Kyaukse

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Kyaukse
ကျောက်ဆည်
Town
Downtown, Kyaukse, Myanmar.jpg
Downtown Kyaukse, the Main Road, and Clock Tower
Myanmar location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Kyaukse
Location in Burma
Coordinates: 21°36′47″N96°7′49″E / 21.61306°N 96.13028°E / 21.61306; 96.13028
CountryFlag of Myanmar.svg  Myanmar
Division Mandalay Region
District Kyaukse District
Township Kyaukse Township
Population
 (2014)
  Total
741,071 [1]
  Ethnicities
Burman
  Religions
Theravada Buddhism
Time zone UTC+6.30 (MST)

Kyaukse (Burmese : ကျောက်ဆည် မြို့, pronounced [tɕaʊʔsʰɛ̀mjo̰] ) is a town and the capital of Kyaukse District in Mandalay Region, Myanmar. Lying on the Zawgyi River, 25 miles (40 km) south of Mandalay, it is served by the Mandalay-Yangon (Rangoon) railway. The first Myanmar probably settled in the area about 800, and local 12th- and 13th-century inscriptions refer to Kyaukse as “the first home”. Remains of pagodas and old cities are found throughout the area. The Shwethalyaung Pagoda, built by King Anawrahta (1044–77), is located in Kyaukse.

Contents

Kyaukse is famous for the Kyaukse elephant dance festival, [2] and for being the home town of former dictator Senior General Than Shwe. The town's industrial zone is one of more than 30 across the country. [3]

Geography

The surrounding area consists of a level strip running south from Mandalay along the foothills of the Shan Plateau. The area is located in the heart of Myanmar’s dry zone but is drained by the Panlaung and Zawgyi rivers, which were used for an ancient irrigation-canal system that predates Myanmar settlement in the area.

History

Pagan era

Kyaukse has been an important area in Myanmar history. It is well irrigated and lush, and has been ever since the Pagan era when it was known as the granary of the kingdom. [4]

King Anawrahta built numerous fortresses along his kingdom's borders, as well as along the rivers flowing within his lands. Tamote was one of nine fortresses along the rivers of Kyaukse region, erected because he needed protection against invasion by water.

The origin of the name "Kyaukse" remains a subject of scholarly debate. During the Pagan dynasty, the Kyaukse Plains were known as "Letwin Satit Khayaing" (လယ်တွင်း ဆယ့်တစ်ခရိုင်; lit. "the Elevn Agricultural Districts"). According to historical records, the name "Kyaukse" (lit. "stone dam") is believed to derive from the stone-reinforced embankments constructed along the Zawgyi River to control flooding and enhance irrigation. An alternative theory suggests that the name originated from one of King Narapati Sithu's (r. 1174–1211) royal irrigation projects—the "Min Ye Dam" (မင်းရဲဆည်), also known as "Kyaukse Taw" (ကျောက်ဆည်တော်, meaning "royal stone dam"). [5]

The Eleven Agricultural Districts have held the elephant dance festival since the reign of King Anawrahta, to honor his royal elephants. The origin of the festival dates back to when King Anawrahta of Pagan obtained several Buddhist relics during a trip to China. Upon his return to Pagan, he decided to build a pagoda to house the precious relics. He strapped a replica of the Buddha's teeth to the back of his white elephant, Sinma Yintha, and instructed the elephant to choose a suitable spot for the new pagoda. When the elephant stopped between two hills, named Thalyaung and Pyetkhaywe, the monarch ordered the construction of pagodas on each summit and enshrined the relic at the Shwethalyaung Pagoda. To honor the royal elephants, a festival is held every year at the foot of Shwethalyaung Hill. [6]

Konbaung era

During the Konbaung dynasty (1752–1885), the Nine Districts of Kyaukse (ကိုးခရိုင် ကျောက်ဆည်) served as a key administrative and agricultural hub. The Kyaukse wun (ကျောက်ဆည်ဝန်, lit. "royal governor") office was established from the reign of King Bodawpaya (r. 1782–1819) onward, with historical records documenting several notable governors. [7]

List of Kyaukse Governors (wuns) by reign,

According to some records, it is noted that the Kyaukse wun's jurisdiction was divided, with the Panlaung River district overseen by the Panlaung Four Districts wun and the Zawgyi River district overseen by the Zawgyi Five Districts wun, both appointed under the Kyaukse wun. [7]

During the late Konbaung period, before the British annexation of Mandalay, Kyaukse served as a vital commercial and transit hub connecting Upper Burma's trade networks. The site of the Mingone Monastery (မင်းကုန်းကျောင်း) was used as the residence of the Kyaukse wun and royal officials. The location of the Kyaukse Municipal Office once housed the royal granaries (ဘုရင့်စပါးကျီကြီးများ) and the residence of the Granary Minister (ကျီဝန်). [7]

Modern era

Historian Gordon Luce, a leading authority on Burmese history, proposed that the origins of Burmese civilization can be traced to the Kyaukse irrigation zone. He supported the theory known as "Myanmar origins lie in Kyaukse" (မြန်မာအစ ကျောက်ဆည်က) by publishing a research paper titled "Old Kyaukse and the Coming of the Burmans". In it, he suggested that in the 8th century CE, some Nanzhao groups migrated on horseback from southern China, passing through the Yunnan–Shan Highlands before eventually settling in the fertile Kyaukse Plains. However, other Burmese historians, such as Dr. Htin Aung, Phoe Latt and Thein Maung, have disagreed with Luce's claim. [8]

Dr. Than Tun and Gordon Luce also argued that the Mon people, rather than the Pyu, were one of the earliest settled groups in Myanmar. They based this claim on evidence from a Mon-language stone inscription discovered in Poungywa, Kyaukse, which records a Mon monk from Kyaukse requesting permission from the Thathanabaing of Pagan to construct an ordination hall. [9] [10]

When Than Shwe was in power at the head of the military regime, a heavy industrial zone was established in Kyaukse – supposedly to provide employment, though its population is relatively small. Kyaukse Township is now constituted with one town, 10 wards and 223 villages of 87 village-tracts. [11]

Earthquake

Following the powerful 2025 Myanmar earthquake, Kyaukse was one of the most damaged towns. More than 170 people were reported dead, and 732 others were injured. [12]

Economy

The Kyaukse area is known for its turmeric, mango and onions. The town has a relatively large shopping centre Aye Mya Kyi Lin Market.

Education

Kyaukse is home to the

Notable people

Sights of interest

References

  1. Provisional Results Census 26 August 2014 FINAL, ပြည်သူ့အင်အားဦးစီးဌာန, 26 August 2014, p. ၂၈, archived from the original on 4 March 2016, retrieved March 25, 2015
  2. "Kyaukse, famous town for elephant festival" (PDF). The New Light of Myanmar . 16 October 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2012-10-20. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  3. Shin, Aung (22 June 2014). "APR takes up the elephant dance". The Myanmar Times . Archived from the original on 9 October 2019. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  4. Ma Theingi (3 October 2011). "Amazing discovery in Kyaukse region". The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on 10 November 2018. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  5. Mranʻ māʹ cvayʻ cuṃ kyamʻʺ: (kya (in Burmese). Mranʻ mā nuiṅʻ ṅaṃ bhā sā pranʻ cā pe ʼa taṅʻʺ. 1954. p. 23.
  6. "Kyaukse Celebrates Elephant Dance Festival, Despite Bomb Concerns". The Irrawaddy . 19 October 2013.
  7. 1 2 3 Moṅʻ), Raññʻ Cuiʺ (Kyokʻ chaññʻ (1993). မြန်မာ့ ဆင်ရုပ်ချိုး အနုပညာ (in Burmese). Cā pe Bimānʻ. pp. 50–59.
  8. "မြန်မာ့အစ ရှာပုံတော်". DVB.
  9. "ပုဂံကို ကာကွယ်သူ၊ ပုဂံမှာပဲသေချင်သူ အင်္ဂလိပ်လူမျိုး ပါမောက္ခ". BBC News မြန်မာ (in Burmese).
  10. Thein, Prof Aung (4 October 2023). "ကျောက်ဆည် နှင့် လယ်တွင်းဒေသအကြောင်း #မှားယွင်းယူဆဖော်ပြချက်များကို ပြင်ဆင်ခြင်း".
  11. "Ancient cities in Kyaukse plain". Myanmar DigitalNews. 1 February 2020. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  12. "ကျောက်ဆည်က ငလျင်သင့်ပြိုကျလုနီး ကျောက်သေတ္တာကြီး ဘာဆက်ဖြစ်နေလဲ". BBC News မြန်မာ (in Burmese). 11 April 2025.
  13. "ABSDF urges inclusiveness in reform process". Archived from the original on 2018-11-10. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  14. "ရှင်ပင်ရွှေဆပ်သွားဘုရား ဗုဒ္ဓပူဇနိယပွဲ၌ နွားဒုန်းပြိုင်ပွဲနှင့် ခြေကျအလှပြိုင်ပွဲ ပါဝင်မည်". The Myanmar Times (in Burmese). 12 February 2020. Archived from the original on 20 February 2021. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  15. "မြင်စိုင်းနန်းဦးစေတီတွင် ရှေးဟောင်းဇာတ်တော် စဉ့်ကွင်းများနှင့် စဉ့်ကွင်းစာများကို ယနေ့တိုင်လေ့လာနိုင်". Myanmar DigitalNews (in Burmese). 27 September 2020. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  16. "ကျောက်ဆည်လွင်ပြင်ထဲက မြင်စိုင်း". The Irrawaddy (in Burmese). 27 May 2017. Archived from the original on 2 November 2020. Retrieved 4 November 2020.