fbpx
Wikipedia

Nanda Bayin

Nanda Bayin (Burmese: နန္ဒဘုရင်, pronounced [nàɰ̃da̰ bəjɪ̀ɰ̃]; Thai: นันทบุเรง, RTGSNantha Bureng; 9 November 1535 – 30 November [O.S. 20 November] 1600), was king of the Toungoo dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1581 to 1599. He presided over the collapse of the First Toungoo Empire, the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia.

Nanda Bayin
နန္ဒဘုရင်
King of Burma and dominions
Reign10 October 1581 – 19 December 1599
Coronation15 October 1581
PredecessorBayinnaung
SuccessorNyaungyan
Chief MinisterBinnya Kyanhtaw
Suzerain of Lan Na
Reign10 October 1581 – c. February 1597
PredecessorBayinnaung
SuccessorNaresuan
KingNawrahta Minsaw
Suzerain of Siam
Reign10 October 1581 – 3 May 1584
PredecessorBayinnaung
SuccessorDisestablished
KingMaha Thammarachathirat
Suzerain of Lan Xang
Reign10 October 1581 – 19 December 1599[note 1]
PredecessorBayinnaung
SuccessorDisestablished
KingMaha Ouparat (1581–88)
Sen Soulintha (1588–91)
Nokeo Koumane (1591–95)
Vorapita (1596–99)
Born9 November 1535
Tuesday, Full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME
Toungoo (Taungoo)
Died30 November 1600 (aged 65)
Thursday, 10th waning of Tazaungmon 962 ME[1]
Toungoo
Burial1 December 1600
Toungoo Palace
SpouseHanthawaddy Mibaya
Min Phyu
Min Htwe
Thiri Yaza Dewi
Min Taya Medaw
Issue
among others...
Mingyi Swa
Minye Kyawswa II of Ava
Khin Ma Hnaung
Thado Dhamma Yaza III
Maung Saw Pru
HouseToungoo
FatherBayinnaung
MotherAtula Thiri aka Thakin Gyi
ReligionTheravada Buddhism

The eldest son of King Bayinnaung was one of the principal commanders in his father's military campaigns that expanded and defended the empire. As king, Nanda faced the impossible task of keeping his father's "improbable domain" together.[2] He never gained the full support of his father's chosen vassal rulers, who governed what used to be sovereign kingdoms just a few decades earlier. Within the first three years of his reign, both Upper Burma and Siam revolted. Though he could never raise more than a third of his father's troop levels, Nanda could not come to terms with a smaller empire.[3] Between 1584 and 1593, he launched five disastrous invasions of Siam, which increasingly weakened his hold everywhere else. From 1593 onward, it was he who was on the defensive, unable to stop a Siamese invasion that seized the entire Tenasserim coast in 1594–95, or prevent the rest of the vassals from breaking away in 1597. In 1599, Nanda surrendered to the joint forces of Toungoo and Arakan, and was taken prisoner to Toungoo. A year later, he was assassinated by Natshinnaung.[4][5]

Nanda was an energetic king, who probably would have made an "above average" Burmese monarch.[3] But he made the mistake of trying to hold on to an "absurdly overextended" empire built mainly on patron-client relationships.[6] The king's monumental failures taught his 17th-century successors not to overextend their realm and to implement a more centralized administrative system. The Restored Toungoo administrative reforms, which with Konbaung modifications, would last to the end of Burmese monarchy in 1885, had their origins in the failures of Nanda Bayin.[5]

Early life edit

Ancestry edit

Nanda was born to Princess Thakin Gyi and General Kyawhtin Nawrahta (later known as Bayinnaung) at the Toungoo Palace on 9 November 1535.[note 2] The prince hailed from Pagan and Pinya royal lines, and was a grandson of King Mingyi Nyo and nephew of King Tabinshwehti of Toungoo.[note 3] He had one full elder sister, Inwa Mibaya. He was probably at least one quarter Shan.[note 4]

Childhood and education edit

Except for the first three years of his life, he grew up at the Pegu Palace in Pegu, which became the new capital of the burgeoning Toungoo dynasty in 1539. Throughout his youth, his father was away on annual military campaigns with his uncle the king. Nanda nominally became the second in line to the Toungoo throne in 1542 when his father was made heir-apparent by Tabinshwehti. Like his father and uncle, who received a military style education in their youth,[7] he as a Toungoo prince probably received the same kind of military oriented education. Indeed, Nanda was only 13 when he, styled as Zeya Thiha (ဇေယျသီဟ), accompanied his father and his uncle in their campaign in Siam. For his bravery at the battle of Ayutthaya, the young prince was awarded the title of Minye Kyawswa (မင်းရဲကျော်စွာ) by Tabinshwehti.[8]

Heir-apparent edit

Accession edit

On 11 January 1551, Nanda became heir-apparent of the kingdom after eight months of chaos following Tabinshwehti's assassination on 30 April 1550. When the news of the assassination reached Pegu, one of Bayinnaung's half-brothers Minkhaung II refused to recognize Bayinnaung as the rightful successor, and seized the throne. Nanda, his mother and his sister had to flee the city to join Bayinnaung who was away on a campaign in Dala (modern Yangon).[9] There, Nanda became an active member of his father's inner circle who plotted to restore the Toungoo Empire. Bayinnaung's forces first attacked his native Toungoo in September 1550 and took the city on 11 January 1551. Bayinnaung held a coronation ceremony there, and made his 15-year-old son his heir-apparent.[note 5]

Military service edit

For the next 15 years, Bayinnaung directed his energies to restoring and expanding the Toungoo Empire. Everyone in his inner circle was devoted to the main enterprise of the kingdom: warfare. In the early years (1551 to 1555), however, Nanda, still a teenager, was given limited roles, and did not see any combat action. It was only 1557 onward that Nanda took on increasingly active and prominent roles in his father's military campaigns that founded the largest empire in Southeast Asia. Nanda, along with his uncles Thado Dhamma Yaza II, Minkhaung II and Thado Minsaw, became one of the four principal commanders of the king. Over the next decades, he grew to be an able military leader in his own right, and by the end of his father's reign, was leading entire campaigns by himself.

Administration edit

Nanda was an active member of the Pegu court dominated by ethnic Mon ministers. His father listened to Nanda's input even if he did not always heed his son's suggestions.[31] He took on an increasingly greater role in the last two years of his father's reign when the king's health deteriorated.[note 7]

Early reign edit

 
Toungoo Empire in 1580. "States as far east as Annam and Cambodia probably paid propitiatory homage to Bayinnaung."[32] Chronicles also claim Cachar and much deeper parts of Yunnan, and treat the Ceylonese Kingdom of Kotte as a protectorate.[33]

Accession edit

Bayinnaung died on 10 October 1581 after a long illness, and Nanda succeeded without incident. He cremated his father's body in the Buddhist tradition of Cakkavatti (universal ruler) in front of the Kanbawzathadi Palace. Nanda was crowned king on 15 October 1581.[note 8] He appointed his eldest son Mingyi Swa his heir-apparent.[34]

State of the empire edit

Nanda had inherited what was "probably the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia"[35] and what the Portuguese regarded as "the most powerful monarchy in Asia except that of China".[36] Yet, it was an "absurdly overextended" empire, largely held together by Bayinnaung's personal relationships with his vassal rulers, who were loyal to Bayinnaung and not the kingdom of Toungoo.[6] To administer the kingdom, Bayinnaung largely followed then prevailing Southeast Asian administrative model of solar polities in which the high king ruled the core while semi-independent tributaries, autonomous viceroys, and governors actually controlled day-to-day administration and manpower.[37] In the tradition of the system, every new high king had to establish his authority with the vassals all over again. This was already very difficult when vassals were situated in the same geographic region but nearly impossible with faraway lands, given inherent difficulties in bringing serious warfare to those lands.[6]

The historian G.E. Harvey noted that Nanda was "saddled with an impossible legacy" of the holding the empire together, and his "one hope of keeping the country together was to evacuate Siam and retrench in every direction."[38] Without the benefit of hindsight, Nanda would try to hold on to the "impossible legacy". He spent the first months of his reign reaffirming the loyalty of the vassal rulers to him. For their part, the vassal rulers, who governed what used to be sovereign states as recently as only a few decades ago, would break away at any first hint of weakness. But no one was yet ready to make the first move against Nanda, an experienced military commander in his own right,[38] and adopted a "wait-and-see attitude".[39] By May 1582, all the key vassal rulers, including the ruler of Siam, the most powerful vassal state, had sent tribute.[40] Even King Min Phalaung of Arakan, half of whose kingdom was under Toungoo occupation in 1580–81, sent an embassy in early 1583 to Pegu to offer a truce between the two kingdoms, to which Nanda agreed.[40]

Futile wars edit

Within the year of his accession, Nanda had to deal with a seemingly small rebellion in northernmost Shan states in present-day Yunnan. The rebellion was put down but it led to rebellions by Ava and Siam in 1584. The rebellion in Ava was put down but that in Siam could not be. Between 1584 and 1593, Nanda manically launched five invasions of Siam, all of which failed. The king never had the full support of his other vassals, and could never field more than a third of the number his father led. By the end of the invasions, his core base of Lower Burma was severely depopulated, and would be unable to stop further breakaways.[3]

Initial rebellions edit

Chinese Shan states (1582–83) edit

The first rebellion started in the Chinese Shan states of Sanda and Thaungthut (present-day Dehong and Baoshan prefectures in Yunnan, China), which never sent tribute to the new king. In September/October 1582,[41] Nanda sent two armies (16,000 men, 1,400 horses, 100 elephants) led by Thado Dhamma Yaza II of Prome and Nawrahta Minsaw of Lan Na for a punitive expedition. The armies spent five months at Sanda before finally taking the town, and arrived back at Pegu on 9 April 1583 .[42]

Ava (1584) edit

But all was not well. Although the two armies had been drawn mainly from Upper Burma and Shan states, Nanda did not ask Thado Minsaw, the viceroy of Ava, to join the campaign, much less lead it. Thado Minsaw was a half-uncle of Nanda, and was married to Nanda's only full sister. Despite the deep familial ties, the slight did not go unnoticed in Ava. In June/July 1583,[43] Thado Minsaw sent secret embassies to Prome, Toungoo and Chiang Mai to raise simultaneous rebellions. His intention was not to seek Nanda's imperial throne but to rule Upper Burma independently. The three viceroys sided with Nanda and secretly forwarded the news to Nanda.[44][45]

At Pegu, Nanda was particularly concerned that Ava had the support of the Shan states. To counter the manpower of Upper Burma, Nanda secretly ordered troops from Prome, Toungoo, Lan Na, Lan Xang and Siam during the dry season of 1583–84.[44] To be sure, he did not trust his remaining vassals either, especially Minkhaung II of Toungoo, his other half uncle who once revolted against none other than Bayinnaung. As a result, Nanda built a series of canals between Toungoo and Pegu. In March 1584, armies from Prome, Toungoo, Lan Na, Lan Xang and Siam marched to Ava.[46] Mingyi Swa was left with a sizable force to guard Pegu.[47]

At Ava, Thado Minsaw asked his loyalists from the Shan states to send help while his army tried to hold off the invading armies. On 24 April 1584 ,[48] the two armies met t the outskirts of Ava—between Tada-U and Pinya. Faced with an overwhelming force, Thado Minsaw issued a challenge of single combat on war elephants to his nephew, who accepted. The nephew prevailed after a long drawn out battle, driving off his uncle off the field. Thado Minsaw with 2,000 of his men fled to northern hills but died en route.[49]

Siam (1584) edit

The Ava rebellion turned out to be just the opening Siam was looking for. The "proud kingdom" had been preparing its defenses for the eventual showdown with Pegu.[50] Its ruler Maha Thammarachathirat sent a 6,000-man army led by his son Naresuan ostensibly for Nanda's Ava campaign. But the Siamese army did not march to Ava as ordered but hovered around Pegu. After Ava fell quickly, the Siamese army withdrew to Martaban (Mottama), and declared independence on 3 May 1584 . Nanda in anger dispatched an expedition force (4,000 men, 400 horses, 40 elephants) to chase the Siamese troops to their country. When he got back to Pegu, he led another army (7,000 men, 500 horses, 50 elephants), and followed up. His son Mingyi Swa was his deputy.[51] Unlike his father's meticulously planned Siamese campaigns, the expedition was hastily planned. An 11,000-man invasion force could have never conquered Siam, let alone in the rainy season. Indeed, the troops were caught unprepared by the flooded countryside by the Chao Phraya, and were nearly wiped out by Siamese on their war canoes.[3][52]

Interlude I (1584–86) edit

Nanda was in a bind. His ministers warned that a failure to recapture Siam would trigger domino-like rebellions elsewhere in the empire.[53] The problem was that he still did not have complete control over his vassals to raise a large enough force that had a reasonable shot at reconquering Siam. He tried to replace the vassals with his loyalists at every opportunity. In May 1584, he appointed Min Letya, son of King Tabinshwehti, as governor of Ava in place of Thado Minsaw. The office was strictly a non-hereditary governorship, not the viceroyship Thado Minsaw enjoyed.[47] But Nanda could not replace hereditary rulers without cause. When Viceroy Minkhaung II of Toungoo died in June/July 1584,[54] he had to accept the late viceroy's eldest son Minye Thihathu II as the rightful successor. Minye Thihathu II for his part pledged loyalty to his cousin.[55]

Nanda spent the next year and a half consolidating his rule over the remaining empire. On 3 March 1585 , he donated five Buddha statues, for which he would be remembered as "Nga-zu Dayaka Min" (ငါးဆူဒါယကာမင်း, "Donor King of Five Buddha Statues").[56] But the court reported that not taking action in Siam was being interpreted as weakness in Lan Na, Lan Xang and Shan states, and urged that the king deal with Siam.[53] History shows that it was a bad recommendation by the court. The vassals' tepid support meant that the king could not have raised enough manpower to capture Siam. If Nanda's best hope of keeping the core country intact was to retrench from the empire's overextended positions, the king and his court could not see it.[38]

Resumption of Siamese war (1586–87) edit

In 1586, the king embarked on what turned out to be suicidal invasions of Siam with whatever he had. He chose to pick off northern Siam first. In March 1586,[57] an army (12,000 troops, 1,200 horses, 100 elephants) led by Mingyi Swa invaded northern Siam from Lan Na. But the army could not get past a heavily fortified Lampang led by Naresuan, and had to withdraw in June.[53] Undeterred, Nanda launched a two-pronged invasion in the following dry season on 19 October 1586 with (25,000 troops, 1,200 horses, 220 elephants).[58] His largest invasion force nonetheless remained vastly inadequate to conquer a major power like Siam, and indeed was only about a third of Bayinnaung's 1568 invasion.[59]

The invasion fared well initially. Both armies overcame Siamese defenses and arrived before Ayutthaya by December. But the armies were not ready for a long-term siege of the heavily fortified capital. Because of poor planning, the troops began dying in thousands "from want and exposure" by February 1587.[52][60] By March, the siege began to falter, and supplies streamed into Ayutthaya through gaps in the Burmese lines.[59] The Burmese forces began their painful withdrawal on 20 April 1587,[61] being chased throughout by the enemy. Only a small portion of the original army made it back across the border.[52]

Interlude II (1587–90) edit

The failed invasion forced him to regroup for the next three years. The restless vassals, even the smaller ones, were beginning to test. In November 1587, he had to send an army of 4,000 to put down a rebellion in a small Shan state of Inya.[62] It took the army seven months to bring the state back into the fold.[63] Whenever leadership positions became vacant in key vassal states, he appointed his loyalists: his middle son Minye Kyawswa II as Viceroy of Ava on 7 February 1587 ; Sen Soulintha as King of Lan Xang in December 1588; another son Thado Dhamma Yaza III as Viceroy of Prome on 28 February 1589.[64]

Final campaigns edit

Siam and Mogaung (1590–92) edit

With his sons at Ava and Prome in charge of the entire Irrawaddy valley, Nanda planned to resume the war against Siam. He had raised the largest force yet, 30,000 men. But the powerful Shan state of Mogaung had revolted, refusing to contribute its quota. Instead of focusing on Mogaung, the king decided to wage war on two fronts. He scaled back his invasion to northern Siam. He sent a 10,000-man army led by Thado Dhamma Yaza III and Natshinnaung to Mogaung on 2 November 1590 , and a 20,000-man army led by Mingyi Swa to Siam on 24 November 1590 .[65]

The northern army took Mogaung by March 1591, and brought back the rebellious saopha to Pegu. But after the army left, the rebel chief's son, who was hiding outside the city, seized the city in November 1591. An 8,000-strong army led by Minye Kyawswa II had to return and put down the rebellion by mid-1592.[66]

The southern army had no such success. Like in 1586, Mingyi Swa invaded northern Siam from Lan Na, and could not again get past the Lampang fort led by Naresuan. But unlike in 1586, it was no mere retreat. The army was thoroughly defeated outside Lampang in March 1591. The remaining army arrived back in such disarray that Nanda verbally disparaged Mingyi Swa and executed some of the top generals.[67]

Final invasion of Siam (1592–93) edit

 
Thai commemoration of single combat between Naresuan and Mingyi Swa at Nong Sarai

Fresh off the success, Naresuan switched to offense in the following dry season of 1591–92 by raiding upper Tenasserim coast with a 5,000-strong army.[66] Though army units from Martaban (Mottama) drove back Naresuan's army, the raid was a clear sign that the balance of power was shifting in favor of the former vassal state. Nanda and his court deliberated at length about their response, fully considering the military setbacks and their inability to raise men. In the end, the court suggested and the king agreed to yet another invasion of Siam.[68]

On 4 November 1592,[note 9] an invasion army of 24,000 tried again.[68] After seven weeks, the army fought its way to Suphanburi, a town just to the west of Ayutthaya.[68] Here Burmese chronicle and Siamese chronicle narratives give different accounts. Burmese chronicles say that a battle took place on 8 January 1593 , in which Mingyi Swa and Naresuan fought on their war elephants. In the battle, Mingyi Swa was felled by a gunshot, after which the Burmese army retreated. According to Siamese chronicles, the battle took place on 18 January 1593.[note 10] Like in the Burmese chronicles, the battle started out between the two forces but the Siamese chronicles say that midway through the battle, the two sides agreed to decide the outcome by having a duel between Mingyi Swa and Naresuan on their elephants, and that Mingyi Swa was cut down by Naresuan.[69]

At any rate, the Burmese forces retreated, suffering heavy casualties along the way by incessant Siamese attacks. It was the last of Pegu's campaigns. Siam's independence was now secured. For the next dozen years, it was Burma that would be on the defensive, "the tables of war turning for the first time in 30 years."[69]

Fall of Toungoo Empire edit

The latest defeat in Siam was significant. The remaining vassals clearly saw that Pegu could no longer launch a credible offensive war. Nanda belatedly tried to retrench from his ambitions but it was too late. All of the vassals would have revolted by 1597, and by 1598, his core country Pegu would be under siege.

Instabilities in the core country (1593–94) edit

By 1593, Nanda was having trouble even in his home base of Lower Burma, which had borne the brunt of his conscription drives year after year. Many people of Lower Burma, many whom were ethnic Mons, fled military service to become monks, debt-slaves, private retainers, or refugees in nearby kingdoms.[70] Chronicles speak of a December 1593 unrest in Hmawbi, a small town to the west of Pegu.[71] While the unrest was easily put down, its proximity to the capital was a telltale sign that the people were desperate.[72] To help him administer the core country, Nanda brought back Minye Kyawswa II from Ava, making his middle son by the chief queen his heir-apparent on 29 December [O.S. 19 December] 1593.[note 11]

The king did not appoint a replacement viceroy or even a governor at Ava to administer the upcountry. With that decision, he had effectively retreated from Upper Burma and Shan states. It shows that he was more concerned about having a strong potential rival in the upcountry than about dealing with myriad competing minor vassal rulers from afar. The decision was not cost free. Without closer control of a viceroy, Nanda would not be able to enlist any men from the remaining vassals in Upper Burma and Shan states in the following years.

At any rate, the new heir-apparent turned out to be a tyrant. He immediately set out to tighten his grip on Lower Burma, branding men to facilitate identification, executing deserters, and forcing monks into the army. Thado Dhamma Yaza III, viceroy of Prome, openly disagreed with his brother's policies, and the two brothers got into a quarrel. Nanda was forced to intervene, officially releasing the conscripted men and seized property.[73] But the damage was already done. Coercion proved self-defeating. With cultivators disappearing, rice prices in Lower Burma reached unheard of levels.[70] In October 1594,[note 12] the ruler of Moulmein (Mawlamyine) revolted with Siamese support.[73]

First Siamese invasion (1594–95) edit

Nanda responded to the revolt by sending an 8,000-strong army led by Minye Thihathu II and Thiri Dhammathawka. Unbeknownst to the Burmese command, the city had been reinforced by Siamese troops led by none other than Naresuan. The army was driven back. In December,[note 13] the Siamese forces (12,000 troops, 600 horses, 60 elephants) marched to Pegu. Nanda was caught totally flatfooted; he had not expected an invasion by Siam. The Siamese army now laid siege to Pegu.[73]

The tables were now completely turned. The king in desperation asked his vassals Prome, Toungoo and Lan Na for help. Aid was slow in coming. Minye Thihathu II of Toungoo, who had just lost many of his men at Moulmein, had to raise more men. Nawrahta Minsaw of Lan Na was facing a threat of attack from the king of Lan Xang, who officially was still a vassal of Pegu. Finally, Thado Dhamma Yaza III of Prome had already decided to revolt against his father. It was only in early April that combined forces of Toungoo and Lan Na came to relieve the city, forcing Naresuan to withdraw on 6 April [O.S. 27 March] 1595. But Siam had gained the upper Tenasserim coast.[74]

Disintegration (1595–97) edit

By then, Prome had revolted. Prome's forces, hoping to consolidate central Burma, attacked Toungoo whose main forces were at the Pegu front. But they could not break through Toungoo's fortified defenses led by Natshinnaung, and had to retreat after two weeks. But Prome had taken over western central Burma up to Pakhan in the north, close to Ava.[73]

Successful rebellions begot more rebellions. Lan Xang's ruler Nokeo Koumane (Noh Meuang) also revolted c. November 1595.[note 14] The Lan Xang rebellion was overdue. Nanda had held onto Lan Xang thus far only because his vassals were themselves weak. Neither Maha Ouparat (r. 1574–88) nor Sen Soulintha (r. 1588–91) appeared to have ruled beyond Vientiane. Anarchy reigned in the countryside.[note 15] In 1591, Nanda placed a 20-year-old Nokeo Koumane, a son of King Setthathirath who grew up in Pegu, on the throne, hoping for a pliant ruler.[75] The young ruler consolidated his hold over his realm by defeating Luang Praban, and finally declared independence in 1595. Nokeo Koumane now proceeded to attack Lan Na, briefly taking over Nan. Nawrahta Minsaw drove back the invaders, without receiving any help from his overlord Nanda.[76] But Nanda caught a break. Nokeo Koumane died shortly after in 1596. His anointed 12-year-old successor Vorawongsa, and his father Vorapita traveled to Pegu to gain permission to rule. Nanda agreed to the request but asked Vorapita to be the regent.[77] By the time, they arrived back to Vientiane, Lan Xang's historical rival Lan Na had revolted. Lan Xang declared war on Lan Na, not at the behest of Pegu but for itself. Although Lan Xang would not officially renounce all tributary ties to Burma until 1603,[78] the mountainous kingdom for all intents and purposes was independent by 1597.[77]

