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Burmese chronicles

Index Burmese chronicles

The royal chronicles of Myanmar (မြန်မာ ရာဇဝင် ကျမ်းများ; also known as Burmese chronicles) are detailed and continuous chronicles of the monarchy of Myanmar (Burma). [1]

161 relations: Alaung Mintayagyi Ayedawbon, Alaungpaya, Alaungpaya Ayedawbon, Alaungsithu, Allegory, Amarapura, Anawrahta, Anglo-Burmese Wars, Arthur Purves Phayre, Ayutthaya Kingdom, Ba Saw Phyu, Bago, Myanmar, Bang Pakong District, Bangkok, Bayinnaung, Binnya Dala (minister-general), Bodawpaya, British rule in Burma, Buddhist deities, Burma Research Society, Burmese calendar, Burmese kyat, Burmese–Siamese War (1765–67), Champa, Chronogram, Common Era, D. G. E. Hall, Dawei, Dawei Yazawin, Devanagari, Dhammasattha, Dhanyawaddy Ayedawbon, Dutiya Yazawin, Epigraphy, First Anglo-Burmese War, First Toungoo Empire, Gautama Buddha, Gavampati (chronicle), George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston, Gordon Luce, Hanthawaddy Hsinbyushin Ayedawbon, Hanthawaddy Kingdom, History of Cambodia, History of Myanmar, Hla Pe, Hmannan Yazawin, Hsenwi Yazawin, Hsinbyushin, Hsinbyushin Ayedawbon, Hsipaw, ..., Hsipaw Yazawin, Htin Aung, Inwa Yazawin, Inzauk Razawin, Jinakalamali, John Sydenham Furnivall, Journal of the Burma Research Society, Kalyani Inscriptions, Kengtung, Kengtung Yazawin, Kingdom of Ava, Kingdom of Mrauk U, Konbaung dynasty, Konbaung Set Yazawin, Kyansittha, Lan Na, Lik Amin Asah, Lower Myanmar, Lyric poetry, Maha Razawin, Maha Razawin (Saya Me), Maha Sammata, Maha Yazawin, Maha Yazawin Kyaw, Mahavamsa, Mani Yadanabon, Manusmriti, Military history of Myanmar, Min Sithu of Toungoo, Min Yaza of Wun Zin, Mindon Min, Minkhaung I, Minyedeippa, Mizzimadetha Ayedawbon, Mon language, Mong Yawng Yazawin, Myanmar, Myauk Nan Kyaung Yazawin, Myazedi inscription, Myeik Yazawin, Myeik, Myanmar, Narapatisithu, National Library of Myanmar, Nidana Arambhakatha, Nyaungyan Min, Nyaungyan Mintaya Ayedawbon, Origin myth, Pagan Kingdom, Pagan Yazawin, Pagan Yazawin Thit, Pak Lat Chronicles, Pali, Palm-leaf manuscript, Parabaik, Pawtugi Yazawin, Poetry, Prose, Pyay Yazawin, Pye Min, Pyu city-states, Pyu language (Burma), Rakhine Razawin, Rakhine Razawin Haung, Rakhine Razawin Thit, Rakhine State, Rama I, Razadarit, Razadarit Ayedawbon, Razawin Linka, Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom, Romanization of Burmese, Rosetta Stone, Royal Burmese armed forces, Royal Historical Commission of Burma, Saopha, Sasana Vamsa, Shan States, Shin Sandalinka, Shin Sawbu, Shwenankyawshin, Shwezigon Pagoda Bell Inscription, Slapat Rajawan, Southeast Asia, Sri Ksetra Kingdom, Swa Saw Ke, Tagaung Kingdom, Tai Tham script, Tarabya, Thalun, Than Tun, Thanlyin, Thant Myint-U, Thaw Kaung, Theinni, Thibaw Min, Three Seals Law, Toungoo dynasty, Toungoo Yazawin, Tripiṭaka, U Kala, University of Yangon, Upper Myanmar, Verse (poetry), Victor Lieberman, Wareru, Wareru Dhammathat, Yazawin Kyaw, Yazawin Thit, Zabu Kun-Cha, Zatadawbon Yazawin, Zinme Yazawin. Expand index (111 more) »

Alaung Mintayagyi Ayedawbon

Alaung Mintayagyi Ayedawbon (အလောင်း မင်းတရားကြီး အရေးတော်ပုံ, also known as Alaungpaya Ayedawbon (အလောင်းဘုရား အရေးတော်ပုံ), is one of two biographic chronicles of King Alaungpaya of Konbaung Dynasty. Both versions trace the king's life from his purported ancestry from King Sithu II of Pagan Dynasty down to his death from an illness from his campaign against Siam in 1760. Both contains many details, though not all the same, of the king's 8-year reign.Thaw Kaung 2010: 32 Scholarship agrees that both chronicles are contemporary accounts of the king by his ministers but does not agree on the authorship. Both versions were kept at the Royal Library of the last two Konbaung kings, Mindon and Thibaw. According to U Yan, the Royal Librarian, one version is by Letwe Nawrahta and the other is by Twinthin Taikwun Maha Sithu. One of the versions was published in 1883, and again in 1900 as Alaungpaya Ayedawbon. The second version was first published only in 1961, alongside the first version, with both versions under names Alaung Mintayagyi Ayedawbon and Alaungpaya Ayedawbon. According to the editor of the 1961 edition Hla Thamein, the second version was written by Letwe Nawrahta.Hla Thamein 1961: 6–11 But historian Yi Yi disagrees, after a careful side-by-side comparison of both texts, stating that both versions were written by Twinthin Taikwun. Another scholar, Kyauk Taing, who like Yi Yi made a side-by-side analysis agrees with Yi Yi and Hla Thamein about the 1883 version but disagrees with them that Twinthin or Letwe Nawrahta wrote the 1961 version.Thaw Kaung 2010: 24–25.

