| |
|---|---|
Kyawswa I depicted as the Nga-zi Shin nat (spirit) | |
| King of Pinya | |
| Reign | 29 March 1344 – 12 December 1350 |
| Predecessor | Sithu (as regent) |
| Successor | Kyawswa II |
| Viceroy of Pinle | |
| Reign | c. February 1325 – 29 March 1344 |
| Coronation | 7 February 1313 |
| Predecessor | himself (as governor) |
| Successor | Nawrahta (as governor) |
| Governor of Pinle | |
| Reign | 7 February 1313 –c. February 1325 |
| Coronation | 7 February 1313 |
| Predecessor | Thihathu (as co-regent) |
| Successor | himself (as viceroy) |
| Born |
Myinsaing,Myinsaing Regency |
| Died |
Pinya,Pinya Kingdom |
| Consort | |
| Issue among others... | |
| House | Myinsaing |
| Father | Thihathu |
| Mother | Mi Saw U |
| Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
Kyawswa I of Pinya (Burmese:ငါးစီးရှင် ကျော်စွာ,pronounced[ŋázíʃɪ̀ɰ̃tɕɔ̀zwà];lit. 'Lord of the Five White Elephants'; 1299–1350) was king ofPinya from 1344 to 1350. His six-year reign briefly restored unity in southern Upper Burma although his authority over his southernmost vassals remained largely nominal. He suddenly died in 1350, and came to be regarded as one of the majorBurmese folk spirits, known asNga-zi Shin Nat.
Born in 1299,[1] Kyawswa was the elder son of QueenMi Saw U ofPagan andThihathu, Co-Regent ofMyinsaing. He was born inMyinsaing[2] but grew up at the Pinle Palace with his younger brotherNawrahta; three half-siblingsUzana,Saw Yun, and Saw Pale; and one stepbrotherTarabya.[3] Kyawswa grew up as second in theline of succession after Uzana. (Eager to be seen as a legitimate successor to the Pagan line,[4] Thihathu ranked his stepson Uzana, of Pagan royalty from both sides, first; and Kyawswa, of Pagan royalty the maternal side, second.)
On 7 February 1313, Kyawswa was appointed governor of Pinle by Thihathu who had become the sole ruler of Myinsaing, later known as thePinya Kingdom.[5] The governorship of his father's old fief was second only in importance behind Thihathu's appointment of Uzana as heir-apparent. (Thihathu's other children did not get any appointments.) While the governorship was likely a titular title in the beginning, by 1315, Kyawswa like Uzana was given command of his own military units (1000 shielded infantry, 80 cavalry, 10 elephants).[6]
In 1316–17, Kyawswa became ensnared in palace succession intrigues. The king asked Kyawswa to retakeSagaing which Saw Yun had fortified after unsatisfied with what the prince perceived to be a second-class status. When Kyawswa got the order, Uzana had already tried, and failed. But Kyawswa's expedition too failed. The king seemed halfhearted about punishing Saw Yun, and did not mobilize all his forces. Uzana and Kyawswa had march with their own small army, separately.[7] But whenToungoo (Taungoo) revolted in 1317, Thihathu asked both Uzana and Kyawswa with a combined army to march to Toungoo. The two brothers got Toungoo's rulerThawun Nge to submit.[8][9]
The Sagaing affair remained unresolved. It is unclear if Sagaing could have been taken if Thihathu ordered a larger expedition as he did with Toungoo. But the king accepted Saw Yun's nominal submission, and did not again order another attack. Though Uzana remained the official crown prince, Saw Yun was already the de facto ruler of the northern country. Thihathu was resigned to the fact that his kingdom would be split into two after his death.[4]
As Thihathu feared, the Pinya kingdom formally separated into two at his death in 1325. Uzana's rump Pinya Kingdom ruled the eastern and southern Central Burma while Saw Yun'sSagaing Kingdom ruled the northern and western parts.[10] Kyawswa did not openly challenge Uzana. But he continued to have his own army and conducted his own policy.[11] Indeed, it was Kyawswa, who famously ordered his commanderKhin Nyo to assassinate Saw Yun.[12] The assassination attempt did not succeed but Kyawswa turned his attention to the control of Pinya in the following years. Both he and Uzana maintained separate specialized military units (shielded infantry, cavalry, war elephants) around their core region ofKyaukse.[11]
The brothers' rivalry greatly limited Pinya's effective power. Its southernmost vassals were practically independent, and had to fend for themselves. Pinya took no action with the 1325 assassination ofSaw Hnit, the Pinya-recognized ruler of Toungoo.[13] Nor did it take any action whenRamanya attackedProme (Pyay) in 1330,[14] or whenArakan attackedThayet in 1334.[15]
The rivalry came to a head in 1340. Kyawswa had collected fivewhite elephants, considered auspicious symbols of Burmese monarchs. Instead of handing them over to his overlord Uzana, he kept them. Uzana asked for them twice. Both times, Kyawswa refused, and sent two regular elephants instead.[16][17]
The refusals signaled war. Uzana ultimately backed down, and looked for a face-saving way out. The king handed over the power to Gov.Sithu ofMyinsaing, uncle and father-in-law of Kyawswa, on 1 September 1340,[18] and became a monk atMekkhaya.[19] Father-in-law or not, Kyawswa apparently did not recognize Sithu either. According to an inscription donated on 17 June 1342 by Kyawswa's chief queen consortAtula Sanda Dewi, Kyawswa had already claimed himself king.[19] A contemporary inscription shows that Kyawswa became the undisputed ruler of Pinya on 29 March 1344.[18]
Kyawswa's the reign name wasPawara Pandita Thihathura Dhamma Yaza but was popularly known asNga-zi Shin (ငါးစီးရှင်, "Lord of the Five White Elephants"). The new king quickly consolidated his hold over the core region of Kyaukse and its periphery. He was able to buy off his potential rivals by using bribery, flattery and indeed the threat of force. He appeased his younger brotherNawrahta by appointing the latter governor of Pinle, his old job.[20] He also successfully persuaded Uzana's younger son Gov.Thihapate of Yamethin not to revolt.[21] However, his hold over the southernmost vassals was still limited. Prome under Pinya-appointed Gov.Saw Yan Naung remained calm but more remote Toungoo was another matter. Within the first three years of Kyawswa's accession, two Toungoo rulers were assassinated. Kyawswa had to be satisfied with the nominal submission by the usurpers.[note 1]
Outside of Toungoo, the kingdom was largely peaceful. He successfully reunified Pinya's military corps in the core region. An avid horse rider, the king formed elite cavalry and shielded infantry units. He not only liked to review military parades but also take part in the military dances of elite shielded units while singing military songs.[22] He appointed his second sonKyawswa II his heir-apparent (over the eldest sonUzana who had weak or paralyzed legs).[23] The appointment apparently did not go well with his brother Nawrahta, who defected to Sagaing in 1349.[20] The king built the Lay-Myet-Hna Pagada in Pinya.[1] He also commissioned a study of the state of the Buddhist clergy but the court fearing his wrath left out the corruption of the so-called monks from the report.[24]
The king died on 12 December 1350. According to tradition, he suddenly fell ill, and died in his 9th year of reign. He is said to have become anat (spirit) with the nameNga-zi Shin Nat. He is still venerated as one of the Outer Thirty Seven Spirits.[25]
The following a list of governors reported in the chronicles. These governors were already in office by either 1341/42 per theYazawin Thit,[26] or 1342/43 per theHmannan.[27]
| Rulers of Key Vassal States | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Vassal state | Region | Ruler (duration in office) | Notes |
| Myinsaing | Core | Thettawshay of Myinsaing (by 1342–?)[26][27] | Son-in-law of Kyawswa I of Pinya |
| Mekkhaya | Core | ? | |
| Pinle | Core | Nawrahta (by 1344–1349)[26][27] | |
| Lanbu | Core | Yandathu (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
| Nyaungyan | Core | Saw Mun Hnit (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
| Wadi | Core | Thinkhaya (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
| Thagara | Core | Gonnandarit the Elder (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
| Yamethin | Core | Thihapate of Yamethin (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
| Yindaw | Core | Tuyin Ponnya the Elder (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
| Paukmyaing | Core | Min Pale of Paukmyaing (by 1342–?)[26][27] | |
Kyawswa had four sons and four daughters by his two principal queens consort.[20] He also had at least one junior queen, Saw Gyi, daughter of Gov. Sithu of Myinsaing.[18]
| Queen | Rank | Issue |
|---|---|---|
| Atula Sanda Dewi | Chief queen |
|
| Mway Medaw | Queen of the Northern Palace |
|
| Saw Gyi | Junior queen | ? |
Theroyal chronicles do not necessarily agree on his birth, death, and reign dates.
| Source | Birth–Death | Age | Reign | Length of reign | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zatadawbon Yazawin List of Kings of Pinya | c. 1288 – 1351/52 [sic] | 63 (64th year) [sic] | 1342/43 – 1351/52 | 9 | [note 3] |
| Zatadawbon Yazawin (reconciled) | c. 1306 – 1351/52 | 45 (46th year) | |||
| Maha Yazawin | c. 1307 – 1351/52 | 44 (45th year) | [28] | ||
| Yazawin Thit | c. 1299 – 1350/51 | 51 (52nd year) | 1341/42 – 1350/51 | [29][note 4] | |
| Hmannan Yazawin | c. 1300 – 1350/51 | 1342/43 – 1350/51 | ~9 | [note 5] | |
| Inscriptions | c. 1299 – 12 December 1350 | 29 March 1344 – 12 December 1350 | 6 | [note 6] | |
| by 17 June 1342 – 12 December 1350(contested reign) | 8 |
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Kyawswa I of Pinya Born: 1299 Died: 12 December 1350 | ||
| Regnal titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | King of Pinya 29 March 1344 – 12 December 1350 | Succeeded by |
| Royal titles | ||
| Preceded by | Heir to the Pinya Throne c. February 1325 – 29 March 1344 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by himself as Governor | Viceroy of Pinle c. February 1325 – 29 March 1344 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded byas co-regent | Governor of Pinle 7 February 1313 –c. February 1325 | Succeeded by himself as Viceroy |