Closer to home, Toungoo also revolted in late 1596/early 1597, around the same time as Lan Na. In Upper Burma, the prince of Nyaungyan had emerged as the main power. In May 1596, he had driven out Prome's forces from Pakhan, ostensibly on behalf of Nanda.[79] But he was quietly consolidating territory for himself. After Lan Na's and Toungoo's declarations of independence, he too announced plans to take over Ava on 19 April [O.S. 9 April] 1597—without Nanda's permission. He brazenly moved into the newly built palace on 29 August [O.S. 19 August] 1597.[80] Nyaungyan never formally revolted but offered no support to the high king either.[81]

Nanda's once mighty empire had been reduced to a strip of coastal Lower Burma (Pegu and the Irrawaddy delta). The former vassal rulers now effectively ignored the high king as inconsequential, instead now saw each other as rivals. It was a natural return to multilateral relations among the smaller states that had existed before the rise of the Toungoo Empire. Concerned by Nyaungyan's takeover of Upper Burma, Thado Dhamma Yaza III of Prome decided to invade the upcountry. But he was assassinated on 15 September [O.S. 5 September] 1597 by one of his advisers. Toungoo tried to pick off Prome but the new ruler of Prome, Yan Naing, fended off Toungoo's attacks.[82] In the middle Tai country too, chaos reigned. Lan Na and Lan Xang were locked in conflict. Lan Na's own vassals (Nan, Chiang Saen, Chiang Rai) were in revolt. Siam began to intervene the upcountry affairs in 1598, gaining Lan Na c. 1601/02 but chaos continued on the Lan Na countryside.[83]

Fall from power edit

Having failed at Prome, Toungoo looked south to Pegu. In late 1597, Toungoo and Arakan agreed to a joint attack on Pegu.[84][85] Toungoo forces moved the forward base to Kawliya, a town northeast of Pegu in March 1598.[85] In the following dry season, Arakanese and Toungoo forces invaded Lower Burma. The Arakanese navy, consisted Portuguese mercenaries, overran the key port of Syriam (Thanlyin) in March 1599. Both Toungoo and Arakanese laid siege to Pegu in April. Eight months into the siege, Nanda's heir-apparent, Minye Kyawswa II, defected to the besiegers, after being promised good treatment. However, it was an empty promise. The prince was executed at Toungoo by Natshinnaung.[85][4] After the defection, the king himself gave up, and surrendered on 19 December [O.S. 9 December] 1599.[86] The fallen king was sent to Toungoo.[87]

The victors divided the enormous wealth of Pegu, accumulated over the past 60 years as the capital of the Toungoo Empire. The gold, silver and precious stones were equally divided. The Arakanese share also included several brazen cannon, 30 Khmer bronze statues, and a white elephant.[4][88] Toungoo forces returned home with their share of the loot on 14 February [O.S. 4 February] 1600, leaving the Arakanese in charge of the city.[89] A month later, the Arakanese forces burned down the entire city, including the Grand Palace of King Bayinnaung.[4]

Exile and death edit

Nanda along with his chief queen Hanthawaddy Mibaya returned to his birth city of Toungoo. They treated well there. But Nanda's presence at the palace was not welcomed by Natshinnaung, the heir-apparent of Toungoo. Natshinnaung intensely disliked Nanda because the fallen king had once denied Natshinnaung's request for a marriage to the love of his life, Yaza Datu Kalaya, the widow of Mingyi Swa. When the Siamese forces came to lay siege to Toungoo in April 1600, demanding Minye Thihathu to give up the fallen king, the 21-year-old Natshinnaung urged his father to give Nanda up.[90] But the father refused, knowing that agreeing to Naresuan's symbolic demand would be seen as a sign of submission to the Siamese king.[91]

Even after the Siamese retreated, Natshinnaung continued to look for an opportunity to remove Nanda. On the night of 30 November [O.S. 20 November] 1600, the prince assassinated the fallen king. Minye Thihathu was extremely displeased with his son's action, and ordered a respectful cremation ceremony for his cousin. He also kept the dowager queen with her attendants at the palace.[92]

Legacy edit

 
Restored Toungoo Empire c. 1650, a "realistic and organic unit" that "walked on two legs".[93]

Nanda by all accounts was an energetic monarch, who from his youth upward, had served in the armed forces and still led them in person. There is no reason to suppose that he was not "above the average of Burmese kings."[3] But unlike no other Burmese kings, he inherited the largest empire in the history of the region, which historians call an "impossible legacy,"[3] "improbable domain,"[2] "absurdly overextended" empire.[6] His mistake was to hold on to this empire without an administrative system, and without the support of the vassal rulers.[3]

Nanda's failures showed several following generations of Burmese monarchs about the perils of over-extension, and the need to establish a more centralized administration in place of hereditary chieftainships. The 17th century Toungoo kings rebuilt the fallen empire by the mid-1620s but they deliberately refrained from invading Siam and Lan Xang.[77] The restored empire was a "realistic and organic unit,... which did not extend in any direction to a point where Burma's supply lines were more extended than those of her nearest lowland rival."[2] The Restored Toungoo kings also instituted an administrative system that replaced hereditary chieftainships with appointed governorships in the entire Irrawaddy valley, and greatly reduced the hereditary rights of Shan chiefs.[93]

Family edit

Nanda had five principal queens (two of whom give birth children), all of whom were his first cousins. His chief queen was Hanthawaddy Mibaya, daughter of King Tabinshwehti. He had seven children (three sons and four daughters) by the chief queen and one daughter by one principal queen .[94]

Queen Rank Issue
Hanthawaddy Mibaya Chief Queen (Myauk Gyi Kadaw) 1. Thakin Gyi (daughter)[95] married to Minye Kyawhtin of Kawliya, the son of Minkhaung II of Toungoo

2. Min Htwe aka Thukha Hsaya (daughter)
3. Mingyi Swa, Crown Prince (r. 1581–93)
4. Khin Ma Hnaung aka Thein Daw Hnaung, Queen of Arakan (r. 1600–12)
5. Khin Pu (daughter)
6. Minye Kyawswa II, Crown Prince (r. 1593–99)
7. Thado Dhamma Yaza III, Viceroy of Prome (r. 1589–97)

Thiri Yaza Dewi Queen of the Northern Palace 1. Min Shwe-Don (daughter) married to Minye Kyawhtin of Kawliya, the son of Minkhaung II of Toungoo

Nanda had more than 50 junior queens 17 of whom had issue.

Name Mother Brief
1. Minyin Phyu Phaukkhaya Sanda Son Gov.of Zapayo

(He and his mother reported sent to Arakan)

2. Mingyi Khamedaw Shwe Nan Choum Me, princess from Martaban, younger sister of Minye Nandameit Gov.of Martaban and daughter of Minye Sithu Son Gov. of Martaban (He and his mother reported sent to Arakan)
3. Maung Saw Pru Khin Nge Nyunt or Da Wi Sunt (Dao-Sruang), the daughter of Pe-Haung (Petch-Hueng), Binnya (Phraya) Jakka or Auk-Phra Sakkri Ko (Auk-Ya Jakri) from Ayutthaya Gov.of Dagon Son, taken to Rakhine with his mother in 1600 later Gov.of Bohmong Htaung onward and married to Shin Dwe Hnaung, the daughter of King Min Razagyi of Rakhine
4. Nara Meik Khlar Khin Gyi Sit (Kyané Hpa Choeng Chum), the daughter of Narapati IV of Ava personal name : Hso Kyaw Hpa Son (He and his mother reported sent to Arakan)
5. Udein Kyawhtin Khin Nge Sone Bon, the younger of Ngetthathura of Kya-Tet Son Gov.of Toungoo in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja with title Thiri Dhamma Thawka and called Toungoo Shwenan Myo Thit
6. Minye Thiha Sao Nang Kyet Min, the daughter of Sao Maw Kya the Saopha of Mongpai Son Gov.of Pyay in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja
7. Awiyoun-htettaya Pathein Minthami, personal name : Khin Myo Myat Hpone, the daughter of Minye Naratheinkha Daughter married to her half-brother Minye Payeik Shi Gov.of Tagaung, she and her husband reported sent to Arakan)
8. Minye Naraseikkha Pathein Minthami, personal name : Khin Myo Myat Hpone, the daughter of Minye Naratheinkha Son Gov.of Tabaung, he reported sent to Arakan) with his mother
9. Minye Payeik Shi Patta Leela, the daughter of Hso Chi Hpa the Saopha of Mohnyin Son Gov.of Tagaung married to his half-sister Awiyoun-htettaya, he and his wife reported sent to Arakan) with his mother
10. Son died when he was born Narapinthala, the courtyard woman Son died when he was born
11. Narathinkhala Narapinthala, the courtyard woman Son Gov.of Ye in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja
12. Nara Thinkhathu Nang Hkuen Sein, the daughter of Ai Hkam Souk, the Gov.of Sipoktara Son Gov.of Singu married to his half-sister Khin Ma Shwe Pa Chok
13. Khin Ma Shwe Pa Chok Lai-Hka Minthami, Sao Su Noe Routha the daughter of Hkun Sang Myat Noe, the saopha of Lai-Hka Daughter married to her half-brother Nara Thinkhathu Gov.of Singu
14. Phwa Daw Htwe Kyoeng Me Yeb Hpa, the daughter of Fang Kawn Hpa, the Saopha of Möng Hkwan Son Gov.of Chauk in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja
15. Tulyarwaddy Champiyak-yam, the daughter of Thao Le Tai, the Saopha of Mong Ti Daughter
16. Khin Ma Hsin In Payoe Zinme Minthami, Nang Tawan Yaw Hseng, the niece of Thao Sai Kham the King of Zinme Daughter became forbidden of Naresuan
17. Minye Biya Nang Min Mueng, the daughter of Thao Möng Earn, the Saopha of Koshanpye Möng Hkang Son Gov.of tharay-khit-taya (nowadays Hmawza) in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja
18. Upapiya Nang Aone Hkoum Möng, the daughter of Pha Inthameittairi the Saopha of Wa from Möng Hseng Son
19. Minye Yamuna Naga Mibaya Lapinawmioni daughter of Laungyettanbu the King of Naga Son, Gov.of Myaungmya and Hanthawaddy Kyawhtin Nawrahta, escaped when Nanda Bayin his father assasinated after that Kauk Taung Anauk's eat married to Myat Hpone Wei, the daughter of King Bayinnaung
20. Mila (Yadana Punna Kasapa) Naga Mibaya Lapinawmioni daughter of Laungyettanbu the King of Naga Daughter, live with her full-brother

Among his principal queens the outstanding queens who had no issue were Min Phyu and Min Htwe (Both were daughters of King Minkhaung II of Toungoo) and Min Taya Medaw, the daughter of Thado Dhamma Yaza II