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Alaungpaya

Alaungpaya (အလောင်းဘုရား,; also spelled Alaunghpaya or Alaung Phra; 11 May 1760) was the founder of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar).

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Alaungpaya Ayedawbon

Alaungpaya Ayedawbon (အလောင်းဘုရား အရေးတော်ပုံ), also known as Alaung Mintayagyi Ayedawbon (အလောင်း မင်းတရားကြီး အရေးတော်ပုံ), is one of two biographic chronicles of King Alaungpaya of Konbaung Dynasty.

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Alaungsithu

Alaungsithu or Sithu I (အလောင်းစည်သူ; also Cansu I; 1090–1167) was king of Pagan Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1112/13 to 1167.

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Allegory

As a literary device, an allegory is a metaphor in which a character, place or event is used to deliver a broader message about real-world issues and occurrences.

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Amarapura

Amarapura (MLCTS) is a former capital of Myanmar, and now a township of Mandalay city.

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Anawrahta

Anawrahta Minsaw (အနော်ရထာ မင်းစော,; 11 May 1014 – 11 April 1077) was the founder of the Pagan Empire.

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Anglo-Burmese Wars

There have been three Burmese Wars or Anglo-Burmese Wars.

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Arthur Purves Phayre

Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Purves Phayre (7 May 1812 – 14 December 1885) was a career British Indian Army officer who was the first Commissioner of British Burma, 1862–1867, Governor of Mauritius, 1874–1878, and author.

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Ayutthaya Kingdom

The Ayutthaya Kingdom (อยุธยา,; also spelled Ayudhya or Ayodhaya) was a Siamese kingdom that existed from 1351 to 1767.

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Ba Saw Phyu

Ba Saw Phyu (ဘစောဖြူ,; also spelled Ba Saw Pru, Arakanese pronunciation:; also known as Kalima Shah; 1430–1482) was king of Arakan from 1459 to 1482.

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Bago, Myanmar

Bago (formerly spelt Pegu;,; ဗဂေါ), formerly known as Hanthawaddy (meaning "She Who Has Swans"), is a city and the capital of the Bago Region in Myanmar.

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Bang Pakong District

Bang Pakong (บางปะกง) is a district (amphoe) in the western part of Chachoengsao Province in central Thailand.

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Bangkok

Bangkok is the capital and most populous city of the Kingdom of Thailand.

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Bayinnaung

Bayinnaung Kyawhtin Nawrahta (ဘုရင့်နောင် ကျော်ထင်နော်ရထာ; บุเรงนองกะยอดินนรธา,; 16 January 1516 – 10 October 1581) was king of the Toungoo Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1550 to 1581.

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Binnya Dala (minister-general)

Agga Maha Thenapati Binnya Dala (အဂ္ဂမဟာသေနာပတိ ဗညားဒလ,; also spelled Banya Dala; 1518–1573) was a Burmese statesman, general and writer-scholar during the reign of King Bayinnaung of Toungoo Dynasty.

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Bodawpaya

Bodawpaya (ဘိုးတော်ဘုရား,; ปดุง; 11 March 1745 – 5 June 1819) was the sixth king of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma.

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British rule in Burma

British rule in Burma, also known as British Burma, lasted from 1824 to 1948, from the Anglo-Burmese wars through the creation of Burma as a Province of British India to the establishment of an independently administered colony, and finally independence.

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Buddhist deities

Buddhism includes a wide array of divine beings that are venerated in various ritual and popular contexts.

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Burma Research Society

The Burma Research Society (မြန်မာနိုင်ငံ သုတေသန အသင်း) was an academic society devoted to historical research of Burma (Myanmar).

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Burmese calendar

The Burmese calendar (မြန်မာသက္ကရာဇ်,, or ကောဇာသက္ကရာဇ်,; Burmese Era (BE) or Myanmar Era (ME)) is a lunisolar calendar in which the months are based on lunar months and years are based on sidereal years.

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Burmese kyat

The kyat (or; ကျပ်; ISO 4217 code MMK) is the currency of Myanmar (Burma).

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Burmese–Siamese War (1765–67)

The Burmese–Siamese War (1765–1767) (ယိုးဒယား-မြန်မာစစ် (၁၇၆၅–၁၇၆၇); สงครามคราวเสียกรุงศรีอยุธยาครั้งที่สอง, lit. "war of the second fall of Ayutthaya") was the second military conflict between the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) and the Ban Phlu Luang Dynasty of Siam (Thailand), and the war that ended the four-century-old Siamese kingdom.

