Mahadhammaraza Dipadi မဟာဓမ္မရာဇာဓိပတိ | |||||
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King of Toungoo | |||||
King of Burma | |||||
Reign | 14 November 1733 – 22 March 1752 | ||||
Coronation | 8 January 1735 | ||||
Predecessor | Taninganway | ||||
Successor | Alaungpaya | ||||
Born | c. 29 March 1714 Thursday,c. Full moon ofLate Tagu 1075ME[note 1] Ava (Inwa) | ||||
Died | 13 October 1754[1] (aged 40) Sunday, 12th waxing ofThadingyut 1116 ME nearPegu (Bago) | ||||
Consort | Maha Zaneinda Dipadi Dewi Maha Yaza Dipadi Dewi Maha Dipadi Dewi | ||||
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House | Toungoo | ||||
Father | Taninganway | ||||
Mother | Thiri Maha Mingala Dewi[2] | ||||
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
Maha Dhammaraza Dipati (Burmese:မဟာ ဓမ္မရာဇာ ဓိပတိ,pronounced[məhàdəma̰jàzàdḭpədḭ];Pali:Mahādhammarājadhipati; 1714–1754), was the last king ofToungoo dynasty ofBurma (Myanmar) from 1733 to 1752. The young king inherited a kingdom already in severe decline, and his inexperience only made the decline faster, finally resulting in the end of House of Toungoo and the collapse of the kingdom over his 18-year reign.[3]
The future king was born to PrinceTaninganway and his chief queen Thiri Maha Mingala Dewi. He was the fifth child and fourth son of the couple. He was givenSingu in fief in his youth. He became the heir presumptive because all three elder brothers died young.[2] He was made the heir apparent on 6 May 1727 (1st waning of Kason 1089 ME).[4]
Five years into his reign, the armies ofManipur invaded and plundered the northern Burmese provinces. The Burmese were unable to suppress them.
Since the move of capital fromPegu to Ava by KingThalun in 1635, Pegu had become the rallying point for the Mon revival and insurgency. The Burmese governors were readily hated due to heavy corrupted taxation. Taking the advantage of weak royal authority after the Manipur invasions, a Burmese governor rebelled and proclaimed himself the King of Pegu in 1740. TheMons, unwilling to have a Burmese king in Pegu, rioted and murdered the new king. Mahadhammaraza Dipati then installed his uncle as the new governor of Pegu.
Yet the Mons were still unsatisfied and went on to kill Burmese officials in Pegu. The king was then enraged at the Mons and ordered a massacre of the Mons at Pegu. The Gwe Shans (the Shans who were taken as captives from their northern homelands to Pegu by King Bayinnaung in the 16th century) took this opportunity to stage their own rebellion. The Shan armies with supports from the Mons took Pegu in 1740. A popular monk of Shan origin was proclaimedGwe Min the King of Pegu.
As Ava was largely distracted by another Manipur invasion. The Peguan armies invadedProme and Ava but failed. They were able to takeToungoo. Thado Minkhaung, the viceroy of Prome and Mahadhammaraza Dipati’s brother, hurried south and took Syriam but was soon repelled. Prome eventually fell to the Mons in 1745. The Mons tried to take Ava again without success.
In 1747,Binnya Dala was proclaimed the King of Pegu. The two sides were unable to overcome each other until 1751 when the crown prince of Pegu (Binnya Dala’s brother) marched the Peguan armies into Upper Irrawaddy and laid siege onSagaing and Ava. Ava fell to the Mons on 22 March 1752 (Wednesday, 8th waxing of Late Tagu 1113 ME) and Maha Dhammaraza Dipati was taken as captive down to Pegu.[5] Mahadhammaraza Dipati had survived for another two years before being executed in 1754 due to a suspected rebellion.
Mahadhammaraza Dipadi Born: c. 29 March 1714 Died: 13 October 1754 | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by | King of Burma 14 November 1733 – 22 March 1752 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Heir to the Burmese Throne 6 May 1727 – 14 November 1733 | Succeeded by |