Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Thibaw Min

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Last King of Burma (reigned 1878–1885)

Thibaw Min
Rey De Birmania
Thibaw,c. 1886
King of Burma
Reign1 October 1878 – 30 November 1885
Coronation6 November 1878
PredecessorMindon Min
SuccessorMonarchy abolished
Prime MinisterKinwun Mingyi U Kaung
BornMaung Yay Set (မောင်ရေစက်)
(1859-01-01)1 January 1859
Wednesday, 10th waxing ofNadaw 1220ME[1]
Mandalay,Burma
Died16 December 1916(1916-12-16) (aged 57)
Saturday, 7th waning of Nadaw 1278 ME
Ratnagiri,Bombay State,British India
Burial
Ratnagiri, India
SpouseSupayagyi
Supayalat
Supayalay
Issue
Detail
1 son, 4 daughters, including:
Myat Phaya Gyi
Myat Phaya Lat
Myat Phaya
Myat Phaya Galay
Regnal name
Siripavara Vijayānanta Yasatiloka Dhipati Paṇḍita Mahādhammarājadhirāja
(သိရီပဝရ ဝိဇယာနန္တ ယသတိလောကာ ဓိပတိ ပဏ္ဍိတ မဟာဓမ္မရာဇာဓိရာဇာ)
HouseKonbaung
FatherMindon Min
MotherLaungshin Mibaya
ReligionTheravada Buddhism
SignatureThibaw Min's signature

Thibaw Min, alsoThebaw (Burmese:သီပေါ‌မင်း,pronounced[θìbɔ́mɪ́ɰ̃]; 1 January 1859 – 16 December 1916), was the last king of theKonbaung dynasty ofBurma (Myanmar) and also the last Burmese monarch in thecountry's history. His reign ended when theRoyal Burmese armed forces were defeated by the forces of theBritish Empire in theThird Anglo-Burmese War, on 29 November 1885, prior to its official annexation on 1 January 1886.

Early life

[edit]
A photograph of King Thibaw and his wives, half-sistersSupayalat andSupayalay (November 1885)

Prince Thibaw was bornMaung Yay Set (မောင်ရေစက်), the son ofKing Mindon and one of his consorts,Laungshe Mibaya. Thibaw's mother had been banished from the palace court by Mindon and spent her final years as athilashin, a kind of female Burmese Buddhist renunciant. During the early years of his life, Thibaw studiedBuddhist texts at akyaung to win his father's favor. He passed thePahtamabyan religious examinations and gained respect and recognition from his father and the chief queen. He was also educated atAitchison College inLahore (now inPakistan).[2]

King Thibaw and QueenSupayalat on the Lion Throne (Palin) atMandalay Palace

One of Mindon's chief consorts, the Queen of the Middle Palace,Hsinbyumashin, helped to broker a marriage between her eldest daughter,Supayagyi and Thibaw, who were half-siblings by blood.

Accession

[edit]
King Thibaw's Royal Barge on theMandalay Palace moat in 1885.
Thibaw and his family's brick residence, known as Thibaw's Palace, when in exile in Ratnagiri, India

In 1878, Thibaw succeeded his father in a bloody succession massacre. Hsinbyumashin, one of Mindon's queens, had grown dominant at the Mandalay court during Mindon's final days. Under the guise that Mindon wanted to bid his children (other princes and princesses) farewell, Hsinbyumashin had all royals of close age (who could potentially be heir to the throne) mercilessly slaughtered by edict, to ensure that Thibaw and her daughter Supayagyi would assume the throne. During the royal Aggamahesi coronation, Supayalat pushed in next to her sister to be anointed queen at the same time, breaking an ancient royal custom. This resulted in two queens being anointed in parallel, a situation that had never occurred before in the history of Burma.

At the time of his accession,Lower Burma, half of the kingdom's former territory, had been under British occupation for thirty years and it was no secret that the King intended to regain this territory. Relations had soured during the early 1880s when the King was perceived as having made moves to align his country with theFrench more closely. Relations deteriorated further in an incident later called "The Great Shoe Question", where visiting British dignitaries refused to remove their shoes before entering the royal palace and were subsequently banished.

At the time, the kingdom's treasury reserves had diminished, forcing the government to increase taxation on the peasants. In 1878, thenational lottery was also introduced on a trial basis, which became popular but soon went awry, with many families losing their livelihoods.[3] The lottery experiment was ended in 1880.[3]

In October to November 1878, a meeting at Mandalay Palace's North Garden significantly expanded the size of theHluttaw from four departments to 14:

  1. Agriculture
  2. Public works
  3. Land warfare
  4. Taxation
  5. Religious knowledge
  6. Royal estate management
  7. Sassamedha (Personal taxes)
  8. Criminal justice
  9. Civil justice
  10. Water-borne warfare
  11. Foreign affairs
  12. Partnerships
  13. Town and village affairs
  14. Mechanised industries