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Champa

Champa (Chăm Pa) was a collection of independent Cham polities that extended across the coast of what is today central and southern Vietnam from approximately the 2nd century AD before being absorbed and annexed by Vietnamese Emperor Minh Mạng in AD 1832.

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Chronogram

A chronogram is a sentence or inscription in which specific letters, interpreted as numerals, stand for a particular date when rearranged.

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Common Era

Common Era or Current Era (CE) is one of the notation systems for the world's most widely used calendar era – an alternative to the Dionysian AD and BC system.

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D. G. E. Hall

Daniel George Edward Hall (1891-1979) was a British historian, author, and academic.

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Dawei

Dawei (ဓဝဲါ,; ทวาย, RTGS: Thawai,; formerly known as Tavoy) is a city in south-eastern Myanmar and is the capital of the Tanintharyi Region, formerly known as the Tenasserim Division, about south of Yangon on the northern bank of the Dawei River.

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Dawei Yazawin

Dawei Yazawin (ထားဝယ် ရာဇဝင်) is an 18th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of Dawei (Tavoy) region.

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Devanagari

Devanagari (देवनागरी,, a compound of "''deva''" देव and "''nāgarī''" नागरी; Hindi pronunciation), also called Nagari (Nāgarī, नागरी),Kathleen Kuiper (2010), The Culture of India, New York: The Rosen Publishing Group,, page 83 is an abugida (alphasyllabary) used in India and Nepal.

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Dhammasattha

Dhammasattha "treatise on the law" is the Pali name of a genre of literature found in the Indianized kingdoms of Western mainland Southeast Asia (modern Laos, Burma, Cambodia, Thailand, and Yunnan) principally written in Pali, Burmese, Mon or the Tai languages or in a bilingual nissaya or literal Pali translation (နိဿယ.). "Sattha" is the Pali cognate of the Sanskrit term for instruction, learning, or treatise, śāstra.

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Dhanyawaddy Ayedawbon

Kawitharabi Thiri-Pawara Agga-Maha-Dhammarazadiraza-Gura, commonly known as Dhanyawaddy Ayedawbon (ဓညဝတီ အရေးတော်ပုံ) is a Burmese chronicle covering the history of Arakan from time immemorial to Konbaung Dynasty's annexation of Mrauk-U Kingdom in 1785.

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Dutiya Yazawin

Dutiya Maha Yazawindawgyi (ဒုတိယ မဟာ ရာဇဝင်တော်ကြီး,; lit "Second Great Chronicle") is the second official chronicle of Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar).

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Epigraphy

Epigraphy (ἐπιγραφή, "inscription") is the study of inscriptions or epigraphs as writing; it is the science of identifying graphemes, clarifying their meanings, classifying their uses according to dates and cultural contexts, and drawing conclusions about the writing and the writers.

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First Anglo-Burmese War

The First Anglo-Burmese War, also known as the First Burma War, (ပထမ အင်္ဂလိပ် မြန်မာ စစ်;; 5 March 1824 – 24 February 1826) was the first of three wars fought between the British and Burmese empires in the 19th century.

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First Toungoo Empire

The First Toungoo Empire (တောင်ငူ ခေတ်,; also known as the First Toungoo Dynasty, the Second Burmese Empire or simply the Toungoo Empire) was the dominant power in mainland Southeast Asia in the second half of the 16th century.

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Gautama Buddha

Gautama Buddha (c. 563/480 – c. 483/400 BCE), also known as Siddhārtha Gautama, Shakyamuni Buddha, or simply the Buddha, after the title of Buddha, was an ascetic (śramaṇa) and sage, on whose teachings Buddhism was founded.

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Gavampati (chronicle)

Gavampati is a supplementary Mon language chronicle that covers legendary early history.

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George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston

George Nathaniel Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston, (11 January 1859 – 20 March 1925), known as Lord Curzon of Kedleston between 1898 and 1911 and as Earl Curzon of Kedleston between 1911 and 1921, and commonly as Lord Curzon, was a British Conservative statesman.

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Gordon Luce

Gordon Hannington Luce was a colonial scholar in Burma.

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Hanthawaddy Hsinbyushin Ayedawbon

Hanthawaddy Hsinbyushin Ayedawbon (ဟံသာဝတီ ဆင်ဖြူရှင် အရေးတော်ပုံ) is a 16th-century Burmese chronicle of King Bayinnaung of Toungoo Dynasty.

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Hanthawaddy Kingdom

The Hanthawaddy Kingdom (ဟံသာဝတီ နေပြည်တော်;,; also Hanthawaddy Pegu or simply Pegu) was the dominant kingdom that ruled lower Burma (Myanmar) from 1287 to 1539 and from 1550 to 1552.

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History of Cambodia

The history of Cambodia, a country in mainland Southeast Asia, can be traced back to at least the 5th millennium BC.

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History of Myanmar

The history of Myanmar (also known as Burma) covers the period from the time of first-known human settlements 13,000 years ago to the present day.

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Hla Pe

Dr.

