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Pyay

Pyay (Burmese: ပြည်မြို့; MLCTS: prany mrui., pronounced [pjì mjo̰]; Mon: ပြန် Mon pronunciation: [prɔn], Burmese pronunciation: [pjàɰ̃]; also known as Prome and Pyè) is the principal town of Pyay Township in the Bago Region in Myanmar. Pyay is located on the bank of the Irrawaddy River, 260 km (160 mi) north-west of Yangon.[1] It is an important trade center for the Ayeyarwady Delta, Central and Upper Myanmar and the Rakhine (Arakan) State.[2] The British Irrawaddy Flotilla Company established the current town in the late 19th century on the Irrawaddy as a transshipment point for cargo between Upper and Lower Burma. The English novelist Jane Austen's brother Rear Admiral Charles Austen died here in 1852.

Pyay
ပြည်မြို့
ဍုၚ်ပြန်
Prome
City
Pyay
Coordinates: 18°49′12″N 95°12′56″E / 18.82000°N 95.21556°E / 18.82000; 95.21556
Country Myanmar
Division Bago Region
DistrictPyay District
TownshipPyay Township
Population
 (2014)
 • Urban
134,861
 • Metro
251,643
Time zoneUTC+6:30 (+6:30)

The district of Pyay encompasses the valley of the Irrawaddy, located between Thayet, Hinthada and Tharrawaddy districts. Along the western side of Pyay District are the Arakan Mountains and along the eastern side are the Pegu Range. Pyay District's main towns are Pyay, Shwetaung, and Paungde.

Etymology edit

The name "Pyay" means "country" in Burmese, and refers to the ruins of the main city of the Pyu city-states, Sri Ksetra (Burmese: သရေခေတ္တရာ, Sanskrit Śrīkṣetra "blessed place, country"), which is located 8 km (5.0 mi) to the south-east of modern Pyay and is in the village of Hmawa.

Geography edit

The north and north-east of the district is forest-covered, and contains numerous valleys and ravines, which unite in one large stream called the Naweng River. The most important of the plains lie in the south and south-west portions of Pyay, and extend along the whole length of the railway that runs between. There are, in addition large tracts of land covered by jungle, which are available for cultivation. The principal river is the Irrawaddy, which intersects the district from north to south; next in importance are the Thani and its tributaries and the Naweng system of rivers. In the hills near the capital the soil is of Tertiary formation, and in the plains it is an alluvial deposit.

History edit

Much debate surrounds the construction of Sri Ksetra. Htin Aung suggests that Pyu might have been founded in 78 CE, based on the Sanskrit / Pyu Era. D. G. E. Hall and Gordon Luce, however, claim that civilisation of the Irrawaddy Valley could not have been possible before the 4th century, thus, attributing the founding of Sri Ksetra to 638, from which the current Burmese Kawza Era begins.

Sri Ksetra was the capital of the Pyu dynasty of Vikrama. The city was circular with walls enclosing about 46 km2 (18 sq mi), making it the largest walled city in Southeast Asia during its peak. The city contained both housing and farms, as is evident from the remains of waterways and tanks which have been discovered.

The Chinese pilgrims Xuanzang and Yijing mentioned Sri Ksetra in their mid-7th-century accounts.[3] It is not known when precisely the Pyu abandoned Sri Ksetra and moved northward. It is speculated that their decline was due to the growth of the Irrawaddy river delta, cutting it off from coastal trade, and also from Mon and later Tai Shan incursions. Burmese chronicles state that when Anawrahta invaded the southern parts of modern-day Myanmar in 1057, he ordered the ruins of Sri Ksetra to be destroyed to prevent rebels from sheltering there. The Burmese came to call the old Pyu center Pyi. The extensive ruins have been the subject of intensive archaeological investigation.

 
Strand Road in 1910.

Called Prome by the British (after the name that appears in the Portuguese texts of the 17th century), the city became part of British territory after the Second Anglo-Burmese War in 1853. The town was taken by the British in 1825 during the Battle of Prome and again in 1852, on both occasions with hardly any opposition. In 1862, it was almost entirely destroyed by fire, and was afterwards relaid out in straight and broad streets. It was erected into a municipality in 1874, and since then great improvements have been made, including waterworks.

 
Indian troops of the 20th Division search for Japanese at the badly damaged station in Prome, 3 May 1945.

During World War II the city was the site of the Battle of Prome. The city was later retaken by the British Army in May 1945.

