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Toungoo dynasty

The Toungoo dynasty (Burmese: တောင်ငူမင်းဆက်, [tàʊɰ̃ŋù mɪ́ɰ̃ zɛʔ]; also spelt Taungoo dynasty), and also known as the Restored Toungoo dynasty, was the ruling dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from the mid-16th century to 1752. Its early kings Tabinshwehti and Bayinnaung succeeded in reunifying the territories of the Pagan Kingdom for the first time since 1287 and in incorporating the Shan States for the first time. ,[1] in addition to including Manipur, Chinese Shan States, Siam and Lan Xang. But the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia collapsed in the 18 years following Bayinnaung's death in 1581.

Toungoo dynasty
တောင်ငူမင်းဆက်
1510–1752
Toungoo Empire at its greatest extent (1580)
The restored Taungoo or Nyaungyan Dynasty c. 1650
CapitalToungoo (Taungoo) (1510–39)
Pegu (Bago) (1539–99)
Ava (Inwa) (1599–1613)
Pegu (Bago) (1613–35)
Ava (Inwa) (1635–1752)
Common languagesOfficial
Burmese
Regional
Religion
Official
Theravada Buddhism
GovernmentMonarchy
• 1530–50
Tabinshwehti
• 1550–81
Bayinnaung
• 1605–28
Anaukpetlun
• 1629–48
Thalun
• 1733–52
Mahadhammaraza Dipadi
LegislatureHluttaw
History 
• Founding of dynasty
1485
• Independence from Ava
16 October 1510
1510–99
1599–1752
• End of dynasty
23 March 1752
Population
• Census
1,982,000 - 2,313,000
CurrencyGanza kyat and silver kyat

The dynasty quickly regrouped under the leadership of Nyaungyan Min and his son, Anaukpetlun, who succeeded in restoring a smaller, more manageable kingdom, encompassing Lower Burma, Upper Burma, Shan States and Lan Na by 1622. The Restored Toungoo kings, now based in Ava (Inwa), created a legal and political system whose basic features would continue under the Konbaung dynasty well into the 19th century. The crown completely replaced the hereditary chieftainships with appointed governorships in the entire Irrawaddy valley and greatly reduced the hereditary rights of Shan chiefs. Its trade and secular administrative reforms built a prosperous economy for more than 80 years.

The kingdom entered a gradual decline due to the "palace rule" of its kings. Starting from the 1720s, the kingdom was beset with raids by the Meitei people of the Chindwin River, and a rebellion in Chiang Mai. Raids by the Meitei intensified in the 1730s, reaching increasingly deeper parts of central Burma. In 1740, the Mon people in Lower Burma began a rebellion, founding the Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom. The Hanthawaddy armies captured Inwa in 1752 and ended the 266-year-old Toungoo dynasty.

History

King Mingyi Nyo founded the First Taungoo Dynasty (1485–1569) at Taungoo far up the Sittaung River south of Inwa towards the end of the Ava Kingdom in 1510. After the conquest of Inwa by the Mohnyin-led Shan sawbwas in 1527, many Burmese-speakers migrated to Taungoo, which became a new centre.

Mingyi Nyo's son, King Tabinshwehti, unified most of Burma, consolidating his power and pushing southward, over-running the Irrawaddy Delta and crushing the Hanthawaddy capital of Bago. In 1544, Tabinshwehti was crowned as king of all Burma at the ancient capital of Bagan. By this time, the geopolitical situation in Southeast Asia had changed dramatically. The Shan gained power in a new kingdom in the north, the Ayutthaya Kingdom had established itself as a suzerain power around the Chao Phraya river basin, while the Portuguese Empire had arrived in the south and conquered Malacca.

With the coming of European traders, Burma was once again an important trading centre, and Tabinshwehti moved his capital to Bago due to its strategic position for commerce. He then began assembling an army for an attack on coastal Rakhine State to the west. Tabinshwehti's forces were defeated at Arakan but he was able to gain control of Lower Burma up to Pyay. He led his retreating army eastward to the Ayutthaya Kingdom, where he was again defeated in the Burmese–Siamese War (1547–49). A period of unrest and rebellions among other conquered peoples followed and Tabinshwehti was assassinated in 1550.

Bayinnaung's Empire

Tabinshwehti's brother-in-law, Bayinnaung, succeeded to the throne in 1550 and reigned 30 years, launching a campaign of conquest invading several states, including Manipur (1560) and Ayutthaya (1564). An energetic leader and effective military commander, he made Toungoo the most powerful state in Southeast Asia and extended his borders from Laos to Ayutthaya. Bayinnaung was poised to deliver a final, decisive assault on the kingdom of Arakan when he died in 1581. His son Nanda Bayin and his successors were forced to quell rebellions in other parts of the kingdom, and the victory over Arakan was never achieved.

Restored Taungoo

Faced with rebellion by several cities and renewed Portuguese incursions, the Toungoo rulers withdrew from southern Burma and founded a second dynasty at Ava, the Nyaungyan or Restored Taungoo Dynasty (1597–1752). Bayinnaung's grandson, Anaukpetlun (1605–1628), once again reunited Burma in 1613 and decisively defeated Portuguese attempts to take over Burma. Anaukpetlun's successor Thalun (1629–1648) rebuilt the war torn country. Based on Thalun's revenue inquest in 1635, the Irrawaddy valley's population was estimated to be around 2 million.[2]

The dynasty survived for another century and a half until the death of Mahadhammayaza in 1752. Encouraged by the French in India, Bago finally rebelled against Inwa, further weakening the state, which fell in 1752. The downfall of the Toungoo dynasty has been more broadly ascribed to institutional weaknesses in the capital, which intensified factionalism and succession disputes, and the uneven impact of growing trade and potential price inflation, on the elite's income streams.[3]

Family tree

Mingyi Swe
V. of Toungoo
~1490s–1549
r.1540–1549
Yaza Dewi
~1500-?
Queen
Mingyi Nyo
1459–1530
r. 1510–1530
Yadana Dewi
1490s-?
Central Palace
Queen
Soe Min
Hteik-Tin

~1460s-~1530s
Chief queen
Dhamma Dewi
~1514/15-1580s
Chief queen
Tabinshwehti
1516–1550
r. 1530–1550
Khay Ma Naw
Chief queen
Atula Thiri
~1518–1568
Chief queen
Bayinnaung
1516–1581
r. 1550–1581
Khin Pyezon
~1530s-?
Queen
Shin
Htwe Myat
Sanda Dewi
1517/18–1580s?
Chief queen
Hanthawaddy
Mibaya

~1536–1606
Chief queen
Nanda
1535–1600
r. 1581–1599
Nyaungyan
1555–1605
r. 1599–1605
Khin Hpone
Myint

~1560-1610s
Chief queen
Atula
Sanda Dewi
Chief queen
Anaukpetlun
1578–1628
r. 1605–1628
Khin
Myo Myat
Min LatMingala DewiThalun
1584–1648
r. 1629–1648
Khin Myo SitKhin
Myat Hset
Minye
Deibba

1608–1629
r. 1628–1629
Khin
Hnin Paw
of Kengtung
Chief queen
Ne Myo
Ye Kyaw
Khin Ma
Min Sit
Atula Sanda
Dewi
Chief queen
Pindale
1608–1661
r. 1648–1661
Min Phyu
Chief queen
Pye
1619–1672
r. 1661–1672
Khin Ma Lat
Atula
Thiri
Chief queen
Minye
Kyawhtin

1651–1698
r. 1673–1698
Sanda DewiNarawara
1650–1673
r. 1672–1673
Sanay
1673–1714
r. 1698–1714
Maha Dewi
Chief queen
Taninganway
1689–1733
r. 1714–1733
Mingala Dewi
Chief queen
Maha Dhamma
Yaza

1714–1754
r. 1733–1752
Nanda
Dipadi
Chief queen

Governance

During the Toungoo dynasty, the Burmese crown undertook a series of reforms that strengthened the stability and relative longevity of the dynasty. While the First Toungoo empire had established the precedent of stitching together independent kingdoms under a single monarch, Restored Toungoo monarchs more successfully subordinated lowland principalities under the Burmese throne's direct control.[3] Senior princes of these principalities were required to live at the Burmese capital under close supervision, and the ceremonial insignia of these provincial rulers was downgraded.[3] Other reforms included direct central control of provincial deputies, more effective links with provincial village chiefs, and expansion of the ahmudan system around the capital.[3] Beginning in 1635, the Burmese crown began to conduct comprehensive censuses, and consolidated access to provincial manpower and tax collections.[3] The Burmese monkhood in Upper Burma was also subject to more effective personnel and financial regulations.[3]

References

  1. ^ Lieberman, Victor B. (14 July 2014). Burmese Administrative Cycles: Anarchy and Conquest, c. 1580-1760. Princeton University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-4008-5585-8.
  2. ^ Dr. Than Tun (December 1968). "Administration Under King Thalun". Journal of Burma Research Society. 51, Part 2: 173–188.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Lieberman, Victor (2018). "Was the Seventeenth Century a Watershed in Burmese History?". In Reid, Anthony J. S. (ed.). Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era: Trade, Power, and Belief. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-3217-1.
  • Victor B. Lieberman, "Burmese Administrative Cycles: Anarchy and Conquest, c. 1580–1760", Princeton University Press, 1984.

toungoo, dynasty, this, article, about, dynasty, that, ruled, myanmar, between, 16th, 18th, centuries, toungoo, period, used, traditional, burmese, historiography, first, toungoo, empire, burmese, မင, ဆက, tàʊɰ, ŋù, zɛʔ, also, spelt, taungoo, dynasty, also, kno. This article is about the dynasty that ruled Myanmar between the 16th and 18th centuries For the Toungoo period တ င င ခ တ as used in traditional Burmese historiography see First Toungoo Empire The Toungoo dynasty Burmese တ င င မင ဆက taʊɰ ŋu mɪ ɰ zɛʔ also spelt Taungoo dynasty and also known as the Restored Toungoo dynasty was the ruling dynasty of Burma Myanmar from the mid 16th century to 1752 Its early kings Tabinshwehti and Bayinnaung succeeded in reunifying the territories of the Pagan Kingdom for the first time since 1287 and in incorporating the Shan States for the first time 1 in addition to including Manipur Chinese Shan States Siam and Lan Xang But the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia collapsed in the 18 years following Bayinnaung s death in 1581 Toungoo dynastyတ င င မင ဆက 1510 1752Toungoo Empire at its greatest extent 1580 The restored Taungoo or Nyaungyan Dynasty c 1650CapitalToungoo Taungoo 1510 39 Pegu Bago 1539 99 Ava Inwa 1599 1613 Pegu Bago 1613 35 Ava Inwa 1635 1752 Common languagesOfficialBurmese RegionalThai Pak Tai Ayutthaya Mon Lower Burma Shan Shan states Lanna Lan Na Lao Lan Xang Meithei Manipur ReligionOfficialTheravada Buddhism MinorityAnimismChristianityHinduismIslamGovernmentMonarchy 1530 50Tabinshwehti 1550 81Bayinnaung 1605 28Anaukpetlun 1629 48Thalun 1733 52Mahadhammaraza DipadiLegislatureHluttawHistory Founding of dynasty1485 Independence from Ava16 October 1510 First Toungoo Empire1510 99 Restored Taungoo Empire1599 1752 End of dynasty23 March 1752Population Census1 982 000 2 313 000CurrencyGanza kyat and silver kyatPreceded by Succeeded byAva KingdomHanthawaddy KingdomShan statesLan Na KingdomAyutthaya KingdomLan Xang KingdomManipur Kingdom Konbaung dynastyAyutthaya KingdomLan Xang KingdomManipur KingdomLan Na KingdomThe dynasty quickly regrouped under the leadership of Nyaungyan Min and his son Anaukpetlun who succeeded in restoring a smaller more manageable kingdom encompassing Lower Burma Upper Burma Shan States and Lan Na by 1622 The Restored Toungoo kings now based in Ava Inwa created a legal and political system whose basic features would continue under the Konbaung dynasty well into the 19th century The crown completely replaced the hereditary chieftainships with appointed governorships in the entire Irrawaddy valley and greatly reduced the hereditary rights of Shan chiefs Its trade and secular administrative reforms built a prosperous economy for more than 80 years The kingdom entered a gradual decline due to the palace rule of its kings Starting from the 1720s the kingdom was beset with raids by the Meitei people of the Chindwin River and a rebellion in Chiang Mai Raids by the Meitei intensified in the 1730s reaching increasingly deeper parts of central Burma In 1740 the Mon people in Lower Burma began a rebellion founding the Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom The Hanthawaddy armies captured Inwa in 1752 and ended the 266 year old Toungoo dynasty Contents 1 History 1 1 Bayinnaung s Empire 1 2 Restored Taungoo 2 Family tree 3 Governance 4 ReferencesHistory EditKing Mingyi Nyo founded the First Taungoo Dynasty 1485 1569 at Taungoo far up the Sittaung River south of Inwa towards the end of the Ava Kingdom in 1510 After the conquest of Inwa by the Mohnyin led Shan sawbwas in 1527 many Burmese speakers migrated to Taungoo which became a new centre Mingyi Nyo s son King Tabinshwehti unified most of Burma consolidating his power and pushing southward over running the Irrawaddy Delta and crushing the Hanthawaddy capital of Bago In 1544 Tabinshwehti was crowned as king of all Burma at the ancient capital of Bagan By this time the geopolitical situation in Southeast Asia had changed dramatically The Shan gained power in a new kingdom in the north the Ayutthaya Kingdom had established itself as a suzerain power around the Chao Phraya river basin while the Portuguese Empire had arrived in the south and conquered Malacca With the coming of European traders Burma was once again an important trading centre and Tabinshwehti moved his capital to Bago due to its strategic position for commerce He then began assembling an army for an attack on coastal Rakhine State to the west Tabinshwehti s forces were defeated at Arakan but he was able to gain control of Lower Burma up to Pyay He led his retreating army eastward to the Ayutthaya Kingdom where he was again defeated in the Burmese Siamese War 1547 49 A period of unrest and rebellions among other conquered peoples followed and Tabinshwehti was assassinated in 1550 Bayinnaung s Empire Edit Tabinshwehti s brother in law Bayinnaung succeeded to the throne in 1550 and reigned 30 years launching a campaign of conquest invading several states including Manipur 1560 and Ayutthaya 1564 An energetic leader and effective military commander he made Toungoo the most powerful state in Southeast Asia and extended his borders from Laos to Ayutthaya Bayinnaung was poised to deliver a final decisive assault on the kingdom of Arakan when he died in 1581 His son Nanda Bayin and his successors were forced to quell rebellions in other parts of the kingdom and the victory over Arakan was never achieved Restored Taungoo Edit Faced with rebellion by several cities and renewed Portuguese incursions the Toungoo rulers withdrew from southern Burma and founded a second dynasty at Ava the Nyaungyan or Restored Taungoo Dynasty 1597 1752 Bayinnaung s grandson Anaukpetlun 1605 1628 once again reunited Burma in 1613 and decisively defeated Portuguese attempts to take over Burma Anaukpetlun s successor Thalun 1629 1648 rebuilt the war torn country Based on Thalun s revenue inquest in 1635 the Irrawaddy valley s population was estimated to be around 2 million 2 The dynasty survived for another century and a half until the death of Mahadhammayaza in 1752 Encouraged by the French in India Bago finally rebelled against Inwa further weakening the state which fell in 1752 The downfall of the Toungoo dynasty has been more broadly ascribed to institutional weaknesses in the capital which intensified factionalism and succession disputes and the uneven impact of growing trade and potential price inflation on the elite s income streams 3 Family tree EditSee also Burmese monarchs family tree Mingyi SweV of Toungoo 1490s 1549r 1540 1549Yaza Dewi 1500 QueenMingyi Nyo1459 1530r 1510 1530Yadana Dewi1490s Central PalaceQueenSoe Min Hteik Tin 1460s 1530sChief queenDhamma Dewi 1514 15 1580sChief queenTabinshwehti1516 1550r 1530 1550Khay Ma NawChief queenAtula Thiri 1518 1568Chief queenBayinnaung1516 1581r 1550 1581Khin Pyezon 1530s QueenShin Htwe MyatSanda Dewi1517 18 1580s Chief queenHanthawaddyMibaya 1536 1606Chief queenNanda1535 1600r 1581 1599Nyaungyan1555 1605r 1599 1605Khin HponeMyint 1560 1610sChief queenAtula Sanda DewiChief queenAnaukpetlun1578 1628r 1605 1628Khin Myo MyatMin LatMingala DewiThalun1584 1648r 1629 1648Khin Myo SitKhin Myat HsetMinyeDeibba1608 1629r 1628 1629Khin Hnin Pawof KengtungChief queenNe Myo Ye KyawKhin Ma Min SitAtula Sanda DewiChief queenPindale1608 1661r 1648 1661Min PhyuChief queenPye1619 1672r 1661 1672Khin Ma LatAtula ThiriChief queenMinye Kyawhtin1651 1698r 1673 1698Sanda DewiNarawara1650 1673r 1672 1673Sanay1673 1714r 1698 1714Maha DewiChief queenTaninganway1689 1733r 1714 1733Mingala DewiChief queenMaha Dhamma Yaza1714 1754r 1733 1752Nanda DipadiChief queenGovernance EditDuring the Toungoo dynasty the Burmese crown undertook a series of reforms that strengthened the stability and relative longevity of the dynasty While the First Toungoo empire had established the precedent of stitching together independent kingdoms under a single monarch Restored Toungoo monarchs more successfully subordinated lowland principalities under the Burmese throne s direct control 3 Senior princes of these principalities were required to live at the Burmese capital under close supervision and the ceremonial insignia of these provincial rulers was downgraded 3 Other reforms included direct central control of provincial deputies more effective links with provincial village chiefs and expansion of the ahmudan system around the capital 3 Beginning in 1635 the Burmese crown began to conduct comprehensive censuses and consolidated access to provincial manpower and tax collections 3 The Burmese monkhood in Upper Burma was also subject to more effective personnel and financial regulations 3 References Edit Lieberman Victor B 14 July 2014 Burmese Administrative Cycles Anarchy and Conquest c 1580 1760 Princeton University Press p 16 ISBN 978 1 4008 5585 8 Dr Than Tun December 1968 Administration Under King Thalun Journal of Burma Research Society 51 Part 2 173 188 a b c d e f Lieberman Victor 2018 Was the Seventeenth Century a Watershed in Burmese History In Reid Anthony J S ed Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era Trade Power and Belief Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 3217 1 Victor B Lieberman Burmese Administrative Cycles Anarchy and Conquest c 1580 1760 Princeton University Press 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Toungoo dynasty amp oldid 1126306797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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