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Hmannan Yazawin

Hmannan Maha Yazawindawgyi (မှန်နန်း မဟာ ရာဇဝင်တော်ကြီး,; commonly, Hmannan Yazawin; known in English as the "Glass Palace Chronicle") is the first official chronicle of Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar).

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Hsenwi Yazawin

Hsenwi Yazawin or Theinni Yazawin (သိန္နီ ရာဇဝင်, lit. "Chronicle of Hsenwi (Theinni)") is a 19th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Shan state of Hsenwi (Theinni).

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Hsinbyushin

Hsinbyushin (ဆင်ဖြူရှင်,; พระเจ้ามังระ; 12 September 1736 – 10 June 1776) was king of the Konbaung dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1763 to 1776.

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Hsinbyushin Ayedawbon

Hsinbyushin Ayedawbon (ဆင်ဖြူရှင် အရေးတော်ပုံ) is an 18th-century Burmese chronicle of the first four years of King Bodawpaya of Konbaung Dynasty.

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Hsipaw

Hsipaw (သီပေါ; Shan:; also known as Thibaw), is the principal town of Hsipaw Township in Shan State, Myanmar on the banks of the Duthawadi River.

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Hsipaw Yazawin

Hsipaw Yazawin or Thibaw Yazawin (သီပေါ ရာဇဝင်, lit. "Chronicle of Hsipaw") is a 19th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Shan state of Hsipaw (Thibaw).

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Htin Aung

Htin Aung (ထင်အောင်; also Maung Htin Aung; 18 May 1909 – 10 May 1978) was an important author and scholar of Burmese culture and history.

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Inwa Yazawin

Inwa Yazawin (အင်းဝ ရာဇဝင်, lit. the "Chronicle of Inwa") is a lost Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Ava Kingdom.

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Inzauk Razawin

Inzauk Razawin (အင်းစောက် ရာဇဝင်) is an Arakanese (Rakhine) chronicle covering the history of Arakan.

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Jinakalamali

Jinakālamālī (ဇိနကာလမာလီ; ชินกาลมาลีปกรณ์;; lit. "The Sheaf of Garlands of the Epochs of the Conqueror") is a Chiang Mai chronicle that covers mostly about religious history, and contains a section on early Lan Na kings to 1516/1517.

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John Sydenham Furnivall

John Sydenham Furnivall (often cited as JS Furnivall or J.S. Furnivall) was a British-born colonial public servant and writer in Burma.

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Journal of the Burma Research Society

The Journal of the Burma Research Society (မြန်မာနိုင်ငံသုတေသနအသင်းဂျာနယ်) was an academic journal covering Burma studies that was published by the Burma Research Society between 1911 and 1980.

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Kalyani Inscriptions

The Kalyani Inscriptions (ကလျာဏီကျောက်စာ), located in Bago, Burma (Myanmar), are the stone inscriptions erected by King Dhammazedi of Hanthawaddy Pegu between 1476 and 1479.

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Kengtung

Kengtung (Shan:;,; เชียงตุง,,; also spelled Kyaingtong, Chiang Tung, Cheingtung, and Kengtong) is a town in Shan State, Myanmar (formerly Burma).

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Kengtung Yazawin

Kengtung Yazawin (ကျိုင်းတုံ ရာဇဝင်, lit. "Chronicle of Kengtung") is a 19th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Shan state of Kengtung.

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Kingdom of Ava

The Ava Kingdom (အင်းဝခေတ်) was the dominant kingdom that ruled upper Burma (Myanmar) from 1364 to 1555.

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Kingdom of Mrauk U

The Kingdom of Mrauk-U was an independent coastal kingdom of Arakan which existed for over 350 years.

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Konbaung dynasty

The Konbaung dynasty (ကုန်းဘောင်ခေတ်), formerly known as the Alompra dynasty, or Alaungpaya dynasty, was the last dynasty that ruled Burma/Myanmar from 1752 to 1885.

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Konbaung Set Yazawin

Konbaung Set Maha Yazawindawgyi (ကုန်းဘောင်ဆက် ရာဇဝင်တော်ကြီး,; lit. the "Chronicle of Konbaung Dynasty") is the last and unofficial royal chronicle of Burma (Myanmar), covering the Konbaung Dynasty (1752–1885).

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Kyansittha

Kyansittha (ကျန်စစ်သား,; also Kyanzittha or "Hti-Hlaing Shin"; 1030 – 1112/13) was king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1084 to 1112/13, and is considered one of the greatest Burmese monarchs.

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Lan Na

The Lan Na or Lanna Kingdom (95px,, "Kingdom of a Million Rice Fields"; อาณาจักรล้านนา,,; ອານາຈັກລ້ານນາ, ဇင္းမယ္ျပည္, or), also known as Lannathai, was an Indianized state centered in present-day Northern Thailand from the 13th to 18th centuries.

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Lik Amin Asah

Lik Amin Asah is a Mon language chronicle that strictly covers the legendary early history of its kings and founding of the city of Hanthawaddy Pegu (Bago).

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Lower Myanmar

Lower Burma (အောက်မြန်မာပြည်, also called Outer Myanmar) is a geographic region of Burma (Myanmar) and includes the low-lying Irrawaddy delta (Ayeyarwady, Bago and Yangon Regions), as well as coastal regions of the country (Rakhine and Mon States and Tanintharyi Region).

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Lyric poetry

Lyric poetry is a formal type of poetry which expresses personal emotions or feelings, typically spoken in the first person.

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Maha Razawin

Maha Razawin (မဟာ ရာဇဝင်), is an Arakanese (Rakhine) chronicle covering the history of Arakan.

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Maha Razawin (Saya Me)

Saya Me's Maha Razawin (ဆရာမည်၏ မဟာရာဇဝင်), is an Arakanese (Rakhine) chronicle covering the history of Arakan.

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Maha Sammata

Maha Sammata (Mahā Sammata; မဟာ သမ္မတ; also spelled Mahasammata; lit. "the Great Elect") was the first monarch of the world according to Buddhist tradition.

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Maha Yazawin

The Maha Yazawin, fully the Maha Yazawindawgyi (မဟာ ရာဇဝင်တော်ကြီး) and formerly romanized as the Maha-Radza Weng, is the first national chronicle of Burma/Myanmar.

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Maha Yazawin Kyaw

Yazeinda Yazawara Mandani, or more commonly known as Maha Yazawin Kyaw (မဟာ ရာဇဝင်ကျော်,; lit. "Great Celebrated Chronicle"), is a Konbaung period national chronicle of Burma (Myanmar).

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Mahavamsa

The Mahavamsa ("Great Chronicle", Pali Mahāvaṃsa) (5th century CE) is an epic poem written in the Pali language.

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Mani Yadanabon

The Mani Yadanabon (မဏိ ရတနာပုံ ကျမ်း,; also spelled Maniyadanabon or Mani-yadana-bon) is an 18th-century court treatise on Burmese statecraft and court organization.

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Manusmriti

The Manusmṛti (Sanskrit: मनुस्मृति), also spelled as Manusmriti, is an ancient legal text among the many of Hinduism.

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Military history of Myanmar

The military history of Myanmar (Burma) spans over a millennium, and is one of the main factors that have shaped the history of the country, and to a lesser degree the histories of the country's neighbours.

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Min Sithu of Toungoo

Min Sithu (မင်းစည်သူ,; also Sithu Nge; died 1485) was Viceroy of Toungoo from 1481 to 1485.

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Min Yaza of Wun Zin

Min Yaza of Wun Zin (ဝန်စင်း မင်းရာဇာ,; also known as Po Yaza (ဘိုးရာဇာ); 1347/48−1421) was chief minister of Ava from 1379/80 to 1421.

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Mindon Min

Mindon Min (မင်းတုန်းမင်း,; 8 July 1808 – 1 October 1878) was the penultimate king of Burma (Myanmar) from 1853 to 1878.

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Minkhaung I

Minkhaung I of Ava (ပထမ မင်းခေါင်; also spelled Mingaung; 1373–1422) was king of Ava from 1400 to 1422.

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Minyedeippa

Minyedeippa (မင်းရဲဒိဗ္ဗ,; also spelled Minredeippa or Minyedaikpa; 1608 – 25 November 1629) was the seventh king of Toungoo dynasty of Burma.

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Mizzimadetha Ayedawbon

Mizzimadetha Ayedawbon (မဇ္ဈိမဒေသ အရေးတော်ပုံ) is a Burmese chronicle covering the history of Arakan after Konbaung Dynasty's annexation of Mrauk-U Kingdom from 1785 to 1816.

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Mon language

The Mon language (ဘာသာ မန်; မွန်ဘာသာ) is an Austroasiatic language spoken by the Mon people, who live in Myanmar and Thailand.

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Mong Yawng Yazawin

Mong Yawng Yazawin (မိုင်းယောင်း ရာဇဝင်, lit. "Chronicle of Mong Yawng") is a 19th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Shan state of Mong Yawng.

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Myanmar

Myanmar, officially the Republic of the Union of Myanmar and also known as Burma, is a sovereign state in Southeast Asia.

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Myauk Nan Kyaung Yazawin

Myauk Nan Kyaung Yazawin (မြောက်‌နန်းကျောင်း ရာဇဝင်) is a 17th-century Burmese chronicle commissioned by King Pye (r. 1661–1671) and written by Myauk Nan Kyaung Sayadaw, a Buddhist monk.

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Myazedi inscription

Myazedi inscription (မြစေတီ ကျောက်စာ; also Yazakumar Inscription or the Gubyaukgyi Inscription), inscribed in 1113, is the oldest surviving stone inscription of the Burmese.

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Myeik Yazawin

Myeik Yazawin (မြိတ် ရာဇဝင်) is an 18th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of Myeik region.

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Myeik, Myanmar

Myeik (or; ဗိက်,; มะริด), formerly Mergui, is a city in Tanintharyi Region in Myanmar (Burma), located in the extreme south of the country on the coast of an island on the Andaman Sea.

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Narapatisithu

Narapati Sithu (နရပတိ စည်သူ,; also Narapatisithu, Sithu II or Cansu II; 1138–1211) was king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1174 to 1211.

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National Library of Myanmar

The National Library of Myanmar, located in Yankin Township, Yangon, is the national library of Myanmar.

