Maha Thamun
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Maha Thamun ( my, မဟာသမွန်, ) was a senior minister of the royal court of
Hanthawaddy Bago (formerly spelt Pegu; , ), formerly known as Hanthawaddy, is a city and the capital of the Bago Region in Myanmar. It is located north-east of Yangon. Etymology The Burmese name Bago (ပဲခူး) is likely derived from the Mon langua ...
from the 1380s to the 1430s. He also served in the Hanthawaddy armed forces for over 30 years during his kingdom's decades-long war against Ava. He twice led the Hanthawaddy delegation in peace negotiations with Ava in 1391 and in 1430–1431, and secured favorable treaties for his kingdom on both occasions.


Brief

Although he is best known as a longtime senior minister, the first mention of Maha Thamun in the royal chronicles is as a commander of a sentinel battalion of the Hanthawaddy army in the first campaign (1385–1386) of the Forty Years' War.Pan Hla 2005: 166


Peace negotiations of 1391

Maha Thamun made his name in the 1390–1391 campaign. His naval flotilla was instrumental in repulsing the numerically superior Ava invasion fleet, outside the port of Gu-Htut on the
Irrawaddy river The Irrawaddy River ( Ayeyarwady River; , , from Indic ''revatī'', meaning "abounding in riches") is a river that flows from north to south through Myanmar (Burma). It is the country's largest river and most important commercial waterway. Origi ...
, in the opening battle of the campaign. His war boats managed to swarm King Swa Saw Ke's royal war boat, and got close enough to capture the gold ornaments from the side of the royal boat itself. The battle proved to be a harbinger of things to come. Over the next few months, Hanthawaddy defenses successfully held off Ava's repeated naval and land-based attacks.Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 429–431 Despite the success, Maha Thamun persuaded the court and the king to sue for peace with Ava. He recommended the king to return Gu-Htut, which Hanthawaddy had occupied since 1390,Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 300Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 429 in exchange for Ava's recognition of Pegu.Pan Hla 2005: 199 Razadarit agreed, and appointed Maha Thamun to lead the Hanthawaddy delegation. The negotiations were successful. Faced with yet another embarrassing failure, Swa accepted the face-saving proposal that called for Pegu to return Gu-Htut and prisoners of war, and Ava to recognize Pegu.Pan Hla 2005: 200–202 The treaty ended Swa's war against his southern neighbor, and allowed Pegu to consolidate most of its gains.Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 431Harvey 1925: 85