During King Thibaw's reign, a new administrative unit, the district (ခရိုင်,khayaing), based on the administrative units ofBritish India, was created, in order to centralize administration from the court. Altogether, the kingdom was divided into 10 districts and administrated by district ministers (ခရိုင်ဝန်), who had authority over smaller administrative units, the villages and towns.[3] Thibaw also rolled back the conversion of local administrators frommyo-thugyi (မြို့သူကြီး) tomyo-ok (မြို့အုတ်), which had been part of administrative reforms carried out by Mindon, based on the prevailing administrative system in Lower Burma.[4]

A proclamation issued by the court of King Thibaw in 1885 which called on his countrymen to conquer Lower Burma was used by the British as pretext that he was a tyrant who reneged on his treaties and they decided to complete the conquest they had started in 1824. The invasion force which consisted of 11,000 men, a fleet of flat-bottomed boats and elephant batteries, was led by GeneralHarry Prendergast.

Abdication

[edit]
A painting by court painter Saya Chone depicting the abdication of King Thibaw.

British troops quickly reached the royal capital ofMandalay with little opposition. Within twenty-four hours, the troops had marched to theMandalay Palace to demand the unconditional surrender of Thibaw and his kingdom within twenty-four hours.[5] At the time, the king and queen had retired to a summer house in the palace gardens.

A tapestry of Thibaw and the royal family leaving Mandalay.

The following morning, King Thibaw was forced on a bullock cart, along with his family, and proceeded to a steamer on theIrrawaddy River, in the presence of a huge crowd of subjects.[5]

Life in exile

[edit]
Transfer of the Captive King Theebaw from the Steamer 'Thooreah' to the Troopship 'Clive' at Rangoon, 6 December 1885.

After abdicating the throne, Thibaw, his wifeSupayalat and two infant daughters were coerced by British authority to move toRatnagiri,British India, a port city off theArabian Sea. During their first 24 years in India, Thibaw's family lived at Outram Hall, inDharangaon, inland from Ratanagiri, but in 1906 the Government agreed to spend over 125,000rupees (c. £9000) to construct a new official residence for them.[6] The family then moved into a grand two-story brick building, colloquially "Thibaw's Palace," built oflaterite and lava rock, set in 20 acres (8.1 ha) of gardens.[7]

The Government of India initially gave Thibaw an annual allowance varying between 35,000 and 42,000 rupees. This was increased in 1906 to 100,000 rupees (c. £7000).[8] Thibaw was reported to be reclusive and did not leave the property during his time in Ratanagiri, but he sponsored local festivals, particularly duringDiwali.[7] He died at age 57 on 15 December 1916 and was buried in a small walled plot adjacent to a Christian cemetery, along with one of his consorts, Hteiksu Phaya Galay.[7]

The four daughters ofKing Thibaw,Myat Phaya Galay, Myat Phaya Gyi,Myat Phaya Lat,Myat Phaya

Return of royal family to Burma

[edit]

The surviving exiled royal family was relocated to Burma in 1919, after the king's death. In exile, the king's first born daughter, Myat Phaya Gyi, had had a romance with a married Indian gatekeeper, Gopal Sawant, which resulted in a daughter, Tutu. Despite the royal family's opposition, the three returned to Ratnagiri and spent the rest of their lives there. Gyi and Tutu lived in poverty and survived by making paper flowers to sell on the markets, as Sawant took all of her pension from the British government; he did however buy them a house. Tutu also lived her life in poverty and had eleven children who knew little about their royal ancestry until 21st century interest in the royal family.[9]

The second daughter, Myat Phaya Lat, became the pretender to the throne and married her father's private secretary,Khin Maung Lat, who was also his nephew. They did not have any children, but Lat adopted her Nepalese maidservant's son.[citation needed]

The third daughter, Myat Phaya, went on to marry twice. Her first marriage was to a Burmese prince, Hteik Tin Kodawgyi, with whom she had a daughter, Phaya Rita. After a divorce, she married secondly a Burmese lawyer, Mya U. Phaya Rita married her cousin,Taw Phaya, a younger son of Myat Phaya Galay.[citation needed]

The fourth daughter,Myat Phaya Galay (1887–1936), married a former Burmese monk, Ko Ko Naing, and had six children, the eldest of whom,Taw Phaya Gyi (1922–1948), became pretender to the throne. His sonSoe Win is the present pretender. Another son,Taw Phaya, married his cousin, Phaya Rita, daughter of Myat Phaya.[10]

Both the third and fourth daughters were born in India but died in Burma and two of their children married each other, pretender to the throne Taw Phaya and princess Phaya Rita. They had seven children, thus securing the royal family line.[citation needed]

Affair with Daing Khin Khin

[edit]

King Thibaw had a secret love affair with the noblewomanDaing Khin Khin, in the absence of his queen, Supayalat, orchestrated by his close companion,Maung Maung Toke. To marry her, King Thibaw made a solemn promise to ensure her safety within the palace and grant her the royal title of the Queen of the Northern Palace. He swore that if he were to break this promise, he would forfeit his throne, potentially leading to the downfall of the dynasty. Unfortunately, the king never fulfilled his promise, and Daing Khin Khin was executed by Supayalat while she was pregnant.[11]