Climate edit

Pyay has a tropical savanna climate (Köppen climate classification Aw). Temperatures are hot throughout the year, especially in the months before the monsoon from March to May when average maximum temperatures exceed 36 °C or 96.8 °F. The winter months from December to February are somewhat milder than the rest of the year. There is a winter dry season from December to April and a summer wet season from May to November, although rainfall during this wet season is much less extreme than in coastal cities like Yangon or especially Sittwe.

Climate data for Pyay (1991–2020)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 32.6
(90.7)
35.5
(95.9)
37.9
(100.2)
38.9
(102.0)
36.1
(97.0)
32.3
(90.1)
31.3
(88.3)
31.4
(88.5)
32.7
(90.9)
33.6
(92.5)
33.3
(91.9)
31.9
(89.4)
33.9
(93.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 24.4
(75.9)
26.6
(79.9)
29.5
(85.1)
31.8
(89.2)
30.8
(87.4)
28.5
(83.3)
27.9
(82.2)
27.9
(82.2)
28.5
(83.3)
28.8
(83.8)
27.5
(81.5)
25.1
(77.2)
28.1
(82.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 16.3
(61.3)
17.7
(63.9)
21.2
(70.2)
24.6
(76.3)
25.5
(77.9)
24.7
(76.5)
24.5
(76.1)
24.5
(76.1)
24.4
(75.9)
24.1
(75.4)
21.7
(71.1)
18.2
(64.8)
22.3
(72.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 4.3
(0.17)
0.7
(0.03)
4.9
(0.19)
36.5
(1.44)
145.9
(5.74)
260
(10.2)
218.5
(8.60)
232.8
(9.17)
219.1
(8.63)
130.8
(5.15)
30.2
(1.19)
4.1
(0.16)
1,287.8
(50.70)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 0.4 0.1 0.7 2.1 9.6 18.9 19.8 19.7 15.8 10.1 2.7 0.4 100.3
Source: World Meteorological Organization[4]

Economy edit

 
Sign indicating city limits of Pyay

The main crop is rice, but some cotton and tobacco are grown, while the custard apples are famous. Sericulture is extensively carried on by a special class. The forests yield teak and cutch, cotton and silk-weaving are important industries; there are also manufactures of ornamental boxes, coarse brown sugar and cutch.

Culture edit

 
A post card of Shwesandaw Pagoda in Pyay dating to 1910.

For a town of its size, Pyay is well-renowned for a number of local delicacies.[5] It is reputed for the Pyay palata (ပြည်ပလာတာ), consisting of paratha, Burmese chicken and potato curry, and raw onions.[6] It is also known for a number of Burmese salads, including the Pyay rice salad (ပြည်ထမင်းသုပ်) and Pyay assorted salad (ပြည်အသုပ်စုံ).[5][7]

Pyay also produces a local pickled delicacy called taw laphet (တောလက်ဖက်; lit.'rural laphet') or Nibbinda laphet (နိဗ္ဗိန္ဒလက်ဖက်).[8] Originating from Burmese nunneries in the hills surrounding Pyay, the laphet is fermented from the leaves of the naywe (နရွဲ) tree, or kyettet (ကြက်တက်), the Combretum pilosum plant.[9][10] The pulp is then tightly wrapped into dried banbwe (ဘန့်ပွေး) leaves and left soaking in regularly changed water for up to 2 years, before it is consumed.[9] Taw laphet is otherwise consumed in an identical fashion to traditional laphet.[9]

Tourism edit

 
Shwesandaw Pagoda is located in the center of Pyay.

To the south and south-east, the town is closed in by low pagoda-topped hills, on one of which stands the conspicuous gilded Shwesandaw Pagoda. The Shwesandaw Pagoda is a notable Buddhist pagoda in the center of Pyay. It is the terminus for a railway from Yangon, which runs through the district.[11]

To the west of Pyay, crossing Irrawaddy river through Nawaday bridge, stands the Shwebontha Muni Pagoda. The Buddha statue is one of three replica of the Maha Myat Muni Buddha statue, believed to date back 554 B.C. when the king Sandar Thuriya ruled.[12]

Education edit

Pyay City has three universities. The universities are Pyay University (PU), Pyay Technological University (PTU), and Computer University, Pyay. Pyay University is situated near to the town centre of Pyay. PTU, which is one of the best ranking University in Myanmar, is situated near to Hnawgone village and Latkhoukpin village, a few miles away from Pyay. CU, Pyay is also quite a far distance from downtown.

Health care edit

  • Pyay General Hospital
  • Aung Zaw Oo Hospital
  • Myo Thuka Hospital
  • Aung Tharaphu Hospital
  • Lawkaparla Hospital
  • Pyi Myanmar Hospital

Notable people edit

  • Khin One (1947—2000), Burmese painter, writer, and singer

References edit

  1. ^ Pyay. (2005). In The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia including Atlas. Retrieved March 13, 2008, from http://www.credoreference.com/entry/6458618
  2. ^ "Myanmar Travel Information". from the original on 2020-02-25. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
  3. ^ Cœdès 1968, pp. 62–63, 77.
  4. ^ "World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1991–2020". World Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
  5. ^ a b "ပြည် အစားအစာတွေ ရနိုင်တဲ့ ဗိုလ်အောင်ကျော်လမ်းက ဆိုင်သစ်လေး". The Myanmar Times (in Burmese). 2017-06-28. from the original on 2021-01-14. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  6. ^ "ပြည်ပလာတာ". Danuphyu Daw Saw Yee (London). 2012-03-17. from the original on 2012-04-01. Retrieved 2021-01-09.
  7. ^ "မနက်စောစောအတွက်အဆင်ပြေတဲ့ ပြည်ထမင်းသုပ်". The Irrawaddy (in Burmese). from the original on 2021-01-14. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  8. ^ "ပြည်လက်ဆောင်". Ksetra Pyay (in Burmese). from the original on 2021-01-13. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  9. ^ a b c "ပြည်မြို့က တောလက်ဖက်". လွမ်းမပြေ သုတရပ်ဝန် (in Burmese). 2014-07-24. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  10. ^ "ပြည်မြို့ကတောလက်ဖက်ကို နှီးနဲ့ဘာဖြစ်လို့တင်းနေအောင်ချည်ထားကြတာလဲ". MRTV Travelogue (Travel Diary -5.1) (in Burmese). from the original on 2021-01-19. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  11. ^ Bagan: Shwesandaw Pagoda, Myanmar(Burma) 2008-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "Shwe Bontha Muni Pagoda". from the original on 2019-02-27. Retrieved 2019-02-27.

Bibliography edit

Pyay
Preceded by
Capital of Prome Kingdom
c. November 1482 – 19 May 1542
Kingdom defeated by Toungoo forces

