History of Myanmar |
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The current capital of Myanmar (Burma) is Naypyidaw. The following is a list of political capitals of notable states in Burmese history from the 9th century to the present. The list is generally organised in dynastic and chronological orders. National capitals are shown in bold.
State | Capital | Period | Duration | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pagan Kingdom | Pagan (Bagan) | 23 December 849 – 17 December 1297 | 447 years, 359 days | [note 1] |
Myinsaing Kingdom | Myinsaing, Mekkhaya and Pinle | 17 December 1297 – 13 April 1310 | 12 years, 117 days | [note 2] |
Pinle | 13 April 1310 – 7 February 1313 | 2 years, 300 days | ||
Pinya Kingdom | Pinya | 7 February 1313 – 26 February 1365 | 52 years, 19 days | [note 3] |
Sagaing Kingdom | Sagaing | 15 May 1315 – 26 February 1365 | 49 years, 287 days | [note 4] |
Ava Kingdom | Ava (Inwa) | 26 February 1365 – 22 January 1555 | 189 years, 330 days | [note 5] |
Prome Kingdom | Prome (Pyay) | c. November 1482 – 19 May 1542 | 59 years, 6+ months | [1] |
Hanthawaddy Kingdom | Martaban (Mottama) | 30 January 1287 – c. February 1364 | ~77 years | [note 6] |
Donwun | by 29 March 1364 – 1369 | 5+ years | [note 7] [2] | |
Pegu (Bago) | 1369 – c. November 1538 | 169+ years | [note 8] | |
Pegu | late June 1550 – 12 March 1552 | 1 year, 8+ months | [note 9] | |
Mrauk-U Kingdom | Launggyet | 18 April 1429 – 16 November 1430 | 1 year, 212 days | [note 10] |
Mrauk-U | 16 November 1430 – 2 January 1785 | 354 years, 47 days | [note 11] [3] | |
Toungoo dynasty | Toungoo (Taungoo) | 16 October 1510 – 1539 | 28–29 years | [note 12] |
Pegu | 1539 – 30 April 1550 | ~11 years | [4] | |
Toungoo | 11 January 1551 – 12 March 1552 | 1 year, 61 days | [note 13] | |
Pegu | 12 March 1552 – 19 December 1599 | 47 years, 282 days | [5] | |
Ava | 19 December 1599 – 14 May 1613 | 13 years, 146 days | [note 14] | |
Pegu | 14 May 1613 – 25 January 1635 | 21 years, 256 days | [6] | |
Ava | 25 January 1635 – 23 March 1752 | 117 years, 58 days | [7] | |
Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom | Pegu | November 1740 – 6 May 1757 | 16 years, 6 months | [8] [9] |
Konbaung dynasty | Shwebo | 29 February 1752 – 26 July 1760 | 8 years, 148 days | [10] [ citation needed ] |
Sagaing | 26 July 1760 – 23 July 1765 | 4 years, 362 days | [11] | |
Ava | 23 July 1765 – 13 May 1783 | 17 years, 294 days | [12] | |
Amarapura | 13 May 1783 – 22 November 1821 | 38 years, 193 days | [13] | |
Ava | 22 November 1821 – 10 February 1842 | 20 years, 80 days | [14] | |
Amarapura | 10 February 1842 – 23 May 1859 | 17 years, 102 days | [15] | |
Mandalay | 23 May 1859 – 29 November 1885 | 26 years, 190 days | [16] | |
British Burma | Mawlamyine (Moulmein) and Sittwe (Akyab) | 24 February 1826 – 20 December 1852 | 35 years, 341 days | [note 15] |
Mawlamyine Sittwe Yangon (Rangoon) | 20 December 1852 – 31 January 1862 | 9 years, 42 days | [note 16] | |
Yangon | 31 January 1862 – 7 March 1942 | 80 years, 35 days | [note 17] | |
Yangon | 3 May 1945 – 4 January 1948 | 2 years, 246 days | ||
Japanese Burma | Yangon | 7 March 1942 – 3 May 1945 | 3 years, 57 days | |
Myanmar | Yangon | 4 January 1948 – 6 November 2005 | 57 years, 306 days | |
Nay Pyi Taw | 6 November 2005 – present | 19 years and 12 days | [17] | |
Narathihapate was the last king of the Pagan Empire who reigned from 1256 to 1287. The king is known in Burmese history as the "Taruk-Pyay Min" for his flight from Pagan (Bagan) to Lower Burma in 1285 during the first Mongol invasion (1277–87) of the kingdom. He eventually submitted to Kublai Khan, founder of the Yuan dynasty in January 1287 in exchange for a Mongol withdrawal from northern Burma. But when the king was assassinated six months later by his son Thihathu, the Viceroy of Prome, the 250-year-old Pagan Empire broke apart into multiple petty states. The political fragmentation of the Irrawaddy valley and its periphery would last for another 250 years until the mid-16th century.
Saw Lu was king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1077 to 1084. He inherited from his father Anawrahta the Pagan Empire, the first ever unified kingdom of Burma (Myanmar) but proved an inexperienced ruler. In 1082, he faced a rebellion in Lower Burma, and was captured c. April 1083. He was later killed in captivity about a year later.
Mahinthrathirat was king of Ayutthaya 1564 to 1568 and again in 1569. He ruled his first reign as a vassal of Toungoo Burma before restoring his father in 1568 as the sovereign king. He became king again in 1569 after his father's death during the Third Siege of Ayutthaya by Toungoo forces. Mahinthrathirat was the last monarch of the Suphannaphum Dynasty as the kingdom fell to the Burmese in 1569. Mahinthrathirat was known for his efforts to counter Burmese and Phitsanulok power by seeking alliance with Setthathirath of Lan Xang.
Maha Dhammaraza Dipati, was the last king of Toungoo dynasty of Burma (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.
Sokkate was king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1038 to 1044. The king lost his life in a single combat with Anawrahta, who succeeded him and went on to found the Pagan Empire.
Kyawswa I of Pinya was king of Pinya 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 major Burmese folk spirits, known as Nga-zi Shin Nat.
Kyawswa II of Pinya was king of Pinya from 1350 to 1359. He had little effective control over his southern vassals but agreed to an alliance with Pinya's longtime rival Sagaing to face off the northern Shan state of Mong Mao. In 1358–59, while he tried to help Sagaing in the north, his home region of Kyaukse came under attack first by his erstwhile vassal Toungoo, and later by Mong Mao Shans. He died during the Shan raids.
Tarabya II of Sagaing was king of Sagaing from 1349 to 1352. He reestablished peace with Sagaing's rival Pinya.
Thado Minbya was the founder of the Kingdom of Ava. In his three plus years of reign (1364–67), the king laid the foundation for the reunification of Central Burma, which had been split into Pinya and Sagaing kingdoms since 1315. He also founded the capital city of Ava (Inwa) in 1365, which would remain the country's capital for most of the following five centuries. The young king restored order in central Burma, and tried to stamp out corrupt Buddhist clergy. He died of smallpox while on a southern military expedition in September 1367.
Mingyi Swa Saw Ke was king of Ava from 1367 to 1400. He reestablished central authority in Upper Myanmar (Burma) for the first time since the fall of the Pagan Empire in the 1280s. He essentially founded the Ava Kingdom that would dominate Upper Burma for the next two centuries.
Tarabya was king of Ava for about seven months in 1400. He was the heir apparent from 1385 to 1400 during his father King Swa Saw Ke's reign. He was a senior commander in Ava's first three campaigns (1385−91) against Hanthawaddy Pegu in the Forty Years' War. He was assassinated seven months into his rule by his one-time tutor, Gov. Thihapate of Tagaung. The court executed the usurper, and gave the throne to Tarabya's half-brother Min Swe.
Minye Kyawswa I of Ava (Burmese: မင်းရဲကျော်စွာ, pronounced[mɪ́ɰ̃jɛ́tɕɔ̀zwà]; also known as Hsinbyushin Minye Kyawswa Gyi was king of Ava from 1439 to c. 1442. In less than three years of rule, the second king from the royal house of Mohnyin had recovered four major former vassal states of Ava: his native Mohnyin, Kale, Taungdwin and Toungoo, and was about to capture a fifth, Mogaung, which was achieved shortly after his death. Despite the successes farther afield, his attempt to capture the closer districts of Pinle and Yamethin failed.
Shwenankyawshin Narapati was king of Ava from 1501 to 1527. His reign saw the disintegration of the Ava Kingdom. He spent much of his reign fighting back the attacks from the Confederation of Shan States. But his efforts ultimately proved unsuccessful. The king died fighting while defending his capital from Confederation attacks, after which Ava Kingdom was taken over by the Confederation.
Mobye Narapati also Sao Hso Kaw Hpa of Mong Pai was the penultimate king of Ava who reigned from 1545 to 1551. The ethnically Shan king ruled as the disputed leader of the Confederation of Shan states that had ruled Ava since 1527. He ended the seven years' war with Toungoo as soon as he came to power. Throughout his six years of reign, he faced an active rebellion by Sithu Kyawhtin, who was supported by the Shan state of Mohnyin. He controlled only a rump state, east of the Irrawaddy and north of Pagan (Bagan). After he was finally driven out of Ava (Inwa) in October 1551, he fled south to Pegu (Bago) where he was given protection by King Bayinnaung of Toungoo Dynasty. He lived out his years at Pegu.
Min Bin was a king of Arakan from 1531 to 1554, "whose reign witnessed the country's emergence as a major power". Aided by Portuguese mercenaries and their firearms, his powerful navy and army pushed the boundaries of the kingdom deep into Bengal, where coins bearing his name and styling him sultan were struck, and even interfered in the affairs of mainland Burma.
Minkhaung II of Toungoo was viceroy of Toungoo (Taungoo) from 1549 to 1551 and from 1552 to 1584 during the reigns of kings Tabinshwehti, Bayinnaung and Nanda of Toungoo Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). He briefly revolted against his eldest half-brother Bayinnaung from 1550 to 1551 but was pardoned by Bayinnaung. Alongside his brothers Bayinnaung, Minye Sithu, Thado Dhamma Yaza II, Thado Minsaw and his nephew Nanda, he fought in nearly every campaign between 1552 and 1584 that rebuilt, expanded and defended the Toungoo Empire.
Thado Minsaw was viceroy of Ava (Inwa) from 1555 to 1584 during the reigns of kings Bayinnaung and Nanda of Toungoo Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). He fought alongside his brothers Bayinnaung, Minye Sithu, Thado Dhamma Yaza II and Minkhaung II, and his nephew Nanda in nearly every campaign from the 1550s to 1570s that rebuilt, expanded and defended the Toungoo Empire. Two years after Bayinnaung's death, he raised the first serious rebellion against the rule of Nanda. Although his rebellion was defeated in April 1584, it had set in motion more rebellions elsewhere that ultimately led to the collapse of the empire in the next 15 years.
Minye Thihathu II of Toungoo was king of the breakaway kingdom of Toungoo (Taungoo) from 1597 to 1609. His kingdom was one of several small states that emerged following the collapse of Toungoo Empire. He is best known in Burmese history for his role in the sack of Pegu (Bago) in 1599 that ended the Toungoo Empire.
These are the lists related to the Family of Emperor Bayinnaung of the Toungoo Dynasty of Burma. The king had over 50 wives and nearly 100 children. All the Toungoo monarchs after him were descended from him.