Renewed interest

[edit]

In December 2012, the president of BurmaThein Sein paid homage at the tomb of the king in Ratnagiri and met the late monarch's descendants. He was the first head of Burmese government to visit the grave. He also visited the former royal palace at Ratnagiri.[12][13][14]

Family

[edit]
  1. Supayalat
    1. Myat Phaya Gyi
    2. Myat Phaya Lat
    3. Myat Phaya
    4. Myat Phaya Galay
    5. 2 sons (unnamed)
  2. Supayagyi
  3. Supayalay (junior queen)

References

[edit]
  1. ^Konbaung Set Vol. 3 2004: 475
  2. ^The Tribune India (9 June 2018)."Raja Sir Daljit Singh, unusual 'adopted' son of Shimla".The Tribune (India). Retrieved3 October 2023.
  3. ^abcThant Myint-U (2001).The Making of Modern Burma. Cambridge University Press. p. 9780521799140.
  4. ^J. George Scott, ed. (1901).Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States. Vol. 1. Rangoon: Government of Burma.
  5. ^abSynge, M.B. (1911). "Annexation of Burma".Growth of the British Empire.
  6. ^W. S. Desai,Deposed King Thibaw (1967) p. 72
  7. ^abcChristian, John LeRoy (1944). "Thebaw: Last King of Burma".The Journal of Asian Studies.3 (4). Association for Asian Studies:309–312.doi:10.2307/2049030.JSTOR 2049030.S2CID 162578447.
  8. ^Desai, ibid. p. 62
  9. ^"In search of princess Phaya: Looking for Myanmar’s forgotten royals in Ratnagiri",Hindustan Times, 25 February 2017, accessed 9 August 2023
  10. ^သီပေါနောက်က တော်ဘုရားများ, BBC News 10 February 2019 (in Burmese)
  11. ^reʺ.), Cimʻʹ (Paññā (1976).ဒိုင်းခင်ခင်: ရတနာပုံခေတ်နန်းတွင်းလျှို့ဝှက်ဇာတ်လမ်းများ (in Burmese). Praññʻ sūʹ myakʻ mhanʻ Cā pe.
  12. ^"Thein Sein visits king's tomb".Bangkok Post. 22 December 2012.
  13. ^"President Thein Sein visits tomb of Myanmar's last king".South China Morning Post. 24 December 2012.
  14. ^"Burmese leader to visit Indian grave of last king". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 22 December 2012.

Bibliography

[edit]
This article containsBurmese script. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead ofBurmese script.
  • Candier, Aurore (December 2011). "Conjuncture and Reform in the Late Konbaung Period". Journal of Burma Studies 15 (2).
  • Charney, Michael W. (2006).Powerful Learning: Buddhist Literati and the Throne in Burma's Last Dynasty, 1752–1885. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan.
  • Desai, W. S.Deposed King Thibaw of Burma in India 1885-1916 (1967
  • Hall, D.G.E. (1960).Burma (3rd ed.). Hutchinson University Library.ISBN 978-1406735031.
  • Htin Aung, Maung (1967).A History of Burma. New York and London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Maung Maung Tin, U (1905).Konbaung Set Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 1–3 (2004 ed.). Yangon: Department of Universities History Research, University of Yangon.
  • Myint-U, Thant (2006).The River of Lost Footsteps—Histories of Burma. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.ISBN 978-0-374-16342-6.
  • Myint-U, Thant (2001). The Making of Modern Burma. Cambridge University Press. pp. 9780521799140.
  • Scott, J. George, ed. (1901). Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States. 1. Rangoon: Government of Burma.
  • Shah, Sudha.The King in Exile: The Fall of the Royal Family of Burma (2012)
  • Phayre, Lt. Gen. Sir Arthur P. (1883).History of Burma (1967 ed.). London: Susil Gupta.

Links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toThibaw Min.
Thibaw Min
Born: 1 January 1859 Died: 19 December 1916
Regnal titles
Preceded byKing of Burma
1 October 1878 – 29 November 1885
Succeeded by
Burmese monarchy abolished
Royal titles
Preceded byHeir to the Burmese Throne
as Prince ofThibaw
19 September 1878 – 1 October 1878
Succeeded by
Myat Phaya (Presumed)
Pagan dynasty
849–1297
Myinsaing andPinya kingdoms
1297–1364
Sagaing kingdom
1315–1364
Kingdom of Ava
1364–1555
Hanthawaddy kingdom
1287–1539, 1550–1552
Mrauk U kingdom
1429–1785
Prome kingdom
1482–1542
Toungoo dynasty
1510–1752
Restored Hanthawaddy kingdom
1740–1757
Konbaung dynasty
1752–1885
  • 1 Regent or Co-Regent
  • 2 Mongol vassal (1297)
  • 3Confederation of Shan States (1527–55)
  • 4 Brief revival (1550–52)
  • 5 Vassal of the Confederation of Shan States (1532–42)
International
National
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thibaw_Min&oldid=1282125373"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp