| Wikimedia Commons Atlas of the World TheWikimedia Atlas of the World is an organized and commented collection of geographical, political and historical maps available atWikimedia Commons. Discussion •Update the atlas •Index of the Atlas •Atlas in categories •Other atlases on line |
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| Map of Myanmar |
| Same map in Italian |
| Same map in German |
| Map of Myanmar |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Map of Myanmar |
| Topographic map |
This section holds maps of the administrative divisions.
| Subdivisions of Myanmar |
This section holds a short summary of the history of the area of present-day Myanmar, illustrated with maps, including historical maps of former countries and empires that included present-day Myanmar.
| In the fifth century BC thePyu, a Tibeto-Burman tribe arrive in present-day Burma. Around 0 the Pyu rule includes large parts of the area (see map). Another tribe, subordiante to the Pyu, named the Burmese, establish in 849 BurmesePagan Kingdom. The other tribes, including the Pyu and theMon, move to the north of the country. In 1287 Pagan is liquidated by Mongolian invadors and the state desintegrates in divided territories dependent from China. These territories unite in 1582 into the Kingdom of Burma under the Toungboo dinasty, but this doesn't develop into a stable country. Since 1752 Burma is more or less a really united country under the Konbaung dinasty of king Alaungpaya. |
| In the nineteenth century theUnited Kingdom tries to control Burma. It begins the conquest in 1824, expanding its holdings after each of the three wars. At the end of the third war in 1885 Britain gains complete control of Burma, annexing it the province of Burma inside British India. In 1937 Burma becomes a separate British colony, but the strive after independence is very strong. |
| Part of the Second World War was theBattle of Kohima. After the battle the nationalists join the British forces in 1945 to liberate the country. |
| In 1946 the United Kingdom regains control over Burma. The Burmese nationalists, led by Aung San of the AFPFL, demand complete political and economic independence from Britain. Britain accedes to these demands. A constitution is completed in 1947 and independence granted in January 1948 as the Union of Burma. This map shows the division ofBritain's holdings on theIndian subcontinent into the four new independent states:India,Burma (nowMyanmar),Ceylon (nowSri Lanka), andPakistan (includingEast Pakistan, modern-dayBangladesh) |
This section holds copies of original general maps more than 70 years old.
| Indochina in 1886 |
| Map of Burma 1911 |
| Ethnolinguistic map |
General remarks:
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