Scholarly minister

The success propelled Maha Thamun to become one of the four most senior ministers (''amat-gyi'', (အမတ်ကြီး)) at the Hanthawaddy court.(Pan Hla 2005: 200–201) says Maha Thamun was one of the four most senior ministers. The other three were not explicitly named but they would have been
Byat Za Burmese honorific, SminSmin is a transliteration of the Mon language title သ္ငီ. The title is also transliterated into English as Smim. Byat Za ( my, သမိန်ဗြာဇ္ဇ, ; also spelled in Burmese, သမိန်ဖြတ် ...
,
Dein Mani-Yut Dein Mani-Yut ( mnw, ဒိန်ၝိတ်ရတ်;Pan Hla 2005: 370 my, ဒိန်မဏိရွတ်, ; commonly known as Amat Dein (အမတ်ဒိန်, "Minister Dein") or as Amat Tein (အမတ်တိန်, "Minister Tein") ...
and
Zeik-Bye Smin E Bya-Ye Zeik-Bye ( mnw, သ္ငီ အဲာပြရဲာ ဇိပ်ဗြဲာ; my, သမိန် အဲပြရဲ ဇိပ်ဗြဲ, ; also spelled Zeip Bye) was chief minister of Hanthawaddy in the 1380s in the service o ...
as mentioned in earlier parts of the chronicle.
According to the historian
Nai Pan Hla Nai Pan Hla ( my, နိုင်ပန်းလှ, mnw, နာဲပါန်လှ; 1923 – 18 June 2010) was a Burmese historian and cultural anthropologist of Mon descent. Throughout his career, he published many works on Mon ethnog ...
, Maha Thamun was an erudite, scholarly minister, known for advocating ethical conduct by those in position of power; he is said to have coined the Mon proverb that translates to "the children's conduct is a reflection of their parents'; the servants' conduct is a reflection of their lord's".Pan Hla 2005: 390 He remained in the king's inner circle to the early 1400s. After Razadarit renewed the war in 1401, Maha Thamun went to the front with the king as an adviser. In a famous episode, he advised the king to revoke the royal order to execute the troops that had fled the battle of Nawin (which took place on 26 December 1402).(Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 220): Tuesday, 3rd waxing of
Tabodwe Tabodwe ( my, တပို့တွဲ) is the eleventh month of the traditional Burmese calendar. Festivals and observances *Full moon of Tabodwe **Harvest Festival () **Mon National Day Rakhine tug of war festival, Yatha Hswe Pwe. *Pagoda fes ...
764 ME (26 December 1402).
He reasoned with a furious king that the responsibility for the fall of the fort laid with the bad planning by the three commanders of the Nawin fort but not with the troops. The king relented. One of the saved was Emundaya, who would become a well known commander in his own right. His influence appeared to have waned in the following years. In 1408, he was not part of the Hanthawaddy delegation, all of whom were senior commanders, that tried to negotiate a ceasefire.(Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 340), (Yazawin Thin Vol. 1 2012: 233), (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 480): The Hanthawaddy delegation consisted of: (1)
Byat Za Burmese honorific, SminSmin is a transliteration of the Mon language title သ္ငီ. The title is also transliterated into English as Smim. Byat Za ( my, သမိန်ဗြာဇ္ဇ, ; also spelled in Burmese, သမိန်ဖြတ် ...
, (2)
Dein Mani-Yut Dein Mani-Yut ( mnw, ဒိန်ၝိတ်ရတ်;Pan Hla 2005: 370 my, ဒိန်မဏိရွတ်, ; commonly known as Amat Dein (အမတ်ဒိန်, "Minister Dein") or as Amat Tein (အမတ်တိန်, "Minister Tein") ...
, (3)
Zeik-Bye Smin E Bya-Ye Zeik-Bye ( mnw, သ္ငီ အဲာပြရဲာ ဇိပ်ဗြဲာ; my, သမိန် အဲပြရဲ ဇိပ်ဗြဲ, ; also spelled Zeip Bye) was chief minister of Hanthawaddy in the 1380s in the service o ...
, (4)
Smin Awa Naing Smin Awa Naing Min Thiri ( my, သမိန် အဝနိုင် မင်းသီရိ, ; also spelled Thamein Inwa Naing (သမိန် အင်းဝနိုင်, lit. "Lord of Victory over Ava"); also known as Awa Mingyi (အဝ ...
, (5) Smin Ye Thin Yan, (6) Smin Maw-Khwin, (7) Smin Than-Kye, (8) Smin Upakaung, (9) Smin Zeik-Pun, (10)
Lagun Ein Maha Saw Lagun Ein ( my, မဟာစော လဂွန်းအိန်, ; also spelled Lagunein; d. March 1413) was a key frontline commander of the Hanthawaddy military from the 1380s to 1413. The commander led the military's vanguard lan ...
.
By 1414, he was a subordinate of minister-general
Smin Awa Naing Smin Awa Naing Min Thiri ( my, သမိန် အဝနိုင် မင်းသီရိ, ; also spelled Thamein Inwa Naing (သမိန် အင်းဝနိုင်, lit. "Lord of Victory over Ava"); also known as Awa Mingyi (အဝ ...
. He was part of a group of commanders and advisers led by Awa Naing that was posted at Dala–Twante to defend the key fort. As the chronicle story goes, Dala had been under siege for months in February 1415 when Commander Emundaya managed to slip through Ava lines to inform the starving forces inside the town that help was on the way, and to hold on for a few more weeks.How Emundaya slipped in and out of Ava lines is a legendary tale still retold to date. According to the chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 40–42), (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 255–256), (Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 33–35), Emundaya pretended to have defected to the Ava side near the Dala front. He then managed to get on a front line patrol before making a rush to the Dala side. He informed the Dala leadership about the upcoming help. He then left Dala by acting as a corpse tied to a raft on the river, which slipped through Ava patrols. He made it back to Pegu unharmed. In his last known command as reported in the chronicles, on 13 March 1415, Maha Thamun led an 800-man regiment in the famous battle outside Dala in which Crown Prince
Minye Kyawswa Minye Kyawswa ( my, မင်းရဲကျော်စွာ, ; also Minyekyawswa and Minrekyawswa; January 1391 – 13 March 1415) was crown prince of Ava from 1406 to 1415, and commander-in-chief of Ava's military from 1410 to 1415. H ...
of Ava fell in action.Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 46


Peace negotiations of 1430–1431

Maha Thamun continued to serve at the Hanthawaddy royal court into the 1430s. In late 1430, King
Binnya Ran I Binnya Ran I ( mnw, ပထမ ဗညာရာံ; my, ပထမ ဗညားရံ, ; 1393–1446) was king of Hanthawaddy Pegu from 1424 to 1446. As crown prince, he ended the Forty Years' War with the rival Ava Kingdom in 1423. He came to th ...
sent the old minister to Ava (Inwa) to present his terms to King Thado of Ava.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 72 Ran's main demand was for Thado to acknowledge his 1427 annexation of Tharrawaddy and
Paungde Paung-deh or Paungde United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. is a town in Pyay District, Pegu region in Burma (Myanmar). It is the administrative seat of Paungde Township Paungde Township is a township in Pyay District in the B ...
, which used to be Ava's southernmost districts. Thado was so angry at the demand that he reflexively ordered Maha Thamun to be executed; Chief Minister
Yazathingyan Yazathingyan ( my, ရာဇသင်္ကြန်, ; 1263 – 1312/13) was a co-founder of Myinsaing Kingdom in present-day Central Burma (Myanmar).Coedès 1968: 209 As a senior commander in the Royal Army of the Pagan Empire, he, along wi ...
had to talk him out of it.Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 68Harvey 1925: 98 The negotiations stalled for three months (until after 27 January 1431)(Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 67) and (Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 69): after the completion of the Yadana Zedi pagoda on Saturday, Full Moon of
Tabaung Tabaung ( my, တပေါင်း) is the twelfth and final month of the traditional Burmese calendar. Festivals and observances *Tabaung Festival (Magha Puja) - full moon of Tabaung * Sand Pagoda Festival () *28 Pagoda Parade Festival, Pyinman ...
792 ME (Saturday, 27 January 1431).
but Thado ultimately agreed to most of Ran's initial terms. Following the negotiations in Ava, Thado and Ran met outside
Prome Pyay (, ; mnw, ပြန် , ; also known as Prome and Pyè) is principal town of Pyay Township in the Bago Region in Myanmar. Pyay is located on the bank of the Irrawaddy River, north-west of Yangon. It is an important trade center for the Ayey ...
(Pyay); Thado formally ceded Tharrawaddy and Paungde, and sent Princess Soe Min Wimala Dewi, a niece of the late King Minkhaung I of Ava, to Ran, in a
marriage of state A marriage of state is a diplomatic marriage or union between two members of different nation-states or internally, between two power blocs, usually in authoritarian societies and is a practice which dates back into ancient times, as far back as ear ...
. The only concession by Ran was to withdraw his support of
Toungoo Taungoo (, ''Tauñngu myoú''; ; also spelled Toungoo) is a district-level city in the Bago Region of Myanmar, 220 km from Yangon, towards the north-eastern end of the division, with mountain ranges to the east and west. The main industr ...
, a rebel vassal state of Ava.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 73–74 Maha Thamun is not mentioned in the chronicles again.


Military service

The following is a list of military campaigns in which Maha Thamun is explicitly mentioned as a commander in the royal chronicles. All of the campaigns were part of the
Forty Years' War The Forty Years' War ( my, အနှစ်လေးဆယ်စစ်; 1385 – 1424; also Ava-Pegu War or the Mon-Burmese War) was a military war fought between the Burmese-speaking Kingdom of Ava and the Mon-speaking Kingdom of Hanthawad ...
.


Notes


References


Bibliography

* * * * * * {{cite book , author=
Royal Historical Commission of Burma The Royal Historical Commission ( my, တော်ဝင် မြန်မာနိုင်ငံ သမိုင်း ကော်မရှင်, ) of the Konbaung Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) produced the standard court chronicles of Konbaung ...
, title=
Hmannan Yazawin ''Hmannan Maha Yazawindawgyi'' ( my, မှန်နန်း မဟာ ရာဇဝင်တော်ကြီး, ; commonly, ''Hmannan Yazawin''; known in English as the '' Glass Palace Chronicle'') is the first official chronicle of Konbaung ...
, volume=1–3 , orig-year=1832 , location=Yangon , language=my , year=2003 , publisher=Ministry of Information, Myanmar Hanthawaddy dynasty 14th-century births 15th-century deaths