pyay, burmese, mlcts, prany, mrui, pronounced, pjì, pronunciation, prɔn, burmese, pronunciation, pjàɰ, also, known, prome, pyè, principal, town, township, bago, region, myanmar, located, bank, irrawaddy, river, north, west, yangon, important, trade, center, ay. Pyay Burmese ပ ည မ MLCTS prany mrui pronounced pji mjo Mon ပ န Mon pronunciation prɔn Burmese pronunciation pjaɰ also known as Prome and Pye is the principal town of Pyay Township in the Bago Region in Myanmar Pyay is located on the bank of the Irrawaddy River 260 km 160 mi north west of Yangon 1 It is an important trade center for the Ayeyarwady Delta Central and Upper Myanmar and the Rakhine Arakan State 2 The British Irrawaddy Flotilla Company established the current town in the late 19th century on the Irrawaddy as a transshipment point for cargo between Upper and Lower Burma The English novelist Jane Austen s brother Rear Admiral Charles Austen died here in 1852 Pyay ပ ည မ ဍ ၚ ပ န PromeCityShwesandaw Pagoda in PyayPyayCoordinates 18 49 12 N 95 12 56 E 18 82000 N 95 21556 E 18 82000 95 21556Country MyanmarDivision Bago RegionDistrictPyay DistrictTownshipPyay TownshipPopulation 2014 Urban134 861 Metro251 643Time zoneUTC 6 30 6 30 The district of Pyay encompasses the valley of the Irrawaddy located between Thayet Hinthada and Tharrawaddy districts Along the western side of Pyay District are the Arakan Mountains and along the eastern side are the Pegu Range Pyay District s main towns are Pyay Shwetaung and Paungde Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 4 Climate 5 Economy 6 Culture 7 Tourism 8 Education 9 Health care 10 Notable people 11 References 11 1 BibliographyEtymology editThe name Pyay means country in Burmese and refers to the ruins of the main city of the Pyu city states Sri Ksetra Burmese သရ ခ တ တရ Sanskrit Srikṣetra blessed place country which is located 8 km 5 0 mi to the south east of modern Pyay and is in the village of Hmawa Geography editThe north and north east of the district is forest covered and contains numerous valleys and ravines which unite in one large stream called the Naweng River The most important of the plains lie in the south and south west portions of Pyay and extend along the whole length of the railway that runs between There are in addition large tracts of land covered by jungle which are available for cultivation The principal river is the Irrawaddy which intersects the district from north to south next in importance are the Thani and its tributaries and the Naweng system of rivers In the hills near the capital the soil is of Tertiary formation and in the plains it is an alluvial deposit History editMuch debate surrounds the construction of Sri Ksetra Htin Aung suggests that Pyu might have been founded in 78 CE based on the Sanskrit Pyu Era D G E Hall and Gordon Luce however claim that civilisation of the Irrawaddy Valley could not have been possible before the 4th century thus attributing the founding of Sri Ksetra to 638 from which the current Burmese Kawza Era begins Sri Ksetra was the capital of the Pyu dynasty of Vikrama The city was circular with walls enclosing about 46 km2 18 sq mi making it the largest walled city in Southeast Asia during its peak The city contained both housing and farms as is evident from the remains of waterways and tanks which have been discovered The Chinese pilgrims Xuanzang and Yijing mentioned Sri Ksetra in their mid 7th century accounts 3 It is not known when precisely the Pyu abandoned Sri Ksetra and moved northward It is speculated that their decline was due to the growth of the Irrawaddy river delta cutting it off from coastal trade and also from Mon and later Tai Shan incursions Burmese chronicles state that when Anawrahta invaded the southern parts of modern day Myanmar in 1057 he ordered the ruins of Sri Ksetra to be destroyed to prevent rebels from sheltering there The Burmese came to call the old Pyu center Pyi The extensive ruins have been the subject of intensive archaeological investigation nbsp Strand Road in 1910 Called Prome by the British after the name that appears in the Portuguese texts of the 17th century the city became part of British territory after the Second Anglo Burmese War in 1853 The town was taken by the British in 1825 during the Battle of Prome and again in 1852 on both occasions with hardly any opposition In 1862 it was almost entirely destroyed by fire and was afterwards relaid out in straight and broad streets It was erected into a municipality in 1874 and since then great improvements have been made including waterworks nbsp Indian troops of the 20th Division search for Japanese at the badly damaged station in Prome 3 May 1945 During World War II the city was the site of the Battle of Prome The city was later retaken by the British Army in May 1945 Climate editPyay has a tropical savanna climate Koppen climate classification Aw Temperatures are hot throughout the year especially in the months before the monsoon from March to May when average maximum temperatures exceed 36 C or 96 8 F The winter months from December to February are somewhat milder than the rest of the year There is a winter dry season from December to April and a summer wet season from May to November although rainfall during this wet season is much less extreme than in coastal cities like Yangon or especially Sittwe Climate data for Pyay 1991 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily maximum C F 32 6 90 7 35 5 95 9 37 9 100 2 38 9 102 0 36 1 97 0 32 3 90 1 31 3 88 3 31 4 88 5 32 7 90 9 33 6 92 5 33 3 91 9 31 9 89 4 33 9 93 0 Daily mean C F 24 4 75 9 26 6 79 9 29 5 85 1 31 8 89 2 30 8 87 4 28 5 83 3 27 9 82 2 27 9 82 2 28 5 83 3 28 8 83 8 27 5 81 5 25 1 77 2 28 1 82 6 Mean daily minimum C F 16 3 61 3 17 7 63 9 21 2 70 2 24 6 76 3 25 5 77 9 24 7 76 5 24 5 76 1 24 5 76 1 24 4 75 9 24 1 75 4 21 7 71 1 18 2 64 8 22 3 72 1 Average precipitation mm inches 4 3 0 17 0 7 0 03 4 9 0 19 36 5 1 44 145 9 5 74 260 10 2 218 5 8 60 232 8 9 17 219 1 8 63 130 8 5 15 30 2 1 19 4 1 0 16 1 287 8 50 70 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 0 4 0 1 0 7 2 1 9 6 18 9 19 8 19 7 15 8 10 1 2 7 0 4 100 3Source World Meteorological Organization 4 Economy edit nbsp Sign indicating city limits of PyayThe main crop is rice but some cotton and tobacco are grown while the custard apples are famous Sericulture is extensively carried on by a special class The forests yield teak and cutch cotton and silk weaving are important industries there are also manufactures of ornamental boxes coarse brown sugar and cutch Culture edit nbsp A post card of Shwesandaw Pagoda in Pyay dating to 1910 For a town of its size Pyay is well renowned for a number of local delicacies 5 It is reputed for the Pyay palata ပ ည ပလ တ consisting of paratha Burmese chicken and potato curry and raw onions 6 It is also known for a number of Burmese salads including the Pyay rice salad ပ ည ထမင သ ပ and Pyay assorted salad ပ ည အသ ပ စ 5 7 Pyay also produces a local pickled delicacy called taw laphet တ လက ဖက lit rural laphet or Nibbinda laphet န ဗ ဗ န ဒလက ဖက 8 Originating from Burmese nunneries in the hills surrounding Pyay the laphet is fermented from the leaves of the naywe နရ tree or kyettet က က တက the Combretum pilosum plant 9 10 The pulp is then tightly wrapped into dried banbwe ဘန ပ leaves and left soaking in regularly changed water for up to 2 years before it is consumed 9 Taw laphet is otherwise consumed in an identical fashion to traditional laphet 9 Tourism edit nbsp Shwesandaw Pagoda is located in the center of Pyay To the south and south east the town is closed in by low pagoda topped hills on one of which stands the conspicuous gilded Shwesandaw Pagoda The Shwesandaw Pagoda is a notable Buddhist pagoda in the center of Pyay It is the terminus for a railway from Yangon which runs through the district 11 To the west of Pyay crossing Irrawaddy river through Nawaday bridge stands the Shwebontha Muni Pagoda The Buddha statue is one of three replica of the Maha Myat Muni Buddha statue believed to date back 554 B C when the king Sandar Thuriya ruled 12 Education editPyay City has three universities The universities are Pyay University PU Pyay Technological University PTU and Computer University Pyay Pyay University is situated near to the town centre of Pyay PTU which is one of the best ranking University in Myanmar is situated near to Hnawgone village and Latkhoukpin village a few miles away from Pyay CU Pyay is also quite a far distance from downtown Health care editPyay General Hospital Aung Zaw Oo Hospital Myo Thuka Hospital Aung Tharaphu Hospital Lawkaparla Hospital Pyi Myanmar HospitalNotable people editKhin One 1947 2000 Burmese painter writer and singerReferences edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Pyay nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pyay Pyay 2005 In The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia including Atlas Retrieved March 13 2008 from http www credoreference com entry 6458618 Myanmar Travel Information Archived from the original on 2020 02 25 Retrieved 2019 02 26 Cœdes 1968 pp 62 63 77 World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1991 2020 World Meteorological Organization Retrieved 16 October 2023 a b ပ ည အစ အစ တ ရန င တ ဗ လ အ င က လမ က ဆ င သစ လ The Myanmar Times in Burmese 2017 06 28 Archived from the original on 2021 01 14 Retrieved 2021 01 12 ပ ည ပလ တ Danuphyu Daw Saw Yee London 2012 03 17 Archived from the original on 2012 04 01 Retrieved 2021 01 09 မနက စ စ အတ က အဆင ပ တ ပ ည ထမင သ ပ The Irrawaddy in Burmese Archived from the original on 2021 01 14 Retrieved 2021 01 12 ပ ည လက ဆ င Ksetra Pyay in Burmese Archived from the original on 2021 01 13 Retrieved 2021 01 12 a b c ပ ည မ က တ လက ဖက လ မ မပ သ တရပ ဝန in Burmese 2014 07 24 Retrieved 2021 01 12 ပ ည မ ကတ လက ဖက က န န ဘ ဖ စ လ တင န အ င ခ ည ထ က တ လ MRTV Travelogue Travel Diary 5 1 in Burmese Archived from the original on 2021 01 19 Retrieved 2021 01 12 Bagan Shwesandaw Pagoda Myanmar Burma Archived 2008 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Shwe Bontha Muni Pagoda Archived from the original on 2019 02 27 Retrieved 2019 02 27 Bibliography edit Cœdes George 1968 The Indianized States of South East Asia University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0368 1 Htin Aung 1967 A History of Burma Columbia University Press 1967 Htin Aung Asoka Society 1970 Burmese history before 1287 a defence of the chronicles the Asoka Society ISBN 9780718921149 Stargardt Janice 1 January 1990 The Ancient Pyu of Burma Early Pyu cities in a man made landscape PACSEA ISBN 978 1 873178 00 3 Thant Myint U 2011 The River of Lost Footsteps Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 26606 7 PyayPreceded by Capital of Prome Kingdomc November 1482 19 May 1542 Kingdom defeated by Toungoo forces Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pyay amp oldid 1180965680, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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