Nyi Kan-Kaung ( mnw, ညီကာံကံင်, my, ညီကံကောင်း or ညီဂံဂေါင်,
[ ; 1352–1388/89) was a Hanthawaddy royal and governor of Dala–Twante from 1370/71 to 1388/89. A stepson of King ]Binnya U
Binnya U ( mnw, ဗညာဥူ, my, ဗညားဦး, ; also known as Hsinbyushin; 1323–1384) was king of Martaban–Hanthawaddy from 1348 to 1384. His reign was marked by several internal rebellions and external conflicts. He survived th ...
, the prince was an early supporter of his half-brother Binnya Nwe's successful rebellion against U in 1383–1384. However he was executed in 1388/89 by Nwe, now known as Razadarit, for suspicion of planning a rebellion.
Early life
Ma Nyi Kan-Kaung was the youngest of three children of Prince Min Linka of Pegu
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 ...
(Bago) and his wife Mwei Daw. He hailed from Martaban
Mottama ( my, မုတ္တမမြို့, ; Muttama mnw, မုဟ်တၟံ, ; formerly Martaban) is a town in the Thaton District of Mon State, Myanmar. Located on the west bank of the Thanlwin river (Salween), on the opposite side ...
and Sukhothai royal lines, and was a half-nephew of then king Binnya U
Binnya U ( mnw, ဗညာဥူ, my, ဗညားဦး, ; also known as Hsinbyushin; 1323–1384) was king of Martaban–Hanthawaddy from 1348 to 1384. His reign was marked by several internal rebellions and external conflicts. He survived th ...
of Martaban.[Pan Hla 2005: 47] The prince was born 1352,[(Pan Hla 2005: 45–47): Kan-Kaung's parents were wedded in 1348/49; he had two elder sisters; and his father was executed early 1353.] during his father's insurrection against the king. But the rebellion failed. In 1353, the entire family was brought to the capital Martaban
Mottama ( my, မုတ္တမမြို့, ; Muttama mnw, မုဟ်တၟံ, ; formerly Martaban) is a town in the Thaton District of Mon State, Myanmar. Located on the west bank of the Thanlwin river (Salween), on the opposite side ...
(Mottama) where Binnya U had Linka executed, and raised Mwei Daw as his latest queen.[ The king did spare the three children due to the intervention of his chief queen ]Sanda Min Hla
Sanda Min Hla ( my, စန္ဒာမင်းလှ, ; 1300s–1363/64) was the chief queen consort of three kings of Martaban, and the real palace power behind the throne. Her murder of her second husband King Saw E, grandson of king of Suk ...
, who was also the children's maternal aunt.[Pan Hla 2005: 57]
Kan-Kaung grew up at the Martaban Palace until 1364. He found a reliable protector in Queen Sanda, who did not have any children and loved him like her own son.[ Then in early 1364, a palace coup drove the royal family to ]Donwun
Donwun ( my, ဒုန်ဝန်းမြို့, ; also spelled Don Wun; also known as Wun), located 16km north of Thaton
Thaton (; mnw, သဓီု ) is a town in Mon State, in southern Myanmar on the Tenasserim plains. Thaton lies a ...
, a small town about north of Martaban where they stayed until 1369.[Pan Hla 2005: 51–52, 57] He lost his protector Queen Sanda soon after their move to Donwun. According to the ''Razadarit Ayedawbon
''Razadarit Ayedawbon'' ( my, ရာဇာဓိရာဇ် အရေးတော်ပုံ) is a Burmese chronicle covering the history of Ramanya from 1287 to 1421. The chronicle consists of accounts of court intrigues, rebellions, diplomati ...
'' chronicle, her last request to Binnya U on her death bed was for U not to punish Kan-Kaung for his father's sins; she died after the king granted her wish.[
]
Governor of Dala
Appointment
U kept his promise. In 1370/71, about a year after he had moved his capital to Pegu, the king appointed his nephew and stepson governor of Dala
Dala may refer to:
Places
*Dala Airport, Dalarna province, Sweden
*Dala, Angola
* Dala, Bhutan
* Dala, Kano, Nigeria
**Dalla Hill, a hill in Kano, Nigeria
*Đala, Serbia
* Dalas, Khuzestan Province, Iran
*Dala Township, Yangon, Myanmar
People
* ...
(modern Dala Township
Dala or Dalla Township ( my, ဒလမြို့နယ်, ) is located on the southern bank of Yangon river across from downtown Yangon, Myanmar. The township, made up of 23 wards and 23 village track (including 50 villages), is bounded by the ...
and Twante Township
Twante Township also Twantay Township ( my, တွံတေး မြို့နယ်, ) is a township in the Yangon Region of Burma (Myanmar). It is located west across the Hlaing River from the city of Yangon. The principal town and administr ...
in Yangon Region
Yangon Region(, ; formerly Rangoon Division and Yangon Division) is an administrative region of Myanmar. Located in the heart of Lower Myanmar, the division is bordered by Bago Region to the north and east, the Gulf of Martaban to the south, ...
).[Pan Hla 2005: 60] The appointment came after the previous governor Smin Zeik-Bye had died of natural causes. It was a key appointment to a strategically important region. Dala was about southwest of Pegu, and bordered the delta province where a serious rebellion by Gov. Laukpya
Laukpya ( my, လောက်ဖျား or , ), was the ruler of the Bassein province of the Martaban–Hanthawaddy Kingdom from 1364 to 1388. He came to power by helping his brother Byattaba stage a coup against King Binnya U. He was also a ...
of Myaungmya
Myaungmya ( my, မြောင်းမြမြို့ ) is a town in Myaungmya Township, Ayeyarwady Region, Myanmar.
The town is home to the Myanmar Union Adventist Seminary, a Seventh-day Adventist seminary and Myaungmya Education College. ...
had been active since 1364.[ Indeed, when Kan-Kaung was appointed, Laukpya's forces were still raiding Dala and Syriam.][ But Kan-Kaung did not see much action as the king reached a truce with Laukpya, and ]Byattaba
Byattaba ( my, ဗြတ်ထဗ; ; also Byat-Hta-Ba) was the ruler of the Martaban province of the Martaban–Hanthawