a serious problem, and in 1381/82, the king had to send away Swe and Theiddat to a small monastery near Pinle to study under the chief primate (Thinga-Yaza). The two princes studied under the learned monk, and traveled around the region, including Taungdwingyi, Minbu, Ngape and Padein, with their attendants.[3]

Governor of Pyinzi Edit

Circa April 1385, Swa appointed Tarabya his heir-apparent.[4] The king kept Swe out of Tarabya's reach, and appointed his 11-year-old son governor of Pyinzi, a small town about 85 km southwest of Ava. He also gave Swe command of the 33-member Pyinzi cavalry.[3] Swe would rule Pyinzi for the next 15 years. Chronicles have little information about Swe's period as governor except that his rivalry with Tarabya continued, and that the rivalry may have cost Ava's best chance of defeating Hanthawaddy Pegu.

 
Key locations in the Ava–Hanthawaddy War (1385–1391)

In 1385, the king ordered his two eldest sons to lead a two-pronged invasion of the southern kingdom in what would become known as the Forty Years' War. Tarabya commanded the First Army (7000 infantry, 500 cavalry, 20 elephants) while Swe led the Second Army (6000 infantry, 500 cavalry, 20 elephants).[5] The two princes were advised by Ava's best commanders, including Thilawa of Yamethin and Theinkhathu Saw Hnaung.[6] The Ava command expected an easy victory over an overpowered opponent. But Ava forces could not break through well-organized Peguan defenses for five months. Then, King Razadarit of Hanthawaddy made a tactical error by coming out of his fortified capital to attack Ava positions near Pankyaw. Tarabya's army pounced, driving back and pursuing Razadarit's army. Meanwhile Swe's army had positioned in the path of retreat of the Hanthawaddy army. Tarabya, the overall commander-in-chief, sent a messenger, ordering Swe to hold his position and not to engage Razadarit until his army could reach the scene. But Swe ignored the order and the advice of his seasoned commanders, and ordered his troops to engage. Razadarit's army defeated Swe's premature attack, and got back inside Pegu. Five days later, with the rainy season approaching, the invasion was called off.[7]

Ava would come to rue the missed opportunity. Swa kept Swe from the next invasion in the following dry season. Swe was assigned to guard the capital while Swa and Tarabya invaded the southern country again.[8] The second invasion fared no better. Razadarit committed no more errors, and hunkered down. Ava troops could not break through Pegu's defenses and had to retreat before the rainy season arrived.[9][10] Swe was to get his chance again to go to the front in the 1390–91 campaign. But this time, he commanded just a regiment, and was directly under the command of Tarabya. At any rate, their army could not break through the Pegu defenses at Pankyaw although the campaign ended in a truce.[11]

Marriage Edit

 
Shin Mi-Nauk portrayed as the Anauk Mibaya nat

In 1389/90, Swe was married to Princess Shin Mi-Nauk, daughter of the chief of Mohnyin, in a marriage of state.[10] The marriage was part of the effort by Ava and Mohnyin to mend their fences after the 1387–88 war between the two states.[12] On the advice of Chief Minister Min Yaza, King Swa selected Swe to marry Mi-Nauk.[10] While the peace with Mohnyin did not last—Ava and Mohnyin were to fight another war just three years later[13]—the marriage between Swe and Mi-Nauk lasted. The couple had four children at Pyinzi: Minye Kyawswa, Saw Pyei Chantha, Minye Thihathu and Minye Kyawhtin.[14]

Accession Edit

In April 1400, King Swa Saw Ke died and Tarabya ascended the throne. The new king kept his two half brothers at an arm's length. Neither Swe nor Theiddat controlled a sizable army. When Tarabya became mentally unstable about five months into his reign, and other pretenders began circling the throne, Swe was not in a strong-enough position to challenge them. In November, Gov. Thihapate of Tagaung assassinated Tarabya, and tried to seize the throne. But the court executed the usurper, and offered the throne to Min Swe.[15] But Swe was concerned about Gov. Maha Pyauk of Yamethin, who controlled a sizable army, and told the court to offer the throne to Pyauk instead. Theiddat implored Swe to reconsider. When his brother still refused, Theiddat took matters into his own hand. Theiddat and his small band of men ambushed Pyauk's much bigger army near Ava while Pyauk was not expecting. Pyauk was killed.[16] On 25 November 1400, Min Swe became king of Ava.[17] He assumed the title of Minkhaung (မင်းခေါင်; "Foremost Lord" or "Paramount Lord").[18]

Early reign Edit

Consolidation of power Edit

Minkhaung spent his first year consolidating his power. He kept Min Yaza as chief minister, and appointed Yaza's son Pauk Hla governor Yamethin, and Yaza's son-in-law Thado Theinkhathu governor of Badon and Tabayin.[19] He also appointed Theiddat governor of Sagaing with the title of Thiri Zeya Thura but stopped short of declaring him his heir-apparent.[19] While Sagaing was a sizable province that used to be an independent kingdom, the younger brother was never satisfied with the reward, and held a "lingering resentment that would later rear its ugly head".[20]

Invasion by Pegu (1401–03) Edit

The succession crisis at Ava did not go unnoticed. The Arakanese raided western Irrawaddy towns. In Pegu, King Razadarit assessed that Minkhaung's hold on power was still weak, and planned to place a nominee of his own. It would be payback for Ava's attempts to dislodge him early in his reign. Throughout 1401, Razadarit prepared an invasion river-borne fleet that could transport not only troops but even horses and elephants.[20] When the dry season began, Hanthawaddy forces invaded by the Irrawaddy river, attacking all the riverside towns and cities, including their main targets, Prome (Pyay) and Ava (Inwa).

The Forty Year's War had resumed after a 10-year hiatus. Initially, Hanthawaddy held the advantage. Ava did not have a navy that could challenge Pegu's massive flotilla. Ava forces had to defend inside the fortified towns along the river: Prome, Myede, Sagu, Salin, Pakhan Nge, Salay, Pagan (Bagan), Talok, Pakhan Gyi, Sagaing and Ava.[21] The Pegu navy held complete control of the Irrawaddy (as far north as Tagaung) but the blockades were not enough to force a surrender. Pegu's attempt to storm the ancient capital of Pagan failed. Minkhaung bought time by asking the monks to broker a truce.[22] Protracted truce negotiations went on from April to c. June/July 1402[23] but the start of rainy season forced Razadarit's hand, and the Hanthawaddy fleet retreated from Ava.[24] Minkhaung's vassals now rallied around him. He was able to assemble a sizable force, which he sent after the rainy season to relieve Prome. The Ava army decisively defeated the invaders south of Prome on 26 December 1402, forcing Pegu to ask for terms about ten days after the battle.[25]

Minkhaung sent an embassy led by Min Yaza to Pegu to negotiate a treaty. He wanted to exact a price from Pegu. After five months of negotiations, the two sides signed a peace treaty. The boundary of their kingdoms was fixed a little to the south of Prome. Pegu agreed to share the customs revenue of Bassein (Pathein), and supply 30 elephants annually. In return, Minkhaung sent his only sister Thupaba Dewi to be queen of Razadarit in a marriage alliance.[26][27]

Expansion Edit

Cis-Salween Shan states (1404–1406) Edit

Minkhaung had come out far stronger from the war. What began as an existential threat to his rule had turned to an agreement that was largely in his favor. In the following years, the king, with the advice of Min Yaza, resumed the expansionist policy of his father in order to restore the Pagan Empire. His first targets were the nearer (cis-Salween) Shan states. According to the Burmese chronicles, the acquisition drive was largely peaceful, and accomplished through diplomatic missions led by Min Yaza to Onbaung (Hsipaw) in 1404/05, Nyaungshwe in 1405/06 and Mohnyin in 1406.[note 2] But the Ming records say that Ava's missions were in fact military expeditions, and that the Ming court became especially concerned after Ava's capture of Mohnyin in 1406 that killed the sawbwa of Mohnyin and his son. On 25 August 1406, the Ming court sent an embassy to Ava to end the "aggression" against the Shan states.[28]

Minkhaung initially brushed off the Chinese concerns. It was not until 1408 when he was about to resume the war with Pegu that he sent an embassy to Nanjing. The Ming records say that the Ava representative offered a formal apology to the emperor for "having occupied" the Ming vassals "without authority" on 28 May 1408; but despite the promise, Ava was encouraging Hsenwi to rebel against the Ming in 1408–1409. By September 1409, the Ming court was considering a punitive action against Ava.[29] The simmering tensions would lead to war between Ava and Ming China between 1412 and 1415.

Arakan (1406) Edit

Despite Chinese concerns, by August 1406, Ava had gained allegiance of all of its surrounding Shan states. Minkhaung now eyed Arakan. The western kingdom was a tributary of Ava between 1373/74 and 1385/86 during his father's reign but escaped Ava's orbit at the start of the Forty Years' War. Using alleged Arakanese raids on Ava's western districts, he sent a 10,000-strong army led by his eldest son Minye Kyawswa to Arakan. On 29 November 1406,[note 3] Ava forces took the Arakanese capital Launggyet, and Min Saw Mon fled to Bengal.[30] Minkhaung appointed Gov. Anawrahta of Kalay king of Arakan.[31]

Heir-apparent selection and its fallout Edit

After Arakan, Minkhaung was riding high. He was greatly impressed by his son's performance, and wanted to make him his heir apparent. With the advice of Min Yaza, he sent away Tarabya's eldest son and potential rival to the throne Prince Min Nyo to Kalay, a frontier state by the Manipur border, as governor. He tried to appease his brother Theiddat, governor of Sagaing, by giving him command of the Northern Cavalry.[32] The king then appointed Minye Kyawswa his heir apparent,[note 4] and married him to Saw Min Hla, a cousin of the groom.[33]

Theiddat felt totally betrayed. The younger brother bitterly complained that Minkhaung would not have become king were it not for him. Min Yaza tried to but could not mollify Theiddat. Minkhaung had Theiddat arrested but later released him after Min Yaza intervened. Shortly after, Theiddat fled to Pegu in 1407.[34][35]

Middle reign Edit

 
Political map of Burma in the 15th century

Deterioration of relations with Pegu Edit

Far more than Ming China, Pegu viewed Ava's acquisition spree with great alarm. Realizing that Pegu was now Ava's only remaining target, Razadarit decided to act. He readily gave shelter to Theiddat although he knew such an action would be regarded as a declaration of war against Ava.[36] He broke the 1403 agreement: Pegu stopped sending the annual shipment of 30 elephants and Ava's share of customs revenue of the Bassein port.[34]

Meanwhile, Minkhaung tried to solidify his hold over Arakan by sending his eldest daughter Saw Pyei Chantha to be the wife of Anawrahta as well as a senior minister to aid the vassal king.[37] He also sent an embassy to Chiang Mai,[38] and a long overdue mission to China in early 1408.[29] According to the Razadarit Ayedawbon chronicle, Razadarit viewed Ava's mission to Chiang Mai as an attempt by Ava to secure its rear, and decided that war was inevitable.[38]

Resumption of war with Pegu (1408–1410) Edit

In March 1408,[note 5] Razadarit sent in an invasion force to Arakan, catching Ava completely by surprise. Its forces had been deployed in the north. The Ava court had not expected Pegu to act first, or an attack on Arakan. Before Ava could send any help, Pegu forces took Launggyet by late March/early April 1408.[note 6] Razadarit had Minkhaung's son-in-law Anawrahta executed, and raised Minkhaung's daughter Pyei Chantha as his queen. Minkhaung was furious. Although the rainy season was just a month away, the king ordered an immediate invasion of the south, overruling his ministers' suggestion to wait until the dry season.[39]

In May 1408, Minkhaung himself led two armies (26,000 men, 2200 horses, 100 elephants), and invaded the southern country.[40] What ensued was a complete disaster. Predictably, Ava forces got bogged down in the swamps of Lower Burma. Three months into the invasion, Ava's troops were running out of supplies due to bad weather as well as Hanthawaddy ambushes on supply lines.[40] For his part, Razadarit could not match Ava's manpower, and ordered two attempts on Minkhaung's life. The first attempt by Hanthawaddy special forces to ambush Minkhaung's small contingent was broken up on the warning by Theiddat who was with the Peguan forces. It turned out that Theiddat could not betray his elder brother. Razadarit had Theiddat executed for the warning.[41] The second attempt nearly succeeded. Razadarit sent a team of commandos led by his top general Lagun Ein to infiltrate the enemy camp. Lagun Ein got inside Minkhaung's tent but refused to kill a sleeping Minkhaung.[41]

At any rate, Ava forces retreated c. August 1408. Razadarit came out and attacked the retreating troops. Ava forces were routed, and Minkhaung's queen Mi-Nauk was captured. Razadarit now had both the mother and the daughter in his harem.[42] Razadarit attempted to pick off Prome by launching an attack on the city on 22 November 1408 but the attack faltered.[43]

Minkhaung was forced to regroup. In December 1409, he again invaded with two armies (14,000 men, 1400 horses, 100 elephants). His armies again could not break through. Five months into the invasion c. May 1410, Razadarit counterattacked. Near Tharrawaddy, Razadarit and Minkhaung faced in battle over elephants, and the Hanthawaddy king drove back Minkhaung. The remaining Ava army was routed; several infantry, cavalry and elephants were captured.[44]

Multi-front war (1410–1415) Edit

After the two consecutive disastrous defeats, a dejected Minkhaung handed over the military leadership to Minye Kyawswa. His eldest son was eager to have a chance to take on Razadarit who held both his mother and sister in his harem. Over the next five years, Minkhaung would call on Minye Kyawswa to wage war against his enemies on multiple fronts: against Hanthawaddy in both Lower Burma and Arakan, and against Ming China and its vassal states in the north. His son proved a gifted commander, and Ava would come closest to reassembling the Pagan Empire.

Lower Burma and Arakan (1410–1412) Edit

Minye Kyawswa brought a fresh thinking to Ava's battle plan. Instead of directly attacking the well-defended Pegu capital region, he would attack what he believed were less defended regions. In late 1410, the prince invaded the Irrawaddy delta by river and land with an army (7000 men, 600 horses, and 40 elephants) and a navy that transported 7000 men. Combined Ava forces proceeded to attack the key delta cities of Myaungmya and Bassein (Pathein). But the prince found that the key delta cities were well fortified and prepared for long sieges.[45] He pulled back his forces to Prome, and invaded Arakan in early 1411. There, he successfully drove out Pegu-installed vassals, and appointed Ava's commanders as governor-generals.[46][47]

Meanwhile, Razadarit sought an alliance with Hsenwi in an attempt to open a second front. After the rainy season of 1411, the Hanthawaddy king sent two armies to Arakan.[48][49] The Ava garrison at Sandoway fell before Ava reinforcements (8000 troops, 300 horses, 30 elephants) led by Minye Kyawswa arrived. Ava forces laid siege to the city for the next three months. But Hsenwi opened a new front by invading Ava territory in the north. The invasion was considered serious enough that Minkhaung recalled Minye Kyawswa from Arakan.[50] After the withdrawal, reinforced Hanthawaddy troops went on to drive out the Ava garrison at Launggyet in 1412.[50] (According to the Arakanese chronicle Rakhine Razawin Thit, Ava retained a toehold at the Khway-thin-taung garrison in northern Arakan until 1416/17.[51] But Ava would not send a major force to Arakan, and the western state would remain a Hanthawaddy vassal at least until Razadarit's death.)

Hsenwi (1412) Edit

Hsenwi's invasion was not just due to Hanthawaddy's urging. The powerful Shan state had been ordered by the Ming court to retaliate against Ava's annexation of Mohnyin six years earlier.[52] It is unclear if Minkhaung and his court realized the gravity of the situation. Even if they did, their actions show they were not concerned about an escalating war against Ming-backed states in their northern border. Minkhaung was determined to teach Hsenwi a lesson. After Minye Kyawswa decisively defeated the Hsenwi force near Wetwin (present-day Pyin Oo Lwin), the king agreed to a plan to attack Hsenwi itself.[52][53]

Minye Kyawswa went on to lay siege to the city of Hsenwi throughout the rainy season of 1412. The Yunnan government sent an army (20,000 men and 2000 cavalry) to relieve the siege. The Ava army then ambushed the larger Chinese army as they came out of the forest. The Chinese army was driven back. Five Chinese commanders, 2000 troops and 1000 horses were taken prisoner.[53][54] Ava wanted to finish off Hsenwi and the siege went on for one more month until c. November 1412. But Pegu came to Hsenwi's aid this time by launching a massive attack on Prome after the rainy season. The attack was serious enough that Minkhaung himself marched with his army to relieve Prome, and ordered Minye Kyawswa to join him on the southern front.[note 7]

Lower Burma (1412–1413) Edit

Over the next four months the father-son team tried to break the Hanthawaddy siege of Prome. They made no meaningful progress until when the Hanthawaddy command suddenly lost its two most senior generals: Gen. Byat Za (natural causes)[55] and Gen. Lagun Ein (KIA).[56] Shaken by the deaths, Razadarit hastily retreated.[57] Minye Kyawswa proposed an immediate invasion of the south. Minkhaung was weary but allowed his son to carry out the plan. In April 1413, Minye Kyawswa took eastern delta towns of Dala–Twante and Dagon. But the Ava advance was halted at the battle of Hmawbi in which Gen. Letya Pyanchi of Prome was mortally wounded. Minkhaung ordered a pause as it was just a month away from the rainy season and the army did not have enough strength.[58][59] The crown prince ignored his father's order, and resumed the march to Pegu in May 1413.[note 8] But the Hanthawaddy defenses stopped Ava forces outside Dala and at Syriam.[60] The fighting paused during the rainy season of 1413.[61] Razadarit again sent emissaries to northern Shan states and Lan Na in search of alliances.[62]

Northern Burma and Maw (1413–1414) Edit

Ava's northern front was never quiet after the siege of Hsenwi. According to the Ming Shilu, the Yongle Emperor ordered another attack on Ava. In 1413, while the main Ava armies were in the south, Chinese-backed Hsenwi forces raided Ava's northern territories, destroying "over 20 cities and stockades". The captured elephants, horses, and other goods were presented at the Chinese capital in September 1413.[52] According to the Burmese chronicles, the attack on Myedu was carried out by another Shan state, Maw (Mong Mao/Mawdon Mawke).[61] As usual, Minkhaung recalled Minye Kyawswa to Ava, and sent his middle son Minye Thihathu to Prome to take over the southern command.[61] At Ava, Minye Kyawswa marched north to take on the Maw forces. His forces defeated Maw forces at Myedu, and chased the enemy to the Chinese border.[33][63]

Lower Burma (1414–1415) Edit

The Ava command apparently considered the victory in the north decisive. Although the Chinese would be back later, Minkhaung and the court now blithely planned a full scale invasion of the south.[63][64] Ava had collected a large invasion force: an army consisted of 8000 men, 200 horses and 80 elephants, and a navy consisting of 13,000 men, and over 1800 ships of all sizes.[65] In October 1414, Minye Kyawswa launched the invasion of the western Irrawaddy delta. Although Hanthawaddy forces put up a spirited defense, Ava forces had gained complete control of the delta by the end of December.[66] Razadarit evacuated Pegu, and moved to Martaban (Mottama). The Ava command planned a pincer movement on Pegu from Toungoo and from Dala.[66] But the attack on Pegu would be delayed as the Chinese forces invaded from the north. Minkhaung managed to send an army which forced the Chinese army to retreat.[note 9]

The Chinese attack provided a much-needed breathing room for Razadarit. He was back in Pegu and planning counterattack by February 1415.[note 10] On 2 March 1415, Razadarit himself led the army to the Dala front.[note 11] On 13 March 1415, the two armies fought at Dala–Twante in one of the most famous battles in Burmese military history. Minye Kyawswa was mortally wounded in the battle.[67] Minkhaung immediately came down with an army, and exhumed his son's body from where Razadarit had given it honorable burial. The remains were solemnly dropped into the waters near Twante.[68] After rampaging through the delta, Minkhaung called off the invasion and left.[68]

Late reign Edit

Minkhaung was totally heartbroken by his eldest son's death. He recalled Thihathu from Prome, and appointed him heir apparent.[69] The war went on languidly for two more campaigns. In 1416–1417, Razadarit tried to pick off Toungoo (Taungoo) but was defeated. In the following dry season, Minkhaung ordered a retaliatory invasion. Ava forces led by Thihathu took the delta, and again forced Razadarit to move to Martaban. They remained in the south for nearly a year. But they could not break through towards Pegu, and had to retreat.[70][71] It was the last campaign during Minkhaung's reign.

The king spent his last years in piety. He died c. October 1421.[note 12] His nemesis Razadarit is said to have lamented when he heard the news of Minkhaung's death. Razadarit died about two months later.[72]

Administration Edit

Minkhaung heavily relied on the advice of his court led by Chief Minister Min Yaza. He continued to employ Pagan's administrative model of solar polities[73] in which the high king ruled the core while semi-independent tributaries, autonomous viceroys, and governors actually controlled day-to-day administration and manpower.[74][75]

Vassal state Region Ruler (duration in office) Notes
Pagan (Bagan) Core Uzana III (by 1380/81–1413)
Tarabya I (1413–c. 1433)[61]
Myinsaing Core Thray Sithu (c. 1386–1426)
Mekkhaya Core ?
Pinle Core Thray Thinkhaya?
Pyinzi Core Nandathingyan (c. 1401–1411/12)
Letya Zeya Thingyan (1411/12–1426)
Pakhan Core Tarabya I (by 1390–1413)[61]
Tarabya II (Minye Kyawhtin) (1413–1426)
Paukmyaing Core Sithu (1402−?)
Wadi Core Thinkhaya
Sagaing North Theiddat (1400–1407)
Thihathu (1408–1413)
Yazathingyan (1413–1450)[76][77]
Amyint North Tuyin Theinzi? (c. 1380–1400s?)[78]
Yazathingyan (1408–1413)[40]
Singu North Letwe?[40]
Baya Gamani (1401–1426, 1427–c. 1450)[79]
Kale (Kalay) North Min Chay-To (1400–c. 1406)[80]
Anawrahta (1406)
Min Nyo (1406–1425)
Mohnyin North vacant (1406–1410)
Thado (1410–1427)
Myedu North Thet-taw-shay (?–1415)[81]
Onbaung Northeast Tho Kyaung Bwa (1404/05–1420s?)
Le Than Bwa (1410s?–1459/60)
Nyaungshwe East Htaw Hmaing Gyi (1405/06–?)[32]
Yamethin Mid Sithu (c. 1401–1413)[82]
Sithu Thihapate (1413–?)[63]
Son of Min Yaza of Wun Zin
Also known as Sithu the Younger
Taungdwin Mid Thihapate II ("Thettawshay Thihapate") (by 1364–c. 1401)[83][84][85]
Thihapate III (c. 1401–1441)[86]
Nyaungyan Mid Baya Kyawhtin (1400s–?)[40]
Sagu Mid Thiri Zeya Kyawhtin (?–1426)[87]
Salin Mid Nawrahta (1390–1426)[87]
Prome (Pyay) South Letya Pyanchi (1390–1413)
Sokkate (1413)
Minye Kyawswa (1413)
Thihathu (1413–1416)
Toungoo (Taungoo) South Min Nemi (1399–1408/09)
Letya Zeya Thingyan (1408/09–1411/12)
Thinkhaya I (1411/12–1415)
Thinkhaya II (1415–1418/19)
Pantaung (1419–1420)
Thinkhaya III (1420–1435)
Launggyet (Arakan) West Anawrahta (1406–1408)
Thray Sithu (1408–1409)
Letya of Phaunglin (North Arakan) (1411–1412)
Sokkate (South Arakan) (1411–1412)
Minkhaung's son-in-law
Viceroy for a few months in 1408–1409
Governor general of North Arakan (Launggyet)
Governor general of South Arakan (Sandoway)

Family Edit

Chronicles state that Minkhaung had five senior queens.[18]

Queen Rank Issue Reference
Shin Saw of Ava Chief queen unknown [88]
Saw Khway Queen of the Northern Palace unknown [88]
Min Pyan Queen of the Middle Palace unknown [88]
Shin Mi-Nauk Queen of the Western Palace (r. 1400−1408) Minye Kyawswa
Saw Pyei Chantha
Thihathu
Minye Kyawhtin
[72]
Shin Bo-Me Queen of the Western Palace (r. 1408−1421?)
Queen of Southern Palace?
none [note 13]
Min Hla Myat Junior queen
wife of Tarabya of Ava
none [72]
Shin Myat Hla Junior queen
married only for five months (1409–10)
none [89]

One of his concubines, Saw Pan-Gon, gave birth to a daughter named Saw Nant-Tha, who was later married to his nephew Prince Min Nyo of Kale Kye-Taung.[72]

Historiography Edit

Source Birth–Death Age Reign Length of reign Reference
Zatadawbon Yazawin (List of Kings of Ava Section) c. 16 October 1369 – 1423 53
(54th year)
1401 – 1423 22 [note 14]
Zatadawbon Yazawin (Horoscopes Section) c. 23 September 1382 [sic] – early 1422 1401 – early 1422 22 [sic] [note 15]
Maha Yazawin c. 1373 – 1422/23 49
(50th year)
June 1401 – 1422/23 21 [note 16]
Mani Yadanabon c. 1369 – 1422/23 53
(54th year)
1400/01 – 1422/23 22 [90]
Yazawin Thit c. 1373 – 1421/22 48
(49th year)
1400 – 1421/22 21 [91]
Hmannan Yazawin June 1401 – 1421/22 21 [sic] [note 17]
Inscriptions 13 September 1373 – ? ? 25 November 1400 – ? [note 18]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Tuesday, 12th waning of Thadingyut 735 ME = 13 September 1373. Scholarship ((Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 55) and (Than Tun 1959)) translates the Burmese date as 13 October 1373 but the translation is most probably incorrect as 13 October 1373 was a Thursday. The Burmese calendar translator used by the Universities Historical Research Center of Myanmar and JC Eades' Southeast Asian Emphemeris (Eades 1989: 112) give 735 ME as a leap year. But according to the inscriptional evidence, it apparently was not. If 735 ME were a leap year, the date Tuesday, 12th waning of Thadingyut would translate to Thursday, 13 October 1373. If 735 ME were a regular year, it would translate to Tuesday, 13 September 1373.
  2. ^ Chronicles (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 224–225) and (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 445–446, 467) say that Nyaungshwe and Mohnyin submitted in 767 ME (1405/06) and 768 ME (1406/07) respectively. According to Ming records, per (Fernquest Autumn 2006: 51), Ava had acquired Bhamo, Mohnyin, and Kalay by 25 August 1406.
  3. ^ (RRT Vol. 2 1999: 9): Monday, 5th waning of Nadaw 768 ME = Monday, 29 November 1406.
  4. ^ Chronicles do not agree on when Minye Kyawswa became crown prince. (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 33–34) says he was appointed crown prince in late 773 ME (early 1412) after the second Arakan campaign of 1411–1412. But (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 225–226) and (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 471) say the appointment came after the first Arakan campaign, in 768 ME (1406/07).
  5. ^ (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 228, 235): Late Tagu 769 ME = 25 February 1408 to 24 March 1408
  6. ^ Chronicles reports slightly different dates for Pegu's takeover of Launggyet. (Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 334) says Pegu forces had taken Arakan by Kason 770 ME (29 March 1408 to 23 April 1408); (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 228) gives Late Tagu 969 ME (25 February 1408 to 24 March 1408); (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 477) gives Late Kason 769 ME (25 March to 28 March 1408).
  7. ^ (Pan Hla 2005: 278): In Binnya Dala's Burmese language version of the Razadarit Ayedawbon chronicle, Minkhaung marched to Prome on the 5th waxing of Nadaw 770 ME (27 November 1408) after recalling Minye Kyawswa from Hsenwi to join him in the south. The 770 ME is an error according to standard chronicles. The invasion of the south after Hsenwi should be 774 ME, according to Hmannan (Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 8–9). Minkhaung may have marched to Prome, starting on the 5th waxing of Nadaw 774 ME (8 November 1412).
  8. ^ (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 244–245): Nayon 775 ME (30 April 1413 to 28 May 1413).
  9. ^ (Fernquest Autumn 2006: 53–54): Ming records do not provide any details about the expedition. The Burmese chronicles (Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 28–29) say that when the Ava army and the Chinese army met, both sides agreed to a duel on horseback. Smin Bayan, who had entered Ava's service, defeated the Chinese commander, after which the Chinese army retreated.
  10. ^ (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 253): Tabodwe 776 ME = 10 January 1415 to 7 February 1415
  11. ^ (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 256): Full moon of Tabaung 776 ME = 22 February 1415; 8th waning of Tabaung 776 ME = 2 March 1415
  12. ^ The approximate date of death based on Yazawin Thit and Razadarit Ayedawbon chronicles. (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 264–265) says that Minkhaung died in his 49th year (at age 48) in 783 ME (30 March 1421 to 29 March 1422), and that Razadarit died about two months after Minkhaung in the same calendar year (783 ME). This means Minkhaung died between his 48th birthday on the 12th waning of Thadingyut 783 ME (22 September 1421) and the last day of 783 ME (29 March 1422). Razadarit Ayedawbon (Pan Hla 2005: 356) says Razadarit died in 783 ME in his 54th year. This means Razadarit died before his 54th birthday on 8th waxing of Tabodwe 783 ME (30 December 1421).
    Because Minkhaung died about two months before Razadarit, he most probably had died by October 1421 and Razadarit about December 1421.
  13. ^ (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 265) says Bo-Me was Queen of the Southern Palace. However, a 1409 stone inscription donated by Shin Saw of Ava states that Shin Saw was the chief queen and her two other sisters Saw Khway and Min Pyan were principal queens. If Bo-Me did become the chief queen, it must be later than 1409.
  14. ^ (Zata 1960: 46): Tuesday, 8th month (Tazaungmon) of 731 ME (1 to 30 October 1369)
  15. ^ (Zata 1960: 73): Minkhaung was born on Tuesday, 15th nekkhat of 7th month (Thadingyut) of 744 ME [sic].
    Minkhaung's reign is derived from the horoscope for Tarabya per (Zata 1960: 73), which says Tarabya died in 1401, and that for Thihathu per (Zata 1960: 74) which says Thihathu came to power in 1421/22.
  16. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 305) and (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 55)
  17. ^ (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 436, 439) and (Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 51–52). Mixing Maha Yazawin's reign dates with Yazawin Thit's age of 48 (49th year).
  18. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 55): Tuesday, 12th waning of Thadingyut 735 ME (13 September 1373; (Than Tun 1959: 128): 25 November 1400

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 285
  2. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 410
  3. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 439–440
  4. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 435
  5. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 418
  6. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 418, 435
  7. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 293
  8. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 295
  9. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 296
  10. ^ a b c Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 424
  11. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 429–431
  12. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 199–200
  13. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 432–433
  14. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 441
  15. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 438
  16. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 439
  17. ^ Than Tun 1959: 128
  18. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 440
  19. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 441–443
  20. ^ a b Fernquest Spring 2006: 10
  21. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 446–447
  22. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 447–455
  23. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 452
  24. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 455–456
  25. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 219–221
  26. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 469–470
  27. ^ Harvey 1925: 89–90
  28. ^ Fernquest autumn 2006: 51
  29. ^ a b Fernquest autumn 2006: 51–52
  30. ^ RRT Vol. 2 1999: 9
  31. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 445
  32. ^ a b Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 225
  33. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 21
  34. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 473–474
  35. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 227
  36. ^ Htin Aung 1967: 91
  37. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 226
  38. ^ a b Razadarit Ayedawbon 2005: 237–238
  39. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 229
  40. ^ a b c d e Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 476–477
  41. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 481–483
  42. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 484–485
  43. ^ (Razadarit Ayedawbon 2005: 278): 5th waxing of Nadaw 770 ME = 22 November 1408
  44. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 2–3
  45. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 237
  46. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 29
  47. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 238
  48. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 30
  49. ^ Razadarit Ayedawbon 2005: 274
  50. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 7–8
  51. ^ RRT Vol. 2 1999: 10
  52. ^ a b c Fernquest Autumn 2006: 53–54
  53. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 9
  54. ^ Goh 2009: 24
  55. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 12
  56. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 242
  57. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 13–14
  58. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 244
  59. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 15–16
  60. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 244–245
  61. ^ a b c d e Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 246
  62. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 16
  63. ^ a b c Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 247
  64. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 21–22
  65. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 22
  66. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 27
  67. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 42–43
  68. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 48–49
  69. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 50
  70. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 264
  71. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 51
  72. ^ a b c d Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 265
  73. ^ Aung-Thwin and Aung-Thwin 2012: 109
  74. ^ Lieberman 2003: 35
  75. ^ Aung-Thwin 1985: 99–101
  76. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 246, 290
  77. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 20, 89
  78. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 414
  79. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 7–8, 66
  80. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 225 footnote 3
  81. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 259
  82. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 212, 247
  83. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 398, 400
  84. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 62–63
  85. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 212
  86. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 79
  87. ^ a b Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 61
  88. ^ a b c Than Tun 1959: 125–126
  89. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 81
  90. ^ Mani Yadanabon 2009: 65, 181
  91. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 264, 266

Bibliography Edit

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Minkhaung I
Born: 13 September 1373 Died: c. October 1421
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Ava
25 November 1400 – c. October 1421
Succeeded by
Royal titles
New title Governor of Pyinzi
c. April 1385 – 25 November 1400
Succeeded by
Nandathingyan

minkhaung, other, people, named, minkhaung, minkhaung, disambiguation, burmese, ပထမ, မင, pətʰəma, ɡàʊɰ, also, spelled, mingaung, 1373, 1421, king, from, 1400, 1421, best, remembered, burmese, history, epic, struggles, against, king, razadarit, hanthawaddy, peg. For other people named Minkhaung see Minkhaung disambiguation Minkhaung I of Ava Burmese ပထမ မင ခ င petʰema mɪ ɰ ɡaʊɰ also spelled Mingaung 1373 1421 was king of Ava from 1400 to 1421 He is best remembered in Burmese history for his epic struggles against King Razadarit of Hanthawaddy Pegu in the Forty Years War 1385 1424 As king Minkhaung continued his father Swa Saw Ke s policy to restore the Pagan Empire Under the military leadership of his eldest son Minye Kyawswa Ava nearly succeeded While he ultimately failed to conquer Hanthawaddy and Launggyet Arakan he was able to bring in most of cis Salween Shan states to the Ava orbit Minkhaung I ပထမ မင ခ င King of AvaReign25 November 1400 c October 1421PredecessorTarabyaSuccessorThihathuChief MinisterMin YazaGovernor of PyinziReignc April 1385 25 November 1400Predecessornew officeSuccessorNandathingyanBorn13 September 1373 Tuesday 12th waning of Thadingyut 735 MEGazun Neint Ava KingdomDiedc October 1421 aged 48 c Nadaw 783 MEAva Inwa Ava KingdomConsortShin Saw Saw Khway Min Pyan Shin Mi Nauk Shin Bo MeIssueamong others Minye Kyawswa Saw Pyei Chantha Thihathu Minye Kyawhtin Saw Nant ThaHouseAvaFatherSwa Saw KeMotherSaw BezaReligionTheravada BuddhismThis article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script Contents 1 Early life 2 Governor of Pyinzi 3 Marriage 4 Accession 5 Early reign 5 1 Consolidation of power 5 2 Invasion by Pegu 1401 03 5 3 Expansion 5 3 1 Cis Salween Shan states 1404 1406 5 3 2 Arakan 1406 5 4 Heir apparent selection and its fallout 6 Middle reign 6 1 Deterioration of relations with Pegu 6 2 Resumption of war with Pegu 1408 1410 6 3 Multi front war 1410 1415 6 3 1 Lower Burma and Arakan 1410 1412 6 3 2 Hsenwi 1412 6 3 3 Lower Burma 1412 1413 6 3 4 Northern Burma and Maw 1413 1414 6 3 5 Lower Burma 1414 1415 7 Late reign 8 Administration 9 Family 10 Historiography 11 Notes 12 References 13 BibliographyEarly life Edit nbsp Swe s childhood rival Tarabya portrayed as Mintara natThe future king was born in a small village called Gazun Nyeint present day northern Sagaing Region on 13 September 1373 note 1 His father King Swa Saw Ke of Ava had met his commoner mother Saw Beza earlier in the year during a military campaign against Mohnyin 1 2 Chronicles say that after giving birth to the child Beza showed up at the Ava palace to present the male son as instructed to by the king The child was named Min Swe မင ဆ mɪ ɴ sʰwe The king made Beza a junior queen and had two more children with her Theiddat and Thupaba Dewi 1 2 Min Swe grew up in Ava Inwa until he was eight His life at the palace was not all well Their older half brother Tarabya who was born to a senior queen constantly bullied both Swe and Theiddat The bullying became a serious problem and in 1381 82 the king had to send away Swe and Theiddat to a small monastery near Pinle to study under the chief primate Thinga Yaza The two princes studied under the learned monk and traveled around the region including Taungdwingyi Minbu Ngape and Padein with their attendants 3 Governor of Pyinzi EditCirca April 1385 Swa appointed Tarabya his heir apparent 4 The king kept Swe out of Tarabya s reach and appointed his 11 year old son governor of Pyinzi a small town about 85 km southwest of Ava He also gave Swe command of the 33 member Pyinzi cavalry 3 Swe would rule Pyinzi for the next 15 years Chronicles have little information about Swe s period as governor except that his rivalry with Tarabya continued and that the rivalry may have cost Ava s best chance of defeating Hanthawaddy Pegu nbsp Key locations in the Ava Hanthawaddy War 1385 1391 In 1385 the king ordered his two eldest sons to lead a two pronged invasion of the southern kingdom in what would become known as the Forty Years War Tarabya commanded the First Army 7000 infantry 500 cavalry 20 elephants while Swe led the Second Army 6000 infantry 500 cavalry 20 elephants 5 The two princes were advised by Ava s best commanders including Thilawa of Yamethin and Theinkhathu Saw Hnaung 6 The Ava command expected an easy victory over an overpowered opponent But Ava forces could not break through well organized Peguan defenses for five months Then King Razadarit of Hanthawaddy made a tactical error by coming out of his fortified capital to attack Ava positions near Pankyaw Tarabya s army pounced driving back and pursuing Razadarit s army Meanwhile Swe s army had positioned in the path of retreat of the Hanthawaddy army Tarabya the overall commander in chief sent a messenger ordering Swe to hold his position and not to engage Razadarit until his army could reach the scene But Swe ignored the order and the advice of his seasoned commanders and ordered his troops to engage Razadarit s army defeated Swe s premature attack and got back inside Pegu Five days later with the rainy season approaching the invasion was called off 7 Ava would come to rue the missed opportunity Swa kept Swe from the next invasion in the following dry season Swe was assigned to guard the capital while Swa and Tarabya invaded the southern country again 8 The second invasion fared no better Razadarit committed no more errors and hunkered down Ava troops could not break through Pegu s defenses and had to retreat before the rainy season arrived 9 10 Swe was to get his chance again to go to the front in the 1390 91 campaign But this time he commanded just a regiment and was directly under the command of Tarabya At any rate their army could not break through the Pegu defenses at Pankyaw although the campaign ended in a truce 11 Marriage Edit nbsp Shin Mi Nauk portrayed as the Anauk Mibaya natIn 1389 90 Swe was married to Princess Shin Mi Nauk daughter of the chief of Mohnyin in a marriage of state 10 The marriage was part of the effort by Ava and Mohnyin to mend their fences after the 1387 88 war between the two states 12 On the advice of Chief Minister Min Yaza King Swa selected Swe to marry Mi Nauk 10 While the peace with Mohnyin did not last Ava and Mohnyin were to fight another war just three years later 13 the marriage between Swe and Mi Nauk lasted The couple had four children at Pyinzi Minye Kyawswa Saw Pyei Chantha Minye Thihathu and Minye Kyawhtin 14 Accession EditIn April 1400 King Swa Saw Ke died and Tarabya ascended the throne The new king kept his two half brothers at an arm s length Neither Swe nor Theiddat controlled a sizable army When Tarabya became mentally unstable about five months into his reign and other pretenders began circling the throne Swe was not in a strong enough position to challenge them In November Gov Thihapate of Tagaung assassinated Tarabya and tried to seize the throne But the court executed the usurper and offered the throne to Min Swe 15 But Swe was concerned about Gov Maha Pyauk of Yamethin who controlled a sizable army and told the court to offer the throne to Pyauk instead Theiddat implored Swe to reconsider When his brother still refused Theiddat took matters into his own hand Theiddat and his small band of men ambushed Pyauk s much bigger army near Ava while Pyauk was not expecting Pyauk was killed 16 On 25 November 1400 Min Swe became king of Ava 17 He assumed the title of Minkhaung မင ခ င Foremost Lord or Paramount Lord 18 Early reign EditConsolidation of power Edit Minkhaung spent his first year consolidating his power He kept Min Yaza as chief minister and appointed Yaza s son Pauk Hla governor Yamethin and Yaza s son in law Thado Theinkhathu governor of Badon and Tabayin 19 He also appointed Theiddat governor of Sagaing with the title of Thiri Zeya Thura but stopped short of declaring him his heir apparent 19 While Sagaing was a sizable province that used to be an independent kingdom the younger brother was never satisfied with the reward and held a lingering resentment that would later rear its ugly head 20 Invasion by Pegu 1401 03 Edit The succession crisis at Ava did not go unnoticed The Arakanese raided western Irrawaddy towns In Pegu King Razadarit assessed that Minkhaung s hold on power was still weak and planned to place a nominee of his own It would be payback for Ava s attempts to dislodge him early in his reign Throughout 1401 Razadarit prepared an invasion river borne fleet that could transport not only troops but even horses and elephants 20 When the dry season began Hanthawaddy forces invaded by the Irrawaddy river attacking all the riverside towns and cities including their main targets Prome Pyay and Ava Inwa The Forty Year s War had resumed after a 10 year hiatus Initially Hanthawaddy held the advantage Ava did not have a navy that could challenge Pegu s massive flotilla Ava forces had to defend inside the fortified towns along the river Prome Myede Sagu Salin Pakhan Nge Salay Pagan Bagan Talok Pakhan Gyi Sagaing and Ava 21 The Pegu navy held complete control of the Irrawaddy as far north as Tagaung but the blockades were not enough to force a surrender Pegu s attempt to storm the ancient capital of Pagan failed Minkhaung bought time by asking the monks to broker a truce 22 Protracted truce negotiations went on from April to c June July 1402 23 but the start of rainy season forced Razadarit s hand and the Hanthawaddy fleet retreated from Ava 24 Minkhaung s vassals now rallied around him He was able to assemble a sizable force which he sent after the rainy season to relieve Prome The Ava army decisively defeated the invaders south of Prome on 26 December 1402 forcing Pegu to ask for terms about ten days after the battle 25 Minkhaung sent an embassy led by Min Yaza to Pegu to negotiate a treaty He wanted to exact a price from Pegu After five months of negotiations the two sides signed a peace treaty The boundary of their kingdoms was fixed a little to the south of Prome Pegu agreed to share the customs revenue of Bassein Pathein and supply 30 elephants annually In return Minkhaung sent his only sister Thupaba Dewi to be queen of Razadarit in a marriage alliance 26 27 Expansion Edit Cis Salween Shan states 1404 1406 Edit Minkhaung had come out far stronger from the war What began as an existential threat to his rule had turned to an agreement that was largely in his favor In the following years the king with the advice of Min Yaza resumed the expansionist policy of his father in order to restore the Pagan Empire His first targets were the nearer cis Salween Shan states According to the Burmese chronicles the acquisition drive was largely peaceful and accomplished through diplomatic missions led by Min Yaza to Onbaung Hsipaw in 1404 05 Nyaungshwe in 1405 06 and Mohnyin in 1406 note 2 But the Ming records say that Ava s missions were in fact military expeditions and that the Ming court became especially concerned after Ava s capture of Mohnyin in 1406 that killed the sawbwa of Mohnyin and his son On 25 August 1406 the Ming court sent an embassy to Ava to end the aggression against the Shan states 28 Minkhaung initially brushed off the Chinese concerns It was not until 1408 when he was about to resume the war with Pegu that he sent an embassy to Nanjing The Ming records say that the Ava representative offered a formal apology to the emperor for having occupied the Ming vassals without authority on 28 May 1408 but despite the promise Ava was encouraging Hsenwi to rebel against the Ming in 1408 1409 By September 1409 the Ming court was considering a punitive action against Ava 29 The simmering tensions would lead to war between Ava and Ming China between 1412 and 1415 Arakan 1406 Edit Despite Chinese concerns by August 1406 Ava had gained allegiance of all of its surrounding Shan states Minkhaung now eyed Arakan The western kingdom was a tributary of Ava between 1373 74 and 1385 86 during his father s reign but escaped Ava s orbit at the start of the Forty Years War Using alleged Arakanese raids on Ava s western districts he sent a 10 000 strong army led by his eldest son Minye Kyawswa to Arakan On 29 November 1406 note 3 Ava forces took the Arakanese capital Launggyet and Min Saw Mon fled to Bengal 30 Minkhaung appointed Gov Anawrahta of Kalay king of Arakan 31 Heir apparent selection and its fallout Edit After Arakan Minkhaung was riding high He was greatly impressed by his son s performance and wanted to make him his heir apparent With the advice of Min Yaza he sent away Tarabya s eldest son and potential rival to the throne Prince Min Nyo to Kalay a frontier state by the Manipur border as governor He tried to appease his brother Theiddat governor of Sagaing by giving him command of the Northern Cavalry 32 The king then appointed Minye Kyawswa his heir apparent note 4 and married him to Saw Min Hla a cousin of the groom 33 Theiddat felt totally betrayed The younger brother bitterly complained that Minkhaung would not have become king were it not for him Min Yaza tried to but could not mollify Theiddat Minkhaung had Theiddat arrested but later released him after Min Yaza intervened Shortly after Theiddat fled to Pegu in 1407 34 35 Middle reign Edit nbsp Political map of Burma in the 15th centuryDeterioration of relations with Pegu Edit Far more than Ming China Pegu viewed Ava s acquisition spree with great alarm Realizing that Pegu was now Ava s only remaining target Razadarit decided to act He readily gave shelter to Theiddat although he knew such an action would be regarded as a declaration of war against Ava 36 He broke the 1403 agreement Pegu stopped sending the annual shipment of 30 elephants and Ava s share of customs revenue of the Bassein port 34 Meanwhile Minkhaung tried to solidify his hold over Arakan by sending his eldest daughter Saw Pyei Chantha to be the wife of Anawrahta as well as a senior minister to aid the vassal king 37 He also sent an embassy to Chiang Mai 38 and a long overdue mission to China in early 1408 29 According to the Razadarit Ayedawbon chronicle Razadarit viewed Ava s mission to Chiang Mai as an attempt by Ava to secure its rear and decided that war was inevitable 38 Resumption of war with Pegu 1408 1410 Edit In March 1408 note 5 Razadarit sent in an invasion force to Arakan catching Ava completely by surprise Its forces had been deployed in the north The Ava court had not expected Pegu to act first or an attack on Arakan Before Ava could send any help Pegu forces took Launggyet by late March early April 1408 note 6 Razadarit had Minkhaung s son in law Anawrahta executed and raised Minkhaung s daughter Pyei Chantha as his queen Minkhaung was furious Although the rainy season was just a month away the king ordered an immediate invasion of the south overruling his ministers suggestion to wait until the dry season 39 In May 1408 Minkhaung himself led two armies 26 000 men 2200 horses 100 elephants and invaded the southern country 40 What ensued was a complete disaster Predictably Ava forces got bogged down in the swamps of Lower Burma Three months into the invasion Ava s troops were running out of supplies due to bad weather as well as Hanthawaddy ambushes on supply lines 40 For his part Razadarit could not match Ava s manpower and ordered two attempts on Minkhaung s life The first attempt by Hanthawaddy special forces to ambush Minkhaung s small contingent was broken up on the warning by Theiddat who was with the Peguan forces It turned out that Theiddat could not betray his elder brother Razadarit had Theiddat executed for the warning 41 The second attempt nearly succeeded Razadarit sent a team of commandos led by his top general Lagun Ein to infiltrate the enemy camp Lagun Ein got inside Minkhaung s tent but refused to kill a sleeping Minkhaung 41 At any rate Ava forces retreated c August 1408 Razadarit came out and attacked the retreating troops Ava forces were routed and Minkhaung s queen Mi Nauk was captured Razadarit now had both the mother and the daughter in his harem 42 Razadarit attempted to pick off Prome by launching an attack on the city on 22 November 1408 but the attack faltered 43 Minkhaung was forced to regroup In December 1409 he again invaded with two armies 14 000 men 1400 horses 100 elephants His armies again could not break through Five months into the invasion c May 1410 Razadarit counterattacked Near Tharrawaddy Razadarit and Minkhaung faced in battle over elephants and the Hanthawaddy king drove back Minkhaung The remaining Ava army was routed several infantry cavalry and elephants were captured 44 Multi front war 1410 1415 Edit After the two consecutive disastrous defeats a dejected Minkhaung handed over the military leadership to Minye Kyawswa His eldest son was eager to have a chance to take on Razadarit who held both his mother and sister in his harem Over the next five years Minkhaung would call on Minye Kyawswa to wage war against his enemies on multiple fronts against Hanthawaddy in both Lower Burma and Arakan and against Ming China and its vassal states in the north His son proved a gifted commander and Ava would come closest to reassembling the Pagan Empire Lower Burma and Arakan 1410 1412 Edit Minye Kyawswa brought a fresh thinking to Ava s battle plan Instead of directly attacking the well defended Pegu capital region he would attack what he believed were less defended regions In late 1410 the prince invaded the Irrawaddy delta by river and land with an army 7000 men 600 horses and 40 elephants and a navy that transported 7000 men Combined Ava forces proceeded to attack the key delta cities of Myaungmya and Bassein Pathein But the prince found that the key delta cities were well fortified and prepared for long sieges 45 He pulled back his forces to Prome and invaded Arakan in early 1411 There he successfully drove out Pegu installed vassals and appointed Ava s commanders as governor generals 46 47 Meanwhile Razadarit sought an alliance with Hsenwi in an attempt to open a second front After the rainy season of 1411 the Hanthawaddy king sent two armies to Arakan 48 49 The Ava garrison at Sandoway fell before Ava reinforcements 8000 troops 300 horses 30 elephants led by Minye Kyawswa arrived Ava forces laid siege to the city for the next three months But Hsenwi opened a new front by invading Ava territory in the north The invasion was considered serious enough that Minkhaung recalled Minye Kyawswa from Arakan 50 After the withdrawal reinforced Hanthawaddy troops went on to drive out the Ava garrison at Launggyet in 1412 50 According to the Arakanese chronicle Rakhine Razawin Thit Ava retained a toehold at the Khway thin taung garrison in northern Arakan until 1416 17 51 But Ava would not send a major force to Arakan and the western state would remain a Hanthawaddy vassal at least until Razadarit s death Hsenwi 1412 Edit Hsenwi s invasion was not just due to Hanthawaddy s urging The powerful Shan state had been ordered by the Ming court to retaliate against Ava s annexation of Mohnyin six years earlier 52 It is unclear if Minkhaung and his court realized the gravity of the situation Even if they did their actions show they were not concerned about an escalating war against Ming backed states in their northern border Minkhaung was determined to teach Hsenwi a lesson After Minye Kyawswa decisively defeated the Hsenwi force near Wetwin present day Pyin Oo Lwin the king agreed