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Nidana Arambhakatha

Nidāna Ārambhakathā (နိဒါန အာရမ္ဘကထာ; lit. "Preface to the Legend")Wade 2012: 126 is a Mon language chronicle.

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Nyaungyan Min

Nyaungyan Min (ညောင်ရမ်းမင်း; 8 November 1555 –) was king of the Toungoo Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1599 to 1605.

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Nyaungyan Mintaya Ayedawbon

Nyaungyan Mintaya Ayedawbon (ညောင်ရမ်း မင်းတရား အရေးတော်ပုံ) is an 18th-century Burmese chronicle of King Nyaungyan (r. 1599–1605) of Toungoo Dynasty.

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Origin myth

An origin myth is a myth that purports to describe the origin of some feature of the natural or social world.

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Pagan Kingdom

The Kingdom of Pagan (ပုဂံခေတ်,, lit. "Pagan Period"; also commonly known as the Pagan Dynasty and the Pagan Empire) was the first kingdom to unify the regions that would later constitute modern-day Burma (Myanmar).

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Pagan Yazawin

Pagan Yazawin (ပုဂံ ရာဇဝင်; also known as Pagan Yazawin Haung (Old Chronicle of Pagan)) is a 16th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Pagan Dynasty.

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Pagan Yazawin Thit

Yaza Wunthalini or more commonly known as Pagan Yazawin Thit (ပုဂံ ရာဇဝင်သစ်) is a 19th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Pagan Dynasty.

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Pak Lat Chronicles

Pak Lat Chronicles is a Mon language chronicle.

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Pali

Pali, or Magadhan, is a Middle Indo-Aryan language native to the Indian subcontinent.

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Palm-leaf manuscript

Palm-leaf manuscripts are manuscripts made out of dried palm leaves.

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Parabaik

Parabaik (ပုရပိုက်) is a type of paper, made of thick sheets of paper that are blackened, glued, and folded together.

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Pawtugi Yazawin

Pawtugi Yazawin (ပေါ်တူဂီ ရာဇဝင်) is a Burmese chronicle that covers the history of the Portuguese, especially their rule at Syriam (Thanlyin) from 1599 to 1613.

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Poetry

Poetry (the term derives from a variant of the Greek term, poiesis, "making") is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and rhythmic qualities of language—such as phonaesthetics, sound symbolism, and metre—to evoke meanings in addition to, or in place of, the prosaic ostensible meaning.

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Prose

Prose is a form of language that exhibits a natural flow of speech and grammatical structure rather than a rhythmic structure as in traditional poetry, where the common unit of verse is based on meter or rhyme.

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Pyay Yazawin

Pyay Yazawin (ပြည် ရာဇဝင်, lit. the "Chronicle of Pyay (Prome)") is a lost Burmese chronicle that covers the history of Pyay (Prome), including that of Prome Kingdom from 1278 to 1542.

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Pye Min

Pye Min (ပြည်မင်း,; 26 May 1619 – 14 April 1672) was king of Toungoo dynasty from 1661 to 1672.

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Pyu city-states

The Pyu city states (ပျူ မြို့ပြ နိုင်ငံများ) were a group of city-states that existed from c. 2nd century BCE to c. mid-11th century in present-day Upper Burma (Myanmar).

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Pyu language (Burma)

The Pyu language (ပျူ ဘာသာ,; also Tircul language) is an extinct Sino-Tibetan language that was mainly spoken in present-day central Burma (Myanmar) in the first millennium CE.

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Rakhine Razawin

Rakhine Razawin (ရခိုင် ရာဇဝင်), is an Arakanese (Rakhine) chronicle covering the history of Arakan.

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Rakhine Razawin Haung

Min Razagri Aredaw Sadan, or more commonly known as Rakhine Razawin Haung (ရခိုင် ရာဇဝင်ဟောင်း), is an Arakanese (Rakhine) chronicle covering the history of Arakan.

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Rakhine Razawin Thit

Rakhine Razawin Thit (ရခိုင် ရာဇဝင်သစ်,, Arakanese pronunciation) is a Burmese chronicle covering the history of Arakan from time immemorial to the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–1826).

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Rakhine State

Rakhine State (Rakhine pronunciation;; formerly Arakan) is a state in Myanmar (Burma).

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Rama I

Phra Phutthayotfa Chulalok, born Thongduang and also known as Rama I (20 March 1737 – 7 September 1809), was the founder of Rattanakosin Kingdom and the first monarch of the reigning Chakri dynasty of Siam (now Thailand).

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Razadarit

Razadarit (ရာဇာဓိရာဇ်;,; 1368–1421) was king of Hanthawaddy Pegu from 1384 to 1421.

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Razadarit Ayedawbon

Razadarit Ayedawbon (ရာဇာဓိရာဇ် အရေးတော်ပုံ) is a Burmese chronicle covering the history of Ramanya from 1287 to 1421.

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Razawin Linka

Razawin Linka (ရာဇဝင် လင်္ကာ) is an Arakanese (Rakhine) chronicle covering the history of Arakan.

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Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom

The Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom (ဟံသာဝတီ နေပြည်တော်) was the kingdom that ruled Lower Burma and parts of Upper Burma from 1740 to 1757.

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Romanization of Burmese

Romanization of the Burmese alphabet is representation of the Burmese language or Burmese names in the Latin alphabet.

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Rosetta Stone

The Rosetta Stone is a granodiorite stele, found in 1799, inscribed with three versions of a decree issued at Memphis, Egypt in 196 BC during the Ptolemaic dynasty on behalf of King Ptolemy V.

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Royal Burmese armed forces

The Royal Armed Forces (တပ်မတော်) were the armed forces of the Burmese monarchy from the 9th to 19th centuries.

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Royal Historical Commission of Burma

The Royal Historical Commission (တော်ဝင် မြန်မာနိုင်ငံ သမိုင်း ကော်မရှင်) of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) produced the standard court chronicles of Konbaung era, Hmannan Yazawin (1832) and Dutiya Yazawin (1869).

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Saopha

Saopha, Sao Pha, Chaopha, Jaopha, sawbwa, or saw-bwa (စော်ဘွား,; Shan: ၸဝ်ႈၾႃႉ, literally meaning "lord of the heavens" or "lord of the sky") was a royal title used by the hereditary rulers of the semi-independent Shan States (Mong, မိူင်း) in what today is Eastern Myanmar (Burma).

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Sasana Vamsa

The Sāsana Vaṃsa or Thathanawin (သာသနာဝင်) is a history of the Buddhist order in Burma, composed by the Burmese monk Paññāsāmi in 1861.

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Shan States

Shan States and British Shan States (1885 - 1948) is an historic name for Minor Kingdoms (analogous to Princely state of British India) ruled by Saopha (similar to Thai royal title Chao Fa Prince or Princess) in large areas of today's Burma (Myanmar), China's Yunnan Province, Laos and Northern Thailand from the late 13th century until the mid-20th century.

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Shin Sandalinka

Shin Sandalinka ((ရှင်စန္ဒလင်္ကာ) was an 18th century Burmese Buddhist monk, who wrote the influential court treatise Mani Yadanabon in 1781. He held a high religious title, Zinalinkara Maha Dhammayazaguru (ဇိနလင်္ကာရ မဟာ ဓမ္မရာဇဂုရု, Pali: Jinalankāra Mahā Dhammarājaguru), bestowed by King Singu.Aung-Thwin 2005: 141–142Sandalinka 2009: book cover He compiled the Mani Yadanabon from various sources, chiefly the late 14th to 15th century Zabu Kun-Cha treatise.Lieberman 1983: 137 His treatise was one of the four books to be machine-published by the Konbaung government in 1871.

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Shin Sawbu

Shin Sawbu (ရှင်စောပု,; သေဝ်စါဝ်ပေါအ်; 1394–1471) was queen regnant of Hanthawaddy from 1454 to 1471.

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Shwenankyawshin

Shwenankyawshin Narapati (ရွှေနန်းကြော့ရှင် နရပတိ,; 22 September 1476 – 14 March 1527) was king of Ava from 1501 to 1527.

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Shwezigon Pagoda Bell Inscription

The Shwezigon Pagoda Bell Inscription (ရွှေစည်းခုံဘုရား ခေါင်းလောင်းစာ) is a multi-language inscription found on the Shwezigon Pagoda Bell, donated by King Bayinnaung of Toungoo Dynasty and located at the Shwezigon Pagoda in Bagan, Burma (Myanmar).

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Slapat Rajawan

Slapat Rajawan Datow Smin Ron (သုပတ် ရာဇာဝင် ဒတောဝ် သ္ငီ ရောင်; lit. "History of Kings"), more commonly known as Bago Yazawin, is a Mon language chronicle that covers 17 dynasties from the legendary times to the Hanthawaddy period.

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Southeast Asia

Southeast Asia or Southeastern Asia is a subregion of Asia, consisting of the countries that are geographically south of China, east of India, west of New Guinea and north of Australia.

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Sri Ksetra Kingdom

Sri Ksetra (Śrī Kṣetra, သရေခေတ္တရာ ပြည်, IPA:; lit. "Field of Fortune"Htin Aung, Maung (1970). Burmese History before 1287: A Defence of the Chronicles. Oxford: The Asoka Society, 8 - 10. or "Field of Glory"), located along the Irrawaddy River at present-day Hmawza, was once a prominent Pyu settlement.

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Swa Saw Ke

Mingyi Swa Saw Ke (မင်းကြီး စွာစော်ကဲ,; also spelled စွာစောကဲ, Minkyiswasawke or Swasawke; 1330–1400) was king of Ava from 1367 to 1400.

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Tagaung Kingdom

Tagaung Kingdom (တကောင်း နေပြည်တော်) was a Pyu city-state that existed in the first millennium CE.

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Tai Tham script

The Tai Tham script, Lanna script (อักษรธรรมล้านนา) or Tua Mueang (ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᨾᩮᩥᩬᨦ,, ᨲᩫ᩠ᩅᨵᨾ᩠ᨾ᩼, Tham, "scripture"), is used for three living languages: Northern Thai (that is, Kham Mueang), Tai Lü and Khün.

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Tarabya

Tarabya (Tarabiye, translit) is a neighbourhood in the Sarıyer district of Istanbul, Turkey.

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Thalun

Thalun (သာလွန်မင်း,; 17 June 1584 – 27 August 1648) was the eighth king of Toungoo dynasty of Burma (Myanmar).

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Than Tun

Than Tun (သန်းထွန်း,; 6 April 1923 – 30 November 2005) was an influential Burmese historian as well as an outspoken critic of the military junta of Burma.

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Thanlyin

Thanlyin (သန်လျင်မြို့, or; သေၚ်,; formerly, Syriam) is a major port city of Myanmar, located across Bago River from the city of Yangon.

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Thant Myint-U

Thant Myint-U (သန့်မြင့်ဦး.; born 31 January 1966) is a historian, writer, a past fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, a former United Nations official, and the founder and chairman of the Yangon Heritage Trust.

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Thaw Kaung

Sithu Thaw Kaung (သော်ကောင်း) is a Burmese university librarian, historian and leading authority in Asian library studies.

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Theinni

Theinni or Hsenwi (သဵၼ်ႈဝီ; သိန္နီ,; แสนหวี) is a town in northern Shan State of Burma, situated near the north bank of the Nam Tu River and now the centre of Hsenwi Township in Lashio District.

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Thibaw Min

Thibaw Min, also Thebaw or Theebaw (သီပေါ‌မင်း,; 1 January 1859 – 19 December 1916) was the last king of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) and also the last Burmese sovereign in the country's history.

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Three Seals Law

The Three Seals Law or Three Seals Code (กฎหมายตราสามดวง) is a collection of law texts compiled in 1805 on the orders of King Rama I of Siam.

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Toungoo dynasty

The Toungoo dynasty (တောင်ငူမင်းဆက်,; also spelt Taungoo dynasty) was the ruling dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from the mid-16th century to 1752.

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Toungoo Yazawin

Ketumadi Toungoo Yazawin (ကေတုမတီ တောင်ငူ ရာဇဝင်, lit. the "Chronicle of Toungoo") is a Burmese chronicle that covers the history of Toungoo from 1279 to 1613.

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Tripiṭaka

The Tripiṭaka (Sanskrit) or Tipiṭaka (Pali), is the traditional term for the Buddhist scriptures.

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U Kala

U Kala (ဦးကုလား) is a Burmese historian and chronicler best known for compiling the Maha Yazawin (lit. 'Great Royal Chronicle'), the first extensive national chronicle of Burma.

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University of Yangon

University of Yangon (also the Yangon University; ရန်ကုန် တက္ကသိုလ်,; formerly Rangoon College, Rangoon University and Rangoon Arts and Sciences University), located in Kamayut, Yangon, is the oldest university in Myanmar's modern education system and the best known university in Myanmar.

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Upper Myanmar

Upper Burma (အထက်မြန်မာပြည်, also called Real Myanmar) refers to a geographic region of Burma (Myanmar), traditionally encompassing Mandalay and its periphery (modern Mandalay, Sagaing, Magway Regions), or more broadly speaking, Kachin and Shan States.

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Verse (poetry)

In the countable sense, a verse is formally a single metrical line in a poetic composition.

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Victor Lieberman

Victor B. Lieberman (born 22 July 1945) is an historian of early modern Southeast Asia and Eurasia.

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Wareru

Wareru (ဝါရီရူး,; also known as Wagaru; 20 March 1253 – 14 January 1307) was the founder of the Martaban Kingdom, located in present-day Myanmar (Burma).

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Wareru Dhammathat

The Wareru Dhammathat (ဝါရီရူး ဓမ္မသတ်,; also known as Wagaru Dhammathat or Code of Wareru) is one of the oldest extant dhammathats (legal treatises) of Myanmar (Burma).

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Yazawin Kyaw

Maha Thanmada Wuntha (မဟာသမ္မတဝံသ,; Mahā Sammata Vaṃsa) or more commonly known as Yazawin Kyaw (ရာဇဝင် ကျော်,; the Celebrated Chronicle) is an early 16th-century chronicle of Buddhist religious history and Burmese history.

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Yazawin Thit

Maha Yazawin Thit (မဟာ ရာဇဝင် သစ်,; lit. the "New Great Chronicle"; also known as Myanmar Yazawin Thit or Yazawin Thit) is a national chronicle of Burma (Myanmar).

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Zabu Kun-Cha

The Zabu Kun-Cha (ဇမ္ဗူကွန်ချာ ကျမ်း,; also spelled Zambu Kungya) is a late 14th to early 15th century court treatise on Burmese statecraft and court organization.

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Zatadawbon Yazawin

Zatadawbon Yazawin (ဇာတာတော်ပုံ ရာဇဝင်,; also spelled Zatatawpon; lit. the "Chronicle of Royal Horoscopes") is the earliest extant chronicle of Burma.

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Zinme Yazawin

Zinme Yazawin (ဇင်းမယ် ရာဇဝင်, lit. "Chronicle of Chiang Mai") is an 18th-century Burmese chronicle that covers the history of Lan Na under Burmese rule (1558–1775).

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Redirects here:

Arakanese chronicle, Arakanese chronicles, Burma chronicle, Burmese chronicle, Mon chronicles, Rakhine chronicles, Shan chronicles.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burmese_chronicles

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