In all he had 29 children (19 sons and 10 daughters): 3 sons and 5 daughters by principal queens, and 16 sons and 5 daughters by junior queens. 3 of the notable children by junior queens were: Maung Saw Pru, The Arakanese King Min Razagyi appointed him as the governor of newly established Bohmong Htaung in 1600 and Thiri Dhamma Thawka (Gov. of Toungoo) and Minye Thiha (Gov. of Pyay) in the reign of King Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja.[94]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Lan Xang did not formally renounce tributary ties with Burma until 1603 per (Stuart-Fox 2008: 38). But it was de facto independent by 1597.
  2. ^ (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 61, 106): Nanda ascended to the throne on the full moon day of Tazaungmon 943 ME (10 October 1581) at age 46 (in his 47th year). It means he was born on or before the full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME (9 November 1535). But (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 240, 248) says he was still 12 years old (in his 13th year) on 13th waxing of Tazaungmon 910 (13 October 1548) at the start of the 1548 Siamese campaign. It means he was born between 14th waxing of Tazaungmon 897 ME and the full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME (8 November or 9 November 1535). Per (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 106) he was born on a Tuesday. It means he was born on 9 November 1535 (Tuesday, full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME).
  3. ^ See (Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 172–173) his grandfather King Mingyi Nyo's ancestry.
  4. ^ Chronicles generally do not mention the ethnicity of the royalty, and Nanda's was no exception. His ethnicity is inferred from the positions of his ancestors. His maternal grandmother Yadana Dewi was a princess of Mobye (Mong Pai), a Shan state. He also descended from King Thihathu, a half-Shan according to colonial period scholarship, and Shin Mi-Nauk of Mohnyin, a full Shan. However, (Aung-Thwin 1996) and (Aung-Thwin and Aung-Thwin 2012: 107–109) argue that it is a mistake to equate the position with ethnicity, and that colonial scholarship grafted on Shan ethnicity to the so-called Shan brothers without any evidence. Indeed, Mohnyin Thado was a Burman saopha of Mohnyin, and many ethnic Shans were governors of the Shwebo region, the Burman heartland. Nevertheless, the ruling clan of Mobye and Hsipaw produced kings Hkonmaing and Mobye Narapati, both of whom are accepted as Shan. Therefore, Nanda's maternal grandmother was probably of Shan ethnicity, and his mother Atula Thiri was at least 50% Shan.
  5. ^ Chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 201) do not explicitly say that Nanda became heir-apparent on Bayinnaung's coronation ceremony on 11 January 1551, in which the king handed out various titles to his brothers. But it assumed that he did as the chronicles refer to Nanda as Maha Upayaza (heir-apparent) on the very next page (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 202).
  6. ^ Chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 68–69) say he arrived back on Sunday, 8th waxing of 942 ME but 8th waxing is a typographical error. 8th waxing of 942 ME translates to Wednesday, 23 March 1580. It was probably 5th waxing of Tagu 942 ME, which translates to Sunday, 20 March 1580. The Burmese numerals 5 () and 8 () written in longhand can easily be mixed up.
  7. ^ As seen in (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 49, 53), Bayinnaung began to back away as early as 1579, and gave Nanda a greater role. In his appointment of Nawrahta Minsaw as ruler of Lan Na, the king acknowledged his failing health, and asked Nawrahta Minsaw to obey Nanda as the health of the kingdom depends on their unity. Later that year, Bayinnaung asked Nanda to go to Lan Xang to restore order there.
  8. ^ Both standard chronicles Maha Yazawin and Hmannan Yazawin state that Nanda's coronation ceremony was held on the Sunday following the king's death. But they each give a different date. Maha Yazawin (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 206: 77) gives Sunday, 4th waning of Tazaungmon 943 ME, which translates to Saturday, 14 October 1581, whereas Hmannan Yazawin (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 73) gives Sunday, 5th waning of Tazaungmon 943 ME, or Sunday, 15 October 1581.
  9. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 93) gives Wednesday, 12th waxing of Nadaw 954 ME which translates to Sunday, 14 November 1592 . But (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 93) corrects it as Wednesday 2nd waning of Nadaw, which translates to Wednesday, 4 November 1592, NS.
  10. ^ (Damrong 2001: 128): Monday, 2nd waning of the second Siamese month of 954 CS (18 January 1593 NS).
  11. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3: 95): Wednesday, 8th waxing of Pyatho 955 ME = 29 December 1593.
  12. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 95): Tazaungmon 956 ME = 13 October to 11 November 1594 NS
  13. ^ Chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 95–96) say the Siamese army retreated on 6 April 1595 after a four-month siege of Pegu. Thus, the Siamese army must have laid siege to Pegu in December.
  14. ^ (Simms & Simms 2001: 89–90) says Nokeo Koumane revolted in 1593 but (Fernquest 2005: 47) says the earliest evidence of a Lan Xang revolt against Nanda in the Lan Xang, Chiang Mai, Ayutthaya and Burmese chronicles is 957 ME (11 April 1595 to 9 April 1596). He had already revolted by November 1595. According to the Nan Chronicle (Ratchasomphan 1994: 67), Lan Xang and Nan forces fought a battle with Lan Na forces on 25 November 1595 NS.
  15. ^ Laotian history per (Simms & Simms 2001: 86–89) holds that Maha Ouparat died in 1579 and was followed by Soulintha who ruled between 1580–82, and that there were no rulers between 1583 and 1591 in Lan Xang. However, both standard Burmese chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 89) and (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 88) say Maha Ouparat died in Thadingyut 950 ME (19 September to 17 October 1588 NS). However, Laotian history's eight years of anarchy is still probable since Maha Ouparat, not deemed an effective ruler even in the Burmese chronicles, probably did not have much control beyond the capital.

References edit

  1. ^ Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 106
  2. ^ a b c Lieberman 2003: 161
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Harvey 1925: 181–182
  4. ^ a b c d Harvey 1925: 182–183
  5. ^ a b Lieberman 2003: 154–156
  6. ^ a b c d Lieberman 2003: 154–155
  7. ^ Sein Lwin Lay 2006: 109
  8. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 189
  9. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 258–259
  10. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 202
  11. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 206
  12. ^ Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 280–281
  13. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 216
  14. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 230, 233–235
  15. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 240–242
  16. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 245
  17. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 249
  18. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 261–262
  19. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 267–272
  20. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 277–279
  21. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 285–287
  22. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 289–292
  23. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 309
  24. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 327
  25. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 332–335
  26. ^ Phayre 1967: 114–115
  27. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 336–338
  28. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 39–42
  29. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 45–46
  30. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 48–49
  31. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 251
  32. ^ Harvey 1925: 151
  33. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 75–77
  34. ^ Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 73
  35. ^ Lieberman 2003: 152
  36. ^ Tarling 1999: 72–73
  37. ^ Lieberman 2003: 35
  38. ^ a b c Harvey 1925: 181
  39. ^ Aung-Thwin & Aung-Thwin 2012: 137
  40. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 77–78
  41. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 78): Thadingyut 944 ME = 27 September 1582 to 25 October 1582 NS
  42. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 78
  43. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 79): Waso 945 ME = 19 June 1583 to 17 July 1583 NS
  44. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 79
  45. ^ Htin Aung 1967: 129
  46. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 80–81
  47. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 82
  48. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 80): Tuesday, 1st waning of Kason 946 ME = 24 April 1584
  49. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 80-82
  50. ^ Lieberman 2003: 155–156
  51. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 82–83
  52. ^ a b c Phayre 1967: 121
  53. ^ a b c Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 86
  54. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 83): [1st] Waso 946 ME = 7 June 1584 to 6 July 1584
  55. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 83
  56. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 83): Sunday, 3rd waxing of Tabaung 946 ME = 3 March 1585
  57. ^ Late Tagu 947 ME = 19 March 1586 to 7 April 1586 NS
  58. ^ Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 84
  59. ^ a b Harvey 1925: 334
  60. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 87
  61. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 87): 14th waxing of Kason 949 ME = 20 April 1587
  62. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 88): Tazaungmon 949 ME = 1 November to 29 November 1587 NS
  63. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 88
  64. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 86–89
  65. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 90): 5th waxing of Tazaungmon 952 ME = 31 October 1590 ; 12th waning of Tazaungmon 952 ME = 22 November 1590
  66. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 91–92
  67. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 90–91
  68. ^ a b c Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 93
  69. ^ a b Wyatt 2003: 88–89
  70. ^ a b Lieberman 2003: 156
  71. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 95): Nadaw 955 ME = 23 November 1593 to 21 December 1593 NS
  72. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 95
  73. ^ a b c d Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 95–96
  74. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 96
  75. ^ Simms & Simms 2001: 88–89
  76. ^ Fernquest 2005: 47
  77. ^ a b c Fernquest 2005: 56–57
  78. ^ Stuart-Fox 2008: 38
  79. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 97
  80. ^ Than Tun Vol. 2 1985: 11
  81. ^ Phayre 1967: 122
  82. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 112–113
  83. ^ Fernquest 2005: 47–48, 51–53
  84. ^ Sandamala Linkara Vol. 2 1999: 77–78
  85. ^ a b c Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 98–99
  86. ^ (Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 100): Sunday, 4th waxing of Pyatho 961 ME = 19 December 1599 NS.
  87. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 100
  88. ^ Htin Aung 1967: 133–134
  89. ^ (Hmannan Vol. 3 2003: 103) & (Yazawin Thit Vol. 2 2012: 235): Monday, 2nd waxing of Tabaung 961 ME = 14 February 1600
  90. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 101
  91. ^ Htin Aung 1967: 134
  92. ^ Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 102
  93. ^ a b Lieberman 2003: 159–164
  94. ^ a b Maha Yazawin Vol. 3 2006: 103
  95. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 2 2012: 239

Bibliography edit

  • Aung-Thwin, Michael A. (November 1996). "The Myth of the "Three Shan Brothers" and the Ava Period in Burmese History". The Journal of Asian Studies. 55 (4): 881–901. doi:10.2307/2646527. JSTOR 2646527.
  • Aung-Thwin, Michael A.; Maitrii Aung-Thwin (2012). A History of Myanmar Since Ancient Times (illustrated ed.). Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-1-86189-901-9.
  • Fernquest, Jon (Spring 2005). "The Flight of Lao War Captives from Burma back to Laos in 1596: A Comparison of Historical Sources" (PDF). SOAS Bulletin of Burma Research. 3 (1). ISSN 1479-8484.
  • Harvey, G. E. (1925). History of Burma: From the Earliest Times to 10 March 1824. London: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.
  • Htin Aung, Maung (1967). A History of Burma. New York and London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Kala, U (2006) [1724]. Maha Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 1–3 (4th printing ed.). Yangon: Ya-Pyei Publishing.
  • Lieberman, Victor B. (2003). Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c. 800–1830, volume 1, Integration on the Mainland. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-80496-7.
  • Maha Sithu (2012) [1798]. Kyaw Win; Thein Hlaing (eds.). Yazawin Thit (in Burmese). Vol. 1–3 (2nd ed.). Yangon: Ya-Pyei Publishing.
  • Phayre, Lt. Gen. Sir Arthur P. (1967) [1883]. History of Burma. London: Susil Gupta.
  • Ratchasomphan (Sænluang.) (1994). David K. Wyatt (ed.). The Nan Chronicle. SEAP Publications. ISBN 9780877277156.
  • Royal Historical Commission of Burma (2003) [1832]. Hmannan Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 1–3. Yangon: Ministry of Information, Myanmar.
  • Sandamala Linkara, Ashin (1997–1999) [1931]. Rakhine Razawin Thit (in Burmese). Vol. 1–2. Yangon: Tetlan Sarpay.
  • Sein Lwin Lay, Kahtika U (2006) [1968]. Mintaya Shwe Hti and Bayinnaung: Ketumadi Taungoo Yazawin (in Burmese) (2nd printing ed.). Yangon: Yan Aung Sarpay.
  • Simms, Peter; Sanda Simms (2001). The Kingdoms of Laos: Six Hundred Years of History (illustrated ed.). Psychology Press. ISBN 9780700715312.
  • Stuart-Fox, Martin (2008). Historical Dictionary of Laos. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810864115.
  • Tarling, Nicholas (1999). The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia. Vol. 2 (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521663700.
  • Than Tun (1985). The Royal Orders of Burma, A.D. 1598–1885. Vol. 2. Kyoto University. hdl:2433/173789.
  • Wyatt, David K. (2003). Thailand: A Short History (2 ed.). Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08475-7.
Nanda Bayin
Born: 9 November 1535 Died: 30 November 1600
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Burma
10 October 1581 – 19 December [O.S. 9 December] 1599
Succeeded by
Royal titles
Preceded by Heir to the Burmese Throne
11 January 1551 – 10 October 1581
Succeeded by

nanda, bayin, burmese, နန, ဒဘ, ရင, pronounced, nàɰ, bəjɪ, thai, นทบ, เรง, rtgs, nantha, bureng, november, 1535, november, november, 1600, king, toungoo, dynasty, burma, myanmar, from, 1581, 1599, presided, over, collapse, first, toungoo, empire, largest, empir. Nanda Bayin Burmese နန ဒဘ ရင pronounced naɰ da bejɪ ɰ Thai nnthbuerng RTGS Nantha Bureng 9 November 1535 30 November O S 20 November 1600 was king of the Toungoo dynasty of Burma Myanmar from 1581 to 1599 He presided over the collapse of the First Toungoo Empire the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia Nanda Bayin နန ဒဘ ရင King of Burma and dominions Pegu 1581 99 Ava and Shan states 1581 97 Toungoo 1581 97 Prome 1581 95 Manipur 1581 93 Reign10 October 1581 19 December 1599Coronation15 October 1581PredecessorBayinnaungSuccessorNyaungyanChief MinisterBinnya KyanhtawSuzerain of Lan NaReign10 October 1581 c February 1597PredecessorBayinnaungSuccessorNaresuanKingNawrahta MinsawSuzerain of SiamReign10 October 1581 3 May 1584PredecessorBayinnaungSuccessorDisestablishedKingMaha ThammarachathiratSuzerain of Lan XangReign10 October 1581 19 December 1599 note 1 PredecessorBayinnaungSuccessorDisestablishedKingMaha Ouparat 1581 88 Sen Soulintha 1588 91 Nokeo Koumane 1591 95 Vorapita 1596 99 Born9 November 1535 Tuesday Full moon of Tazaungmon 897 METoungoo Taungoo Died30 November 1600 aged 65 Thursday 10th waning of Tazaungmon 962 ME 1 ToungooBurial1 December 1600Toungoo PalaceSpouse Hanthawaddy Mibaya Min Phyu Min Htwe Thiri Yaza Dewi Min Taya MedawIssueamong others Mingyi Swa Minye Kyawswa II of Ava Khin Ma Hnaung Thado Dhamma Yaza III Maung Saw PruHouseToungooFatherBayinnaungMotherAtula Thiri aka Thakin GyiReligionTheravada Buddhism This article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script The eldest son of King Bayinnaung was one of the principal commanders in his father s military campaigns that expanded and defended the empire As king Nanda faced the impossible task of keeping his father s improbable domain together 2 He never gained the full support of his father s chosen vassal rulers who governed what used to be sovereign kingdoms just a few decades earlier Within the first three years of his reign both Upper Burma and Siam revolted Though he could never raise more than a third of his father s troop levels Nanda could not come to terms with a smaller empire 3 Between 1584 and 1593 he launched five disastrous invasions of Siam which increasingly weakened his hold everywhere else From 1593 onward it was he who was on the defensive unable to stop a Siamese invasion that seized the entire Tenasserim coast in 1594 95 or prevent the rest of the vassals from breaking away in 1597 In 1599 Nanda surrendered to the joint forces of Toungoo and Arakan and was taken prisoner to Toungoo A year later he was assassinated by Natshinnaung 4 5 Nanda was an energetic king who probably would have made an above average Burmese monarch 3 But he made the mistake of trying to hold on to an absurdly overextended empire built mainly on patron client relationships 6 The king s monumental failures taught his 17th century successors not to overextend their realm and to implement a more centralized administrative system The Restored Toungoo administrative reforms which with Konbaung modifications would last to the end of Burmese monarchy in 1885 had their origins in the failures of Nanda Bayin 5 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Ancestry 1 2 Childhood and education 2 Heir apparent 2 1 Accession 2 2 Military service 2 3 Administration 3 Early reign 3 1 Accession 3 2 State of the empire 4 Futile wars 4 1 Initial rebellions 4 1 1 Chinese Shan states 1582 83 4 1 2 Ava 1584 4 1 3 Siam 1584 4 2 Interlude I 1584 86 4 3 Resumption of Siamese war 1586 87 4 4 Interlude II 1587 90 4 5 Final campaigns 4 5 1 Siam and Mogaung 1590 92 4 5 2 Final invasion of Siam 1592 93 5 Fall of Toungoo Empire 5 1 Instabilities in the core country 1593 94 5 2 First Siamese invasion 1594 95 5 3 Disintegration 1595 97 5 4 Fall from power 6 Exile and death 7 Legacy 8 Family 9 Notes 10 References 11 BibliographyEarly life editAncestry edit Nanda was born to Princess Thakin Gyi and General Kyawhtin Nawrahta later known as Bayinnaung at the Toungoo Palace on 9 November 1535 note 2 The prince hailed from Pagan and Pinya royal lines and was a grandson of King Mingyi Nyo and nephew of King Tabinshwehti of Toungoo note 3 He had one full elder sister Inwa Mibaya He was probably at least one quarter Shan note 4 Ancestry of King Nanda8 Taungkha Min4 Mingyi Swe9 Kayenawaddy2 Bayinnaung10 Kywesit Min5 Shin Myo Myat11 lt unnamed gt 1 Zeya Thiha Nanda12 Maha Thinkhaya6 Mingyi Nyo13 Min Hla Nyet3 Atula Thiri14 Saopha of Mobye7 Yadana Dewi15 unnamed Childhood and education edit Except for the first three years of his life he grew up at the Pegu Palace in Pegu which became the new capital of the burgeoning Toungoo dynasty in 1539 Throughout his youth his father was away on annual military campaigns with his uncle the king Nanda nominally became the second in line to the Toungoo throne in 1542 when his father was made heir apparent by Tabinshwehti Like his father and uncle who received a military style education in their youth 7 he as a Toungoo prince probably received the same kind of military oriented education Indeed Nanda was only 13 when he styled as Zeya Thiha ဇ ယ သ ဟ accompanied his father and his uncle in their campaign in Siam For his bravery at the battle of Ayutthaya the young prince was awarded the title of Minye Kyawswa မင ရ က စ by Tabinshwehti 8 Heir apparent editAccession edit On 11 January 1551 Nanda became heir apparent of the kingdom after eight months of chaos following Tabinshwehti s assassination on 30 April 1550 When the news of the assassination reached Pegu one of Bayinnaung s half brothers Minkhaung II refused to recognize Bayinnaung as the rightful successor and seized the throne Nanda his mother and his sister had to flee the city to join Bayinnaung who was away on a campaign in Dala modern Yangon 9 There Nanda became an active member of his father s inner circle who plotted to restore the Toungoo Empire Bayinnaung s forces first attacked his native Toungoo in September 1550 and took the city on 11 January 1551 Bayinnaung held a coronation ceremony there and made his 15 year old son his heir apparent note 5 Military service edit For the next 15 years Bayinnaung directed his energies to restoring and expanding the Toungoo Empire Everyone in his inner circle was devoted to the main enterprise of the kingdom warfare In the early years 1551 to 1555 however Nanda still a teenager was given limited roles and did not see any combat action It was only 1557 onward that Nanda took on increasingly active and prominent roles in his father s military campaigns that founded the largest empire in Southeast Asia Nanda along with his uncles Thado Dhamma Yaza II Minkhaung II and Thado Minsaw became one of the four principal commanders of the king Over the next decades he grew to be an able military leader in his own right and by the end of his father s reign was leading entire campaigns by himself Military campaigns of Crown Prince Nanda 1551 80 Campaign Duration Troops commanded Notes Prome 1551 Guarded Toungoo 10 Pegu 1552 1 regiment Did not see any action 11 Ava 1553 14 000 His first big assignment and as commander in chief to move the forward perimeter in the north against Ava Kingdom His role was largely ceremonial since the two 7 000 strong armies were led by his uncles Thado Dhamma Yaza II and Minkhaung II experienced generals After seeing extensive defenses of Ava the trio decided not to proceed 12 He guarded Pegu during the next Ava campaign 1554 55 13 Ava 1554 55 Guarded Pegu 13 Shan states 1557 12 000 Led an army Along with Thado Minsaw s and Minkhaung II s armies his army converged on to Thibaw part of a three pronged attack Fought on elephant back in the battle of Hsipaw 14 Mone 1557 8000 Led an army with Binnya Dala as deputy but did not see any action Thado Dhamma Yaza II s vanguard army took Mone 15 Lan Na 1558 10 regiments 2 cavalry battalions Led one of the three vanguard armies alongside Thado Dhamma Yaza II Thado Minsaw 16 Mone 1558 10 regiments He and Thado Minsaw returned to Mone from Lan Na and put down a rebellion by the saopha of Mone 17 Trans Salween Chinese Shan states 1563 12 000 Led one of the four armies that invaded the trans Salween states His army invaded from Momeik Binnya Dala was again his deputy Saw action at Maing Maw Took Hotha Latha Kaingma Mainglyin 18 Siam 1563 64 14 000 He and Minkhaung II jointly attacked and conquered Sukhothai in December 1563 Attacked the fort defending Ayutthaya 19 Lan Na 1564 12 000 One of four armies that marched to Chiang Mai from Ayutthaya From Chiang Mai marched to Chiang Saen and secured allegiance there 20 Lan Xang 1564 65 24 000 Commander in chief of the campaign Took Vientiane in January 1565 21 Installed a vassal ruler Spent the next seven months fruitlessly searching for King Setthathirath s troops in the Lan Xang countryside Returned to Pegu in August 1565 22 Siam 1568 69 11 000 Led one of the five armies that invaded Siam 23 Lan Xang 1569 70 11 regiments Led one of five armies that invaded Lan Xang in October 1569 His army invaded northern Lan Xang via Lamphun 24 Burmese armies spent months in the countryside searching for elusive bands of guerrilla forces but returned in March 1570 having lost many men from starvation and disease 25 Very few men of the original army survived to reach their own country 26 Mohnyin and Mogaung 1571 72 12 000 Led one of two 12 000 strong armies dispatched to northern Kachin hills to put down a rebellion Thado Dhamma Yaza II commanded the other Reconquered Mohnyin and Mogaung without a fight Chased rebel chiefs to the jungle but could not find them 27 Lan Xang 1574 11 000 Led one of three vanguard armies that invaded Lan Xang Saw no action Took Vientiane without a fight 28 Mohnyin and Mogaung 1575 7 000 Led one of five armies that put down another rebellion in northern Kachin hills 29 His army and Thado Minsaw s army chased the rebels to the northern hills One of the battalions from Thado Minsaw s army found the rebel chiefs and killed one of them 30 Lan Xang 1579 80 22 000 Led a force to restore law and order after instabilities rose in Lan Xang Spent months in the Lan Xang countryside but saw no resistance Arrived back at Pegu on 20 March 1580 note 6 Administration edit Nanda was an active member of the Pegu court dominated by ethnic Mon ministers His father listened to Nanda s input even if he did not always heed his son s suggestions 31 He took on an increasingly greater role in the last two years of his father s reign when the king s health deteriorated note 7 Early reign edit nbsp Toungoo Empire in 1580 States as far east as Annam and Cambodia probably paid propitiatory homage to Bayinnaung 32 Chronicles also claim Cachar and much deeper parts of Yunnan and treat the Ceylonese Kingdom of Kotte as a protectorate 33 Accession edit Bayinnaung died on 10 October 1581 after a long illness and Nanda succeeded without incident He cremated his father s body in the Buddhist tradition of Cakkavatti universal ruler in front of the Kanbawzathadi Palace Nanda was crowned king on 15 October 1581 note 8 He appointed his eldest son Mingyi Swa his heir apparent 34 State of the empire edit Nanda had inherited what was probably the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia 35 and what the Portuguese regarded as the most powerful monarchy in Asia except that of China 36 Yet it was an absurdly overextended empire largely held together by Bayinnaung s personal relationships with his vassal rulers who were loyal to Bayinnaung and not the kingdom of Toungoo 6 To administer the kingdom Bayinnaung largely followed then prevailing Southeast Asian administrative model of solar polities in which the high king ruled the core while semi independent tributaries autonomous viceroys and governors actually controlled day to day administration and manpower 37 In the tradition of the system every new high king had to establish his authority with the vassals all over again This was already very difficult when vassals were situated in the same geographic region but nearly impossible with faraway lands given inherent difficulties in bringing serious warfare to those lands 6 The historian G E Harvey noted that Nanda was saddled with an impossible legacy of the holding the empire together and his one hope of keeping the country together was to evacuate Siam and retrench in every direction 38 Without the benefit of hindsight Nanda would try to hold on to the impossible legacy He spent the first months of his reign reaffirming the loyalty of the vassal rulers to him For their part the vassal rulers who governed what used to be sovereign states as recently as only a few decades ago would break away at any first hint of weakness But no one was yet ready to make the first move against Nanda an experienced military commander in his own right 38 and adopted a wait and see attitude 39 By May 1582 all the key vassal rulers including the ruler of Siam the most powerful vassal state had sent tribute 40 Even King Min Phalaung of Arakan half of whose kingdom was under Toungoo occupation in 1580 81 sent an embassy in early 1583 to Pegu to offer a truce between the two kingdoms to which Nanda agreed 40 Futile wars editWithin the year of his accession Nanda had to deal with a seemingly small rebellion in northernmost Shan states in present day Yunnan The rebellion was put down but it led to rebellions by Ava and Siam in 1584 The rebellion in Ava was put down but that in Siam could not be Between 1584 and 1593 Nanda manically launched five invasions of Siam all of which failed The king never had the full support of his other vassals and could never field more than a third of the number his father led By the end of the invasions his core base of Lower Burma was severely depopulated and would be unable to stop further breakaways 3 Initial rebellions edit Chinese Shan states 1582 83 edit The first rebellion started in the Chinese Shan states of Sanda and Thaungthut present day Dehong and Baoshan prefectures in Yunnan China which never sent tribute to the new king In September October 1582 41 Nanda sent two armies 16 000 men 1 400 horses 100 elephants led by Thado Dhamma Yaza II of Prome and Nawrahta Minsaw of Lan Na for a punitive expedition The armies spent five months at Sanda before finally taking the town and arrived back at Pegu on 9 April 1583 42 Ava 1584 edit But all was not well Although the two armies had been drawn mainly from Upper Burma and Shan states Nanda did not ask Thado Minsaw the viceroy of Ava to join the campaign much less lead it Thado Minsaw was a half uncle of Nanda and was married to Nanda s only full sister Despite the deep familial ties the slight did not go unnoticed in Ava In June July 1583 43 Thado Minsaw sent secret embassies to Prome Toungoo and Chiang Mai to raise simultaneous rebellions His intention was not to seek Nanda s imperial throne but to rule Upper Burma independently The three viceroys sided with Nanda and secretly forwarded the news to Nanda 44 45 At Pegu Nanda was particularly concerned that Ava had the support of the Shan states To counter the manpower of Upper Burma Nanda secretly ordered troops from Prome Toungoo Lan Na Lan Xang and Siam during the dry season of 1583 84 44 To be sure he did not trust his remaining vassals either especially Minkhaung II of Toungoo his other half uncle who once revolted against none other than Bayinnaung As a result Nanda built a series of canals between Toungoo and Pegu In March 1584 armies from Prome Toungoo Lan Na Lan Xang and Siam marched to Ava 46 Mingyi Swa was left with a sizable force to guard Pegu 47 At Ava Thado Minsaw asked his loyalists from the Shan states to send help while his army tried to hold off the invading armies On 24 April 1584 48 the two armies met t the outskirts of Ava between Tada U and Pinya Faced with an overwhelming force Thado Minsaw issued a challenge of single combat on war elephants to his nephew who accepted The nephew prevailed after a long drawn out battle driving off his uncle off the field Thado Minsaw with 2 000 of his men fled to northern hills but died en route 49 Siam 1584 edit See also Burmese Siamese War 1584 1593 The Ava rebellion turned out to be just the opening Siam was looking for The proud kingdom had been preparing its defenses for the eventual showdown with Pegu 50 Its ruler Maha Thammarachathirat sent a 6 000 man army led by his son Naresuan ostensibly for Nanda s Ava campaign But the Siamese army did not march to Ava as ordered but hovered around Pegu After Ava fell quickly the Siamese army withdrew to Martaban Mottama and declared independence on 3 May 1584 Nanda in anger dispatched an expedition force 4 000 men 400 horses 40 elephants to chase the Siamese troops to their country When he got back to Pegu he led another army 7 000 men 500 horses 50 elephants and followed up His son Mingyi Swa was his deputy 51 Unlike his father s meticulously planned Siamese campaigns the expedition was hastily planned An 11 000 man invasion force could have never conquered Siam let alone in the rainy season Indeed the troops were caught unprepared by the flooded countryside by the Chao Phraya and were nearly wiped out by Siamese on their war canoes 3 52 Interlude I 1584 86 edit Nanda was in a bind His ministers warned that a failure to recapture Siam would trigger domino like rebellions elsewhere in the empire 53 The problem was that he still did not have complete control over his vassals to raise a large enough force that had a reasonable shot at reconquering Siam He tried to replace the vassals with his loyalists at every opportunity In May 1584 he appointed Min Letya son of King Tabinshwehti as governor of Ava in place of Thado Minsaw The office was strictly a non hereditary governorship not the viceroyship Thado Minsaw enjoyed 47 But Nanda could not replace hereditary rulers without cause When Viceroy Minkhaung II of Toungoo died in June July 1584 54 he had to accept the late viceroy s eldest son Minye Thihathu II as the rightful successor Minye Thihathu II for his part pledged loyalty to his cousin 55 Nanda spent the next year and a half consolidating his rule over the remaining empire On 3 March 1585 he donated five Buddha statues for which he would be remembered as Nga zu Dayaka Min င ဆ ဒ ယက မင Donor King of Five Buddha Statues 56 But the court reported that not taking action in Siam was being interpreted as weakness in Lan Na Lan Xang and Shan states and urged that the king deal with Siam 53 History shows that it was a bad recommendation by the court The vassals tepid support meant that the king could not have raised enough manpower to capture Siam If Nanda s best hope of keeping the core country intact was to retrench from the empire s overextended positions the king and his court could not see it 38 Resumption of Siamese war 1586 87 edit In 1586 the king embarked on what turned out to be suicidal invasions of Siam with whatever he had He chose to pick off northern Siam first In March 1586 57 an army 12 000 troops 1 200 horses 100 elephants led by Mingyi Swa invaded northern Siam from Lan Na But the army could not get past a heavily fortified Lampang led by Naresuan and had to withdraw in June 53 Undeterred Nanda launched a two pronged invasion in the following dry season on 19 October 1586 with 25 000 troops 1 200 horses 220 elephants 58 His largest invasion force nonetheless remained vastly inadequate to conquer a major power like Siam and indeed was only about a third of Bayinnaung s 1568 invasion 59 The invasion fared well initially Both armies overcame Siamese defenses and arrived before Ayutthaya by December But the armies were not ready for a long term siege of the heavily fortified capital Because of poor planning the troops began dying in thousands from want and exposure by February 1587 52 60 By March the siege began to falter and supplies streamed into Ayutthaya through gaps in the Burmese lines 59 The Burmese forces began their painful withdrawal on 20 April 1587 61 being chased throughout by the enemy Only a small portion of the original army made it back across the border 52 Interlude II 1587 90 edit The failed invasion forced him to regroup for the next three years The restless vassals even the smaller ones were beginning to test In November 1587 he had to send an army of 4 000 to put down a rebellion in a small Shan state of Inya 62 It took the army seven months to bring the state back into the fold 63 Whenever leadership positions became vacant in key vassal states he appointed his loyalists his middle son Minye Kyawswa II as Viceroy of Ava on 7 February 1587 Sen Soulintha as King of Lan Xang in December 1588 another son Thado Dhamma Yaza III as Viceroy of Prome on 28 February 1589 64 Final campaigns edit Siam and Mogaung 1590 92 edit With his sons at Ava and Prome in charge of the entire Irrawaddy valley Nanda planned to resume the war against Siam He had raised the largest force yet 30 000 men But the powerful Shan state of Mogaung had revolted refusing to contribute its quota Instead of focusing on Mogaung the king decided to wage war on two fronts He scaled back his invasion to northern Siam He sent a 10 000 man army led by Thado Dhamma Yaza III and Natshinnaung to Mogaung on 2 November 1590 and a 20 000 man army led by Mingyi Swa to Siam on 24 November 1590 65 The northern army took Mogaung by March 1591 and brought back the rebellious saopha to Pegu But after the army left the rebel chief s son who was hiding outside the city seized the city in November 1591 An 8 000 strong army led by Minye Kyawswa II had to return and put down the rebellion by mid 1592 66 The southern army had no such success Like in 1586 Mingyi Swa invaded northern Siam from Lan Na and could not again get past the Lampang fort led by Naresuan But unlike in 1586 it was no mere retreat The army was thoroughly defeated outside Lampang in March 1591 The remaining army arrived back in such disarray that Nanda verbally disparaged Mingyi Swa and executed some of the top generals 67 Final invasion of Siam 1592 93 edit nbsp Thai commemoration of single combat between Naresuan and Mingyi Swa at Nong Sarai Fresh off the success Naresuan switched to offense in the following dry season of 1591 92 by raiding upper Tenasserim coast with a 5 000 strong army 66 Though army units from Martaban Mottama drove back Naresuan s army the raid was a clear sign that the balance of power was shifting in favor of the former vassal state Nanda and his court deliberated at length about their response fully considering the military setbacks and their inability to raise men In the end the court suggested and the king agreed to yet another invasion of Siam 68 On 4 November 1592 note 9 an invasion army of 24 000 tried again 68 After seven weeks the army fought its way to Suphanburi a town just to the west of Ayutthaya 68 Here Burmese chronicle and Siamese chronicle narratives give different accounts Burmese chronicles say that a battle took place on 8 January 1593 in which Mingyi Swa and Naresuan fought on their war elephants In the battle Mingyi Swa was felled by a gunshot after which the Burmese army retreated According to Siamese chronicles the battle took place on 18 January 1593 note 10 Like in the Burmese chronicles the battle started out between the two forces but the Siamese chronicles say that midway through the battle the two sides agreed to decide the outcome by having a duel between Mingyi Swa and Naresuan on their elephants and that Mingyi Swa was cut down by Naresuan 69 At any rate the Burmese forces retreated suffering heavy casualties along the way by incessant Siamese attacks It was the last of Pegu s campaigns Siam s independence was now secured For the next dozen years it was Burma that would be on the defensive the tables of war turning for the first time in 30 years 69 Fall of Toungoo Empire editThe latest defeat in Siam was significant The remaining vassals clearly saw that Pegu could no longer launch a credible offensive war Nanda belatedly tried to retrench from his ambitions but it was too late All of the vassals would have revolted by 1597 and by 1598 his core country Pegu would be under siege Instabilities in the core country 1593 94 edit By 1593 Nanda was having trouble even in his home base of Lower Burma which had borne the brunt of his conscription drives year after year Many people of Lower Burma many whom were ethnic Mons fled military service to become monks debt slaves private retainers or refugees in nearby kingdoms 70 Chronicles speak of a December 1593 unrest in Hmawbi a small town to the west of Pegu 71 While the unrest was easily put down its proximity to the capital was a telltale sign that the people were desperate 72 To help him administer the core country Nanda brought back Minye Kyawswa II from Ava making his middle son by the chief queen his heir apparent on 29 December O S 19 December 1593 note 11 The king did not appoint a replacement viceroy or even a governor at Ava to administer the upcountry With that decision he had effectively retreated from Upper Burma and Shan states It shows that he was more concerned about having a strong potential rival in the upcountry than about dealing with myriad competing minor vassal rulers from afar The decision was not cost free Without closer control of a viceroy Nanda would not be able to enlist any men from the remaining vassals in Upper Burma and Shan states in the following years At any rate the new heir apparent turned out to be a tyrant He immediately set out to tighten his grip on Lower Burma branding men to facilitate identification executing deserters and forcing monks into the army Thado Dhamma Yaza III viceroy of Prome openly disagreed with his brother s policies and the two brothers got into a quarrel Nanda was forced to intervene officially releasing the conscripted men and seized property 73 But the damage was already done Coercion proved self defeating With cultivators disappearing rice prices in Lower Burma reached unheard of levels 70 In October 1594 note 12 the ruler of Moulmein Mawlamyine revolted with Siamese support 73 First Siamese invasion 1594 95 edit See also Burmese Siamese War 1594 1605 Nanda responded to the revolt by sending an 8 000 strong army led by Minye Thihathu II and Thiri Dhammathawka Unbeknownst to the Burmese command the city had been reinforced by Siamese troops led by none other than Naresuan The army was driven back In December note 13 the Siamese forces 12 000 troops 600 horses 60 elephants marched to Pegu Nanda was caught totally flatfooted he had not expected an invasion by Siam The Siamese army now laid siege to Pegu 73 The tables were now completely turned The king in desperation asked his vassals Prome Toungoo and Lan Na for help Aid was slow in coming Minye Thihathu II of Toungoo who had just lost many of his men at Moulmein had to raise more men Nawrahta Minsaw of Lan Na was facing a threat of attack from the king of Lan Xang who officially was still a vassal of Pegu Finally Thado Dhamma Yaza III of Prome had already decided to revolt against his father It was only in early April that combined forces of Toungoo and Lan Na came to relieve the city forcing Naresuan to withdraw on 6 April O S 27 March 1595 But Siam had gained the upper Tenasserim coast 74 Disintegration 1595 97 edit By then Prome had revolted Prome s forces hoping to consolidate central Burma attacked Toungoo whose main forces were at the Pegu front But they could not break through Toungoo s fortified defenses led by Natshinnaung and had to retreat after two weeks But Prome had taken over western central Burma up to Pakhan in the north close to Ava 73 Successful rebellions begot more rebellions Lan Xang s ruler Nokeo Koumane Noh Meuang also revolted c November 1595 note 14 The Lan Xang rebellion was overdue Nanda had held onto Lan Xang thus far only because his vassals were themselves weak Neither Maha Ouparat r 1574 88 nor Sen Soulintha r 1588 91 appeared to have ruled beyond Vientiane Anarchy reigned in the countryside note 15 In 1591 Nanda placed a 20 year old Nokeo Koumane a son of King Setthathirath who grew up in Pegu on the throne hoping for a pliant ruler 75 The young ruler consolidated his hold over his realm by defeating Luang Praban and finally declared independence in 1595 Nokeo Koumane now proceeded to attack Lan Na briefly taking over Nan Nawrahta Minsaw drove back the invaders without receiving any help from his overlord Nanda 76 But Nanda caught a break Nokeo Koumane died shortly after in 1596 His anointed 12 year old successor Vorawongsa and his father Vorapita traveled to Pegu to gain permission to rule Nanda agreed to the request but asked Vorapita to be the regent 77 By the time they arrived back to Vientiane Lan Xang s historical rival Lan Na had revolted Lan Xang declared war on Lan Na not at the behest of Pegu but for itself Although Lan Xang would not officially renounce all tributary ties to Burma until 1603 78 the mountainous kingdom for all intents and purposes was independent by 1597 77 Closer to home Toungoo also revolted in late 1596 early 1597 around the same time as Lan Na In Upper Burma the prince of Nyaungyan had emerged as the main power In May 1596 he had driven out Prome s forces from Pakhan ostensibly on behalf of Nanda 79 But he was quietly consolidating territory for himself After Lan Na s and Toungoo s declarations of independence he too announced plans to take over Ava on 19 April O S 9 April 1597 without Nanda s permission He brazenly moved into the newly built palace on 29 August O S 19 August 1597 80 Nyaungyan never formally revolted but offered no support to the high king either 81 Nanda s once mighty empire had been reduced to a strip of coastal Lower Burma Pegu and the Irrawaddy delta The former vassal rulers now effectively ignored the high king as inconsequential instead now saw each other as rivals It was a natural return to multilateral relations among the smaller states that had existed before the rise of the Toungoo Empire Concerned by Nyaungyan s takeover of Upper Burma Thado Dhamma Yaza III of Prome decided to invade the upcountry But he was assassinated on 15 September O S 5 September 1597 by one of his advisers Toungoo tried to pick off Prome but the new ruler of Prome Yan Naing fended off Toungoo s attacks 82 In the middle Tai country too chaos reigned Lan Na and Lan Xang were locked in conflict Lan Na s own vassals Nan Chiang Saen Chiang Rai were in revolt Siam began to intervene the upcountry affairs in 1598 gaining Lan Na c 1601 02 but chaos continued on the Lan Na countryside 83 Fall from power edit Having failed at Prome Toungoo looked south to Pegu In late 1597 Toungoo and Arakan agreed to a joint attack on Pegu 84 85 Toungoo forces moved the forward base to Kawliya a town northeast of Pegu in March 1598 85 In the following dry season Arakanese and Toungoo forces invaded Lower Burma The Arakanese navy consisted Portuguese mercenaries overran the key port of Syriam Thanlyin in March 1599 Both Toungoo and Arakanese laid siege to Pegu in April Eight months into the siege Nanda s heir apparent Minye Kyawswa II defected to the besiegers after being promised good treatment However it was an empty promise The prince was executed at Toungoo by Natshinnaung 85 4 After the defection the king himself gave up and surrendered on 19 December O S 9 December 1599 86 The fallen king was sent to Toungoo 87 The victors divided the enormous wealth of Pegu accumulated over the past 60 years as the capital of the Toungoo Empire The gold silver and precious stones were equally divided The Arakanese share also included several brazen cannon 30 Khmer bronze statues and a white elephant 4 88 Toungoo forces returned home with their share of the loot on 14 February O S 4 February 1600 leaving the Arakanese in charge of the city 89 A month later the Arakanese forces burned down the entire city including the Grand Palace of King Bayinnaung 4 Exile and death editNanda along with his chief queen Hanthawaddy Mibaya returned to his birth city of Toungoo They treated well there But Nanda s presence at the palace was not welcomed by Natshinnaung the heir apparent of Toungoo Natshinnaung intensely disliked Nanda because the fallen king had once denied Natshinnaung s request for a marriage to the love of his life Yaza Datu Kalaya the widow of Mingyi Swa When the Siamese forces came to lay siege to Toungoo in April 1600 demanding Minye Thihathu to give up the fallen king the 21 year old Natshinnaung urged his father to give Nanda up 90 But the father refused knowing that agreeing to Naresuan s symbolic demand would be seen as a sign of submission to the Siamese king 91 Even after the Siamese retreated Natshinnaung continued to look for an opportunity to remove Nanda On the night of 30 November O S 20 November 1600 the prince assassinated the fallen king Minye Thihathu was extremely displeased with his son s action and ordered a respectful cremation ceremony for his cousin He also kept the dowager queen with her attendants at the palace 92 Legacy edit nbsp Restored Toungoo Empire c 1650 a realistic and organic unit that walked on two legs 93 Nanda by all accounts was an energetic monarch who from his youth upward had served in the armed forces and still led them in person There is no reason to suppose that he was not above the average of Burmese kings 3 But unlike no other Burmese kings he inherited the largest empire in the history of the region which historians call an impossible legacy 3 improbable domain 2 absurdly overextended empire 6 His mistake was to hold on to this empire without an administrative system and without the support of the vassal rulers 3 Nanda s failures showed several following generations of Burmese monarchs about the perils of over extension and the need to establish a more centralized administration in place of hereditary chieftainships The 17th century Toungoo kings rebuilt the fallen empire by the mid 1620s but they deliberately refrained from invading Siam and Lan Xang 77 The restored empire was a realistic and organic unit which did not extend in any direction to a point where Burma s supply lines were more extended than those of her nearest lowland rival 2 The Restored Toungoo kings also instituted an administrative system that replaced hereditary chieftainships with appointed governorships in the entire Irrawaddy valley and greatly reduced the hereditary rights of Shan chiefs 93 Family editNanda had five principal queens two of whom give birth children all of whom were his first cousins His chief queen was Hanthawaddy Mibaya daughter of King Tabinshwehti He had seven children three sons and four daughters by the chief queen and one daughter by one principal queen 94 Queen Rank Issue Hanthawaddy Mibaya Chief Queen Myauk Gyi Kadaw 1 Thakin Gyi daughter 95 married to Minye Kyawhtin of Kawliya the son of Minkhaung II of Toungoo 2 Min Htwe aka Thukha Hsaya daughter 3 Mingyi Swa Crown Prince r 1581 93 4 Khin Ma Hnaung aka Thein Daw Hnaung Queen of Arakan r 1600 12 5 Khin Pu daughter 6 Minye Kyawswa II Crown Prince r 1593 99 7 Thado Dhamma Yaza III Viceroy of Prome r 1589 97 Thiri Yaza Dewi Queen of the Northern Palace 1 Min Shwe Don daughter married to Minye Kyawhtin of Kawliya the son of Minkhaung II of Toungoo Nanda had more than 50 junior queens 17 of whom had issue Name Mother Brief 1 Minyin Phyu Phaukkhaya Sanda Son Gov of Zapayo He and his mother reported sent to Arakan 2 Mingyi Khamedaw Shwe Nan Choum Me princess from Martaban younger sister of Minye Nandameit Gov of Martaban and daughter of Minye Sithu Son Gov of Martaban He and his mother reported sent to Arakan 3 Maung Saw Pru Khin Nge Nyunt or Da Wi Sunt Dao Sruang the daughter of Pe Haung Petch Hueng Binnya Phraya Jakka or Auk Phra Sakkri Ko Auk Ya Jakri from Ayutthaya Gov of Dagon Son taken to Rakhine with his mother in 1600 later Gov of Bohmong Htaung onward and married to Shin Dwe Hnaung the daughter of King Min Razagyi of Rakhine 4 Nara Meik Khlar Khin Gyi Sit Kyane Hpa Choeng Chum the daughter of Narapati IV of Ava personal name Hso Kyaw Hpa Son He and his mother reported sent to Arakan 5 Udein Kyawhtin Khin Nge Sone Bon the younger of Ngetthathura of Kya Tet Son Gov of Toungoo in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja with title Thiri Dhamma Thawka and called Toungoo Shwenan Myo Thit 6 Minye Thiha Sao Nang Kyet Min the daughter of Sao Maw Kya the Saopha of Mongpai Son Gov of Pyay in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja 7 Awiyoun htettaya Pathein Minthami personal name Khin Myo Myat Hpone the daughter of Minye Naratheinkha Daughter married to her half brother Minye Payeik Shi Gov of Tagaung she and her husband reported sent to Arakan 8 Minye Naraseikkha Pathein Minthami personal name Khin Myo Myat Hpone the daughter of Minye Naratheinkha Son Gov of Tabaung he reported sent to Arakan with his mother 9 Minye Payeik Shi Patta Leela the daughter of Hso Chi Hpa the Saopha of Mohnyin Son Gov of Tagaung married to his half sister Awiyoun htettaya he and his wife reported sent to Arakan with his mother 10 Son died when he was born Narapinthala the courtyard woman Son died when he was born 11 Narathinkhala Narapinthala the courtyard woman Son Gov of Ye in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja 12 Nara Thinkhathu Nang Hkuen Sein the daughter of Ai Hkam Souk the Gov of Sipoktara Son Gov of Singu married to his half sister Khin Ma Shwe Pa Chok 13 Khin Ma Shwe Pa Chok Lai Hka Minthami Sao Su Noe Routha the daughter of Hkun Sang Myat Noe the saopha of Lai Hka Daughter married to her half brother Nara Thinkhathu Gov of Singu 14 Phwa Daw Htwe Kyoeng Me Yeb Hpa the daughter of Fang Kawn Hpa the Saopha of Mong Hkwan Son Gov of Chauk in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja 15 Tulyarwaddy Champiyak yam the daughter of Thao Le Tai the Saopha of Mong Ti Daughter 16 Khin Ma Hsin In Payoe Zinme Minthami Nang Tawan Yaw Hseng the niece of Thao Sai Kham the King of Zinme Daughter became forbidden of Naresuan 17 Minye Biya Nang Min Mueng the daughter of Thao Mong Earn the Saopha of Koshanpye Mong Hkang Son Gov of tharay khit taya nowadays Hmawza in reign Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja 18 Upapiya Nang Aone Hkoum Mong the daughter of Pha Inthameittairi the Saopha of Wa from Mong Hseng Son 19 Minye Yamuna Naga Mibaya Lapinawmioni daughter of Laungyettanbu the King of Naga Son Gov of Myaungmya and Hanthawaddy Kyawhtin Nawrahta escaped when Nanda Bayin his father assasinated after that Kauk Taung Anauk s eat married to Myat Hpone Wei the daughter of King Bayinnaung 20 Mila Yadana Punna Kasapa Naga Mibaya Lapinawmioni daughter of Laungyettanbu the King of Naga Daughter live with her full brother Among his principal queens the outstanding queens who had no issue were Min Phyu and Min Htwe Both were daughters of King Minkhaung II of Toungoo and Min Taya Medaw the daughter of Thado Dhamma Yaza IIIn all he had 29 children 19 sons and 10 daughters 3 sons and 5 daughters by principal queens and 16 sons and 5 daughters by junior queens 3 of the notable children by junior queens were Maung Saw Pru The Arakanese King Min Razagyi appointed him as the governor of newly established Bohmong Htaung in 1600 and Thiri Dhamma Thawka Gov of Toungoo and Minye Thiha Gov of Pyay in the reign of King Hanthawaddy Mahadhammaraja 94 Notes edit Lan Xang did not formally renounce tributary ties with Burma until 1603 per Stuart Fox 2008 38 But it was de facto independent by 1597 Hmannan Vol 3 2003 61 106 Nanda ascended to the throne on the full moon day of Tazaungmon 943 ME 10 October 1581 at age 46 in his 47th year It means he was born on or before the full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME 9 November 1535 But Hmannan Vol 3 2003 240 248 says he was still 12 years old in his 13th year on 13th waxing of Tazaungmon 910 13 October 1548 at the start of the 1548 Siamese campaign It means he was born between 14th waxing of Tazaungmon 897 ME and the full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME 8 November or 9 November 1535 Per Hmannan Vol 3 2003 106 he was born on a Tuesday It means he was born on 9 November 1535 Tuesday full moon of Tazaungmon 897 ME See Hmannan Vol 2 2003 172 173 his grandfather King Mingyi Nyo s ancestry Chronicles generally do not mention the ethnicity of the royalty and Nanda s was no exception His ethnicity is inferred from the positions of his ancestors His maternal grandmother Yadana Dewi was a princess of Mobye Mong Pai a Shan state He also descended from King Thihathu a half Shan according to colonial period scholarship and Shin Mi Nauk of Mohnyin a full Shan However Aung Thwin 1996 and Aung Thwin and Aung Thwin 2012 107 109 argue that it is a mistake to equate the position with ethnicity and that colonial scholarship grafted on Shan ethnicity to the so called Shan brothers without any evidence Indeed Mohnyin Thado was a Burman saopha of Mohnyin and many ethnic Shans were governors of the Shwebo region the Burman heartland Nevertheless the ruling clan of Mobye and Hsipaw produced kings Hkonmaing and Mobye Narapati both of whom are accepted as Shan Therefore Nanda s maternal grandmother was probably of Shan ethnicity and his mother Atula Thiri was at least 50 Shan Chronicles Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 201 do not explicitly say that Nanda became heir apparent on Bayinnaung s coronation ceremony on 11 January 1551 in which the king handed out various titles to his brothers But it assumed that he did as the chronicles refer to Nanda as Maha Upayaza heir apparent on the very next page Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 202 Chronicles Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 68 69 say he arrived back on Sunday 8th waxing of 942 ME but 8th waxing is a typographical error 8th waxing of 942 ME translates to Wednesday 23 March 1580 It was probably 5th waxing of Tagu 942 ME which translates to Sunday 20 March 1580 The Burmese numerals 5 ၅ and 8 ၈ written in longhand can easily be mixed up As seen in Hmannan Vol 3 2003 49 53 Bayinnaung began to back away as early as 1579 and gave Nanda a greater role In his appointment of Nawrahta Minsaw as ruler of Lan Na the king acknowledged his failing health and asked Nawrahta Minsaw to obey Nanda as the health of the kingdom depends on their unity Later that year Bayinnaung asked Nanda to go to Lan Xang to restore order there Both standard chronicles Maha Yazawin and Hmannan Yazawin state that Nanda s coronation ceremony was held on the Sunday following the king s death But they each give a different date Maha Yazawin Maha Yazawin Vol 3 206 77 gives Sunday 4th waning of Tazaungmon 943 ME which translates to Saturday 14 October 1581 whereas Hmannan Yazawin Hmannan Vol 3 2003 73 gives Sunday 5th waning of Tazaungmon 943 ME or Sunday 15 October 1581 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 93 gives Wednesday 12th waxing of Nadaw 954 ME which translates to Sunday 14 November 1592 But Hmannan Vol 3 2003 93 corrects it as Wednesday 2nd waning of Nadaw which translates to Wednesday 4 November 1592 NS Damrong 2001 128 Monday 2nd waning of the second Siamese month of 954 CS 18 January 1593 NS Maha Yazawin Vol 3 95 Wednesday 8th waxing of Pyatho 955 ME 29 December 1593 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 95 Tazaungmon 956 ME 13 October to 11 November 1594 NS Chronicles Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 95 96 say the Siamese army retreated on 6 April 1595 after a four month siege of Pegu Thus the Siamese army must have laid siege to Pegu in December Simms amp Simms 2001 89 90 says Nokeo Koumane revolted in 1593 but Fernquest 2005 47 says the earliest evidence of a Lan Xang revolt against Nanda in the Lan Xang Chiang Mai Ayutthaya and Burmese chronicles is 957 ME 11 April 1595 to 9 April 1596 He had already revolted by November 1595 According to the Nan Chronicle Ratchasomphan 1994 67 Lan Xang and Nan forces fought a battle with Lan Na forces on 25 November 1595 NS Laotian history per Simms amp Simms 2001 86 89 holds that Maha Ouparat died in 1579 and was followed by Soulintha who ruled between 1580 82 and that there were no rulers between 1583 and 1591 in Lan Xang However both standard Burmese chronicles Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 89 and Hmannan Vol 3 2003 88 say Maha Ouparat died in Thadingyut 950 ME 19 September to 17 October 1588 NS However Laotian history s eight years of anarchy is still probable since Maha Ouparat not deemed an effective ruler even in the Burmese chronicles probably did not have much control beyond the capital References edit Hmannan Vol 3 2003 106 a b c Lieberman 2003 161 a b c d e f g Harvey 1925 181 182 a b c d Harvey 1925 182 183 a b Lieberman 2003 154 156 a b c d Lieberman 2003 154 155 Sein Lwin Lay 2006 109 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 189 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 258 259 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 202 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 206 Hmannan Vol 2 2003 280 281 a b Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 216 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 230 233 235 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 240 242 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 245 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 249 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 261 262 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 267 272 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 277 279 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 285 287 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 289 292 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 309 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 327 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 332 335 Phayre 1967 114 115 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 336 338 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 39 42 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 45 46 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 48 49 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 251 Harvey 1925 151 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 75 77 Hmannan Vol 3 2003 73 Lieberman 2003 152 Tarling 1999 72 73 Lieberman 2003 35 a b c Harvey 1925 181 Aung Thwin amp Aung Thwin 2012 137 a b Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 77 78 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 78 Thadingyut 944 ME 27 September 1582 to 25 October 1582 NS Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 78 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 79 Waso 945 ME 19 June 1583 to 17 July 1583 NS a b Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 79 Htin Aung 1967 129 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 80 81 a b Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 82 Maha Yazawin Vol 2 2006 80 Tuesday 1st waning of Kason 946 ME 24 April 1584 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 80 82 Lieberman 2003 155 156 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 82 83 a b c Phayre 1967 121 a b c Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 86 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 83 1st Waso 946 ME 7 June 1584 to 6 July 1584 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 83 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 83 Sunday 3rd waxing of Tabaung 946 ME 3 March 1585 Late Tagu 947 ME 19 March 1586 to 7 April 1586 NS Hmannan Vol 3 2003 84 a b Harvey 1925 334 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 87 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 87 14th waxing of Kason 949 ME 20 April 1587 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 88 Tazaungmon 949 ME 1 November to 29 November 1587 NS Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 88 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 86 89 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 90 5th waxing of Tazaungmon 952 ME 31 October 1590 12th waning of Tazaungmon 952 ME 22 November 1590 a b Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 91 92 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 90 91 a b c Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 93 a b Wyatt 2003 88 89 a b Lieberman 2003 156 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 95 Nadaw 955 ME 23 November 1593 to 21 December 1593 NS Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 95 a b c d Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 95 96 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 96 Simms amp Simms 2001 88 89 Fernquest 2005 47 a b c Fernquest 2005 56 57 Stuart Fox 2008 38 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 97 Than Tun Vol 2 1985 11 Phayre 1967 122 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 112 113 Fernquest 2005 47 48 51 53 Sandamala Linkara Vol 2 1999 77 78 a b c Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 98 99 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 100 Sunday 4th waxing of Pyatho 961 ME 19 December 1599 NS Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 100 Htin Aung 1967 133 134 Hmannan Vol 3 2003 103 amp Yazawin Thit Vol 2 2012 235 Monday 2nd waxing of Tabaung 961 ME 14 February 1600 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 101 Htin Aung 1967 134 Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 102 a b Lieberman 2003 159 164 a b Maha Yazawin Vol 3 2006 103 Yazawin Thit Vol 2 2012 239Bibliography editAung Thwin Michael A November 1996 The Myth of the Three Shan Brothers and the Ava Period in Burmese History The Journal of Asian Studies 55 4 881 901 doi 10 2307 2646527 JSTOR 2646527 Aung Thwin Michael A Maitrii Aung Thwin 2012 A History of Myanmar Since Ancient Times illustrated ed Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 1 86189 901 9 Fernquest Jon Spring 2005 The Flight of Lao War Captives from Burma back to Laos in 1596 A Comparison of Historical Sources PDF SOAS Bulletin of Burma Research 3 1 ISSN 1479 8484 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 Lieberman Victor B 2003 Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 volume 1 Integration on the Mainland Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 80496 7 Maha Sithu 2012 1798 Kyaw Win Thein Hlaing eds Yazawin Thit in Burmese Vol 1 3 2nd ed Yangon Ya Pyei Publishing Phayre Lt Gen Sir Arthur P 1967 1883 History of Burma London Susil Gupta Ratchasomphan Saenluang 1994 David K Wyatt ed The Nan Chronicle SEAP Publications ISBN 9780877277156 Royal Historical Commission of Burma 2003 1832 Hmannan Yazawin in Burmese Vol 1 3 Yangon Ministry of Information Myanmar Sandamala Linkara Ashin 1997 1999 1931 Rakhine Razawin Thit in Burmese Vol 1 2 Yangon Tetlan Sarpay Sein Lwin Lay Kahtika U 2006 1968 Mintaya Shwe Hti and Bayinnaung Ketumadi Taungoo Yazawin in Burmese 2nd printing ed Yangon Yan Aung Sarpay Simms Peter Sanda Simms 2001 The Kingdoms of Laos Six Hundred Years of History illustrated ed Psychology Press ISBN 9780700715312 Stuart Fox Martin 2008 Historical Dictionary of Laos Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810864115 Tarling Nicholas 1999 The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia Vol 2 illustrated ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521663700 Than Tun 1985 The Royal Orders of Burma A D 1598 1885 Vol 2 Kyoto University hdl 2433 173789 Wyatt David K 2003 Thailand A Short History 2 ed Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08475 7 Nanda BayinToungoo dynastyBorn 9 November 1535 Died 30 November 1600 Regnal titles Preceded byBayinnaung King of Burma10 October 1581 19 December O S 9 December 1599 Succeeded byNyaungyan Royal titles Preceded byBayinnaung Heir to the Burmese Throne11 January 1551 10 October 1581 Succeeded byMingyi Swa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nanda Bayin amp oldid 1214321805, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.