to a plan to attack Hsenwi itself 52 53 Minye Kyawswa went on to lay siege to the city of Hsenwi throughout the rainy season of 1412 The Yunnan government sent an army 20 000 men and 2000 cavalry to relieve the siege The Ava army then ambushed the larger Chinese army as they came out of the forest The Chinese army was driven back Five Chinese commanders 2000 troops and 1000 horses were taken prisoner 53 54 Ava wanted to finish off Hsenwi and the siege went on for one more month until c November 1412 But Pegu came to Hsenwi s aid this time by launching a massive attack on Prome after the rainy season The attack was serious enough that Minkhaung himself marched with his army to relieve Prome and ordered Minye Kyawswa to join him on the southern front note 7 Lower Burma 1412 1413 Edit Over the next four months the father son team tried to break the Hanthawaddy siege of Prome They made no meaningful progress until when the Hanthawaddy command suddenly lost its two most senior generals Gen Byat Za natural causes 55 and Gen Lagun Ein KIA 56 Shaken by the deaths Razadarit hastily retreated 57 Minye Kyawswa proposed an immediate invasion of the south Minkhaung was weary but allowed his son to carry out the plan In April 1413 Minye Kyawswa took eastern delta towns of Dala Twante and Dagon But the Ava advance was halted at the battle of Hmawbi in which Gen Letya Pyanchi of Prome was mortally wounded Minkhaung ordered a pause as it was just a month away from the rainy season and the army did not have enough strength 58 59 The crown prince ignored his father s order and resumed the march to Pegu in May 1413 note 8 But the Hanthawaddy defenses stopped Ava forces outside Dala and at Syriam 60 The fighting paused during the rainy season of 1413 61 Razadarit again sent emissaries to northern Shan states and Lan Na in search of alliances 62 Northern Burma and Maw 1413 1414 Edit Ava s northern front was never quiet after the siege of Hsenwi According to the Ming Shilu the Yongle Emperor ordered another attack on Ava In 1413 while the main Ava armies were in the south Chinese backed Hsenwi forces raided Ava s northern territories destroying over 20 cities and stockades The captured elephants horses and other goods were presented at the Chinese capital in September 1413 52 According to the Burmese chronicles the attack on Myedu was carried out by another Shan state Maw Mong Mao Mawdon Mawke 61 As usual Minkhaung recalled Minye Kyawswa to Ava and sent his middle son Minye Thihathu to Prome to take over the southern command 61 At Ava Minye Kyawswa marched north to take on the Maw forces His forces defeated Maw forces at Myedu and chased the enemy to the Chinese border 33 63 Lower Burma 1414 1415 Edit The Ava command apparently considered the victory in the north decisive Although the Chinese would be back later Minkhaung and the court now blithely planned a full scale invasion of the south 63 64 Ava had collected a large invasion force an army consisted of 8000 men 200 horses and 80 elephants and a navy consisting of 13 000 men and over 1800 ships of all sizes 65 In October 1414 Minye Kyawswa launched the invasion of the western Irrawaddy delta Although Hanthawaddy forces put up a spirited defense Ava forces had gained complete control of the delta by the end of December 66 Razadarit evacuated Pegu and moved to Martaban Mottama The Ava command planned a pincer movement on Pegu from Toungoo and from Dala 66 But the attack on Pegu would be delayed as the Chinese forces invaded from the north Minkhaung managed to send an army which forced the Chinese army to retreat note 9 The Chinese attack provided a much needed breathing room for Razadarit He was back in Pegu and planning counterattack by February 1415 note 10 On 2 March 1415 Razadarit himself led the army to the Dala front note 11 On 13 March 1415 the two armies fought at Dala Twante in one of the most famous battles in Burmese military history Minye Kyawswa was mortally wounded in the battle 67 Minkhaung immediately came down with an army and exhumed his son s body from where Razadarit had given it honorable burial The remains were solemnly dropped into the waters near Twante 68 After rampaging through the delta Minkhaung called off the invasion and left 68 Late reign EditMinkhaung was totally heartbroken by his eldest son s death He recalled Thihathu from Prome and appointed him heir apparent 69 The war went on languidly for two more campaigns In 1416 1417 Razadarit tried to pick off Toungoo Taungoo but was defeated In the following dry season Minkhaung ordered a retaliatory invasion Ava forces led by Thihathu took the delta and again forced Razadarit to move to Martaban They remained in the south for nearly a year But they could not break through towards Pegu and had to retreat 70 71 It was the last campaign during Minkhaung s reign The king spent his last years in piety He died c October 1421 note 12 His nemesis Razadarit is said to have lamented when he heard the news of Minkhaung s death Razadarit died about two months later 72 Administration EditMinkhaung heavily relied on the advice of his court led by Chief Minister Min Yaza He continued to employ Pagan s administrative model of solar polities 73 in which the high king ruled the core while semi independent tributaries autonomous viceroys and governors actually controlled day to day administration and manpower 74 75 Vassal state Region Ruler duration in office NotesPagan Bagan Core Uzana III by 1380 81 1413 Tarabya I 1413 c 1433 61 Myinsaing Core Thray Sithu c 1386 1426 Mekkhaya Core Pinle Core Thray Thinkhaya Pyinzi Core Nandathingyan c 1401 1411 12 Letya Zeya Thingyan 1411 12 1426 Pakhan Core Tarabya I by 1390 1413 61 Tarabya II Minye Kyawhtin 1413 1426 Paukmyaing Core Sithu 1402 Wadi Core ThinkhayaSagaing North Theiddat 1400 1407 Thihathu 1408 1413 Yazathingyan 1413 1450 76 77 Amyint North Tuyin Theinzi c 1380 1400s 78 Yazathingyan 1408 1413 40 Singu North Letwe 40 Baya Gamani 1401 1426 1427 c 1450 79 Kale Kalay North Min Chay To 1400 c 1406 80 Anawrahta 1406 Min Nyo 1406 1425 Mohnyin North vacant 1406 1410 Thado 1410 1427 Myedu North Thet taw shay 1415 81 Onbaung Northeast Tho Kyaung Bwa 1404 05 1420s Le Than Bwa 1410s 1459 60 Nyaungshwe East Htaw Hmaing Gyi 1405 06 32 Yamethin Mid Sithu c 1401 1413 82 Sithu Thihapate 1413 63 Son of Min Yaza of Wun Zin Also known as Sithu the YoungerTaungdwin Mid Thihapate II Thettawshay Thihapate by 1364 c 1401 83 84 85 Thihapate III c 1401 1441 86 Nyaungyan Mid Baya Kyawhtin 1400s 40 Sagu Mid Thiri Zeya Kyawhtin 1426 87 Salin Mid Nawrahta 1390 1426 87 Prome Pyay South Letya Pyanchi 1390 1413 Sokkate 1413 Minye Kyawswa 1413 Thihathu 1413 1416 Toungoo Taungoo South Min Nemi 1399 1408 09 Letya Zeya Thingyan 1408 09 1411 12 Thinkhaya I 1411 12 1415 Thinkhaya II 1415 1418 19 Pantaung 1419 1420 Thinkhaya III 1420 1435 Launggyet Arakan West Anawrahta 1406 1408 Thray Sithu 1408 1409 Letya of Phaunglin North Arakan 1411 1412 Sokkate South Arakan 1411 1412 Minkhaung s son in law Viceroy for a few months in 1408 1409 Governor general of North Arakan Launggyet Governor general of South Arakan Sandoway Family EditChronicles state that Minkhaung had five senior queens 18 Queen Rank Issue ReferenceShin Saw of Ava Chief queen unknown 88 Saw Khway Queen of the Northern Palace unknown 88 Min Pyan Queen of the Middle Palace unknown 88 Shin Mi Nauk Queen of the Western Palace r 1400 1408 Minye Kyawswa Saw Pyei Chantha Thihathu Minye Kyawhtin 72 Shin Bo Me Queen of the Western Palace r 1408 1421 Queen of Southern Palace none note 13 Min Hla Myat Junior queen wife of Tarabya of Ava none 72 Shin Myat Hla Junior queen married only for five months 1409 10 none 89 One of his concubines Saw Pan Gon gave birth to a daughter named Saw Nant Tha who was later married to his nephew Prince Min Nyo of Kale Kye Taung 72 Historiography EditSource Birth Death Age Reign Length of reign ReferenceZatadawbon Yazawin List of Kings of Ava Section c 16 October 1369 1423 53 54th year 1401 1423 22 note 14 Zatadawbon Yazawin Horoscopes Section c 23 September 1382 sic early 1422 1401 early 1422 22 sic note 15 Maha Yazawin c 1373 1422 23 49 50th year June 1401 1422 23 21 note 16 Mani Yadanabon c 1369 1422 23 53 54th year 1400 01 1422 23 22 90 Yazawin Thit c 1373 1421 22 48 49th year 1400 1421 22 21 91 Hmannan Yazawin June 1401 1421 22 21 sic note 17 Inscriptions 13 September 1373 25 November 1400 note 18 Notes Edit Tuesday 12th waning of Thadingyut 735 ME 13 September 1373 Scholarship Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 55 and Than Tun 1959 translates the Burmese date as 13 October 1373 but the translation is most probably incorrect as 13 October 1373 was a Thursday The Burmese calendar translator used by the Universities Historical Research Center of Myanmar and JC Eades Southeast Asian Emphemeris Eades 1989 112 give 735 ME as a leap year But according to the inscriptional evidence it apparently was not If 735 ME were a leap year the date Tuesday 12th waning of Thadingyut would translate to Thursday 13 October 1373 If 735 ME were a regular year it would translate to Tuesday 13 September 1373 Chronicles Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 224 225 and Hmannan Vol 1 2003 445 446 467 say that Nyaungshwe and Mohnyin submitted in 767 ME 1405 06 and 768 ME 1406 07 respectively According to Ming records per Fernquest Autumn 2006 51 Ava had acquired Bhamo Mohnyin and Kalay by 25 August 1406 RRT Vol 2 1999 9 Monday 5th waning of Nadaw 768 ME Monday 29 November 1406 Chronicles do not agree on when Minye Kyawswa became crown prince Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 33 34 says he was appointed crown prince in late 773 ME early 1412 after the second Arakan campaign of 1411 1412 But Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 225 226 and Hmannan Vol 1 2003 471 say the appointment came after the first Arakan campaign in 768 ME 1406 07 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 228 235 Late Tagu 769 ME 25 February 1408 to 24 March 1408 Chronicles reports slightly different dates for Pegu s takeover of Launggyet Maha Yazawin Vol 1 2006 334 says Pegu forces had taken Arakan by Kason 770 ME 29 March 1408 to 23 April 1408 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 228 gives Late Tagu 969 ME 25 February 1408 to 24 March 1408 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 477 gives Late Kason 769 ME 25 March to 28 March 1408 Pan Hla 2005 278 In Binnya Dala s Burmese language version of the Razadarit Ayedawbon chronicle Minkhaung marched to Prome on the 5th waxing of Nadaw 770 ME 27 November 1408 after recalling Minye Kyawswa from Hsenwi to join him in the south The 770 ME is an error according to standard chronicles The invasion of the south after Hsenwi should be 774 ME according to Hmannan Hmannan Vol 2 2003 8 9 Minkhaung may have marched to Prome starting on the 5th waxing of Nadaw 774 ME 8 November 1412 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 244 245 Nayon 775 ME 30 April 1413 to 28 May 1413 Fernquest Autumn 2006 53 54 Ming records do not provide any details about the expedition The Burmese chronicles Hmannan Vol 2 2003 28 29 say that when the Ava army and the Chinese army met both sides agreed to a duel on horseback Smin Bayan who had entered Ava s service defeated the Chinese commander after which the Chinese army retreated Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 253 Tabodwe 776 ME 10 January 1415 to 7 February 1415 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 256 Full moon of Tabaung 776 ME 22 February 1415 8th waning of Tabaung 776 ME 2 March 1415 The approximate date of death based on Yazawin Thit and Razadarit Ayedawbon chronicles Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 264 265 says that Minkhaung died in his 49th year at age 48 in 783 ME 30 March 1421 to 29 March 1422 and that Razadarit died about two months after Minkhaung in the same calendar year 783 ME This means Minkhaung died between his 48th birthday on the 12th waning of Thadingyut 783 ME 22 September 1421 and the last day of 783 ME 29 March 1422 Razadarit Ayedawbon Pan Hla 2005 356 says Razadarit died in 783 ME in his 54th year This means Razadarit died before his 54th birthday on 8th waxing of Tabodwe 783 ME 30 December 1421 Because Minkhaung died about two months before Razadarit he most probably had died by October 1421 and Razadarit about December 1421 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 265 says Bo Me was Queen of the Southern Palace However a 1409 stone inscription donated by Shin Saw of Ava states that Shin Saw was the chief queen and her two other sisters Saw Khway and Min Pyan were principal queens If Bo Me did become the chief queen it must be later than 1409 Zata 1960 46 Tuesday 8th month Tazaungmon of 731 ME 1 to 30 October 1369 Zata 1960 73 Minkhaung was born on Tuesday 15th nekkhat of 7th month Thadingyut of 744 ME sic Minkhaung s reign is derived from the horoscope for Tarabya per Zata 1960 73 which says Tarabya died in 1401 and that for Thihathu per Zata 1960 74 which says Thihathu came to power in 1421 22 Maha Yazawin Vol 1 2006 305 and Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 55 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 436 439 and Hmannan Vol 2 2003 51 52 Mixing Maha Yazawin s reign dates with Yazawin Thit s age of 48 49th year Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 55 Tuesday 12th waning of Thadingyut 735 ME 13 September 1373 Than Tun 1959 128 25 November 1400References Edit a b Maha Yazawin Vol 1 2006 285 a b Hmannan Vol 1 2003 410 a b Hmannan Vol 1 2003 439 440 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 435 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 418 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 418 435 Maha Yazawin Vol 1 2006 293 Maha Yazawin Vol 1 2006 295 Maha Yazawin Vol 1 2006 296 a b c Hmannan Vol 1 2003 424 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 429 431 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 199 200 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 432 433 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 441 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 438 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 439 Than Tun 1959 128 a b Hmannan Vol 1 2003 440 a b Hmannan Vol 1 2003 441 443 a b Fernquest Spring 2006 10 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 446 447 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 447 455 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 452 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 455 456 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 219 221 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 469 470 Harvey 1925 89 90 Fernquest autumn 2006 51 a b Fernquest autumn 2006 51 52 RRT Vol 2 1999 9 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 445 a b Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 225 a b Hmannan Vol 2 2003 21 a b Hmannan Vol 1 2003 473 474 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 227 Htin Aung 1967 91 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 226 a b Razadarit Ayedawbon 2005 237 238 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 229 a b c d e Hmannan Vol 1 2003 476 477 a b Hmannan Vol 1 2003 481 483 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 484 485 Razadarit Ayedawbon 2005 278 5th waxing of Nadaw 770 ME 22 November 1408 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 2 3 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 237 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 29 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 238 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 30 Razadarit Ayedawbon 2005 274 a b Hmannan Vol 2 2003 7 8 RRT Vol 2 1999 10 a b c Fernquest Autumn 2006 53 54 a b Hmannan Vol 2 2003 9 Goh 2009 24 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 12 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 242 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 13 14 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 244 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 15 16 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 244 245 a b c d e Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 246 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 16 a b c Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 247 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 21 22 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 22 a b Hmannan Vol 2 2003 27 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 42 43 a b Hmannan Vol 2 2003 48 49 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 50 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 264 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 51 a b c d Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 265 Aung Thwin and Aung Thwin 2012 109 Lieberman 2003 35 Aung Thwin 1985 99 101 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 246 290 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 20 89 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 414 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 7 8 66 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 225 footnote 3 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 259 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 212 247 Hmannan Vol 1 2003 398 400 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 62 63 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 212 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 79 a b Hmannan Vol 2 2003 61 a b c Than Tun 1959 125 126 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 81 Mani Yadanabon 2009 65 181 Yazawin Thit Vol 1 2012 264 266Bibliography EditGoh Geok Yian 2009 Connecting and Distancing Southeast Asia and China Institute of Southeast Asian ISBN 9789812308566 Fernquest Jon Spring 2006 Rajadhirat s Mask of Command Military Leadership in Burma c 1348 1421 PDF SBBR 4 1 Fernquest Jon Autumn 2006 Crucible of War Burma and the Ming in the Tai Frontier Zone 1382 1454 PDF SOAS Bulletin of Burma Research 4 2 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 Kala U 2006 1724 Maha Yazawin in Burmese Vol 1 3 4th printing ed Yangon Ya Pyei Publishing Maha Sithu 2012 1798 Myint Swe Kyaw Win Thein Hlaing eds Yazawin Thit in Burmese Vol 1 3 2nd printing ed Yangon Ya Pyei Publishing Royal Historians of Burma 1960 c 1680 U Hla Tin Hla Thamein ed Zatadawbon Yazawin Historical Research Directorate of the Union of Burma Royal Historical Commission of Burma 2003 1832 Hmannan Yazawin in Burmese Vol 1 3 Yangon Ministry of Information Myanmar Sandalinka Shin 2009 1781 Mani Yadanabon in Burmese 4th printing ed Yangon Seit Ku Cho Cho Sandamala Linkara Ashin 1997 1999 1931 Rakhine Razawin Thit in Burmese Vol 1 2 Yangon Tetlan Sarpay Than Tun December 1959 History of Burma A D 1300 1400 Journal of Burma Research Society XLII II Minkhaung IAva KingdomBorn 13 September 1373 Died c October 1421Regnal titlesPreceded byTarabya King of Ava25 November 1400 c October 1421 Succeeded byThihathuRoyal titlesNew title Governor of Pyinzic April 1385 25 November 1400 Succeeded byNandathingyan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Minkhaung I amp oldid 1163230386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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