Mingyi Swa Of Prome
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Mingyi Swa of Prome ( my, မင်းကြီးစွာ, ; 1435–1482) was viceroy of Prome from 1446 to 1482 during the reigns of kings Narapati I, Thihathura I and
Minkhaung II Minkhaung II ( my, ဒုတိယ မင်းခေါင် ; 9 October 1446 – 7 April 1501) was king of Ava from 1480 to 1501. His 20-year reign was the beginning of the decline of Ava's hold on Upper Burma. Yamethin, a region to the east ...
of Ava.


Brief

He was born Min Hsin-Mya (မင်းဆင်များMaha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 78 or မင်းဆင်မြားHmannan Vol. 2 2003: 86) to Viceroy
Thihathu of Prome Thihathu of Prome ( my, သီဟသူ, ; d. 1288), or Sihasura, was viceroy of Prome (Pyay) from 1275 to 1288. He is known in Burmese history for assassinating his own father King Narathihapate, the last sovereign king of the Pagan Empire, in ...
and his chief queen
Atula Thiri Maha Yaza Dewi , image = , caption = , reign = 30 April 1550 – 15 June 1568 , coronation = 11 January 1551 12 January 1554 , succession = Chief queen consort of Burma , predecessor ...
in
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 Aye ...
(Pyay).Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 83 He was probably born 1435.Chronicles do not explicitly mention his birth date. His eldest sibling Thihathura was born on 1 May 1431. He had two elder sisters in between him and Thihathura, meaning he could have been born no earlier than 1434. Moreover, because he was appointed viceroy in early 1446, he must have been at least around 10. It is probable that he was born around 1435. He was the fourth of the couple's eight children. He had one elder brother, two elder sisters, one younger brother and three younger sisters.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 83–84 In April 1442, the family moved to Ava (Inwa) when Thihathu succeeded the Ava throne as Narapati I of Ava.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 81 His stay at Ava was short. In January 1446,Standard chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 2 2006: 78; Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 86) say that King Narapati made new appointments in Toungoo (Taungoo) and Prome (Pyay) following the death of Tarabya of Toungoo in 807 ME (29 March 1445 to 28 March 1446). According to the '' Toungoo Yazawin'' chronicle (Sein Lwin Lay 2006: 30–31), Tarabya died on 2 January 1446 (5th waxing of Tabodwe 807 ME). It means the appointments were made sometime between 2 January 1446 and 28 March 1446, and most probably in January 1446. Narapati I appointed his second son, then no older than 11 years of age, the viceroy of Prome, the second most important city in the kingdom.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 86 He was a loyal son throughout his father's 26-year reign. But in 1472, he tried to revolt against his elder brother King Thihathura I by getting into a league with his younger brother
Thado Minsaw Thado Minsaw ( my, သတိုးမင်းစော ; 15 June 1762 – 9 April 1808), also known as Shwedaung Min (), was heir-apparent of Burma from 1783 to 1808, during the reign of his father King Bodawpaya of Konbaung dynasty. As Pri ...
, governor of Tharrawaddy. But the planned rebellion never panned out and both brothers submitted to the king in February 1473.(Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 102): Tabaung 834 ME = 28 January 1473 to 26 February 1473 Thihathura forgave his brothers and appointed them to their former position.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 101–102 He gave no more trouble when his nephew
Minkhaung II Minkhaung II ( my, ဒုတိယ မင်းခေါင် ; 9 October 1446 – 7 April 1501) was king of Ava from 1480 to 1501. His 20-year reign was the beginning of the decline of Ava's hold on Upper Burma. Yamethin, a region to the east ...
became king of Ava in 1480. In return, the new king kept Mingyi Swa at his post. Swa died in 1482.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 215 Thado Minsaw of Tharrawaddy seized Prome, and revolted against
Minkhaung II Minkhaung II ( my, ဒုတိယ မင်းခေါင် ; 9 October 1446 – 7 April 1501) was king of Ava from 1480 to 1501. His 20-year reign was the beginning of the decline of Ava's hold on Upper Burma. Yamethin, a region to the east ...
. The rebellion succeeded, and Prome became independent.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 113–114


Family

Swa and his principal wife Saw Myat Lay had 11 children (four sons and seven daughters). He was also married to the daughter of
Minye Kyawhtin of Toungoo Minye Kyawhtin ( my, မင်းရဲ ကျော်ထင်, ; also known as Min-nge Kyawhtin (မင်းငယ် ကျော်ထင်), ; 1408–1459) was a pretender to the Ava throne from 1426 to 1459. The eldest son of Crown Pr ...
and Princess of Yamethin.Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 94


Ancestry


Notes


References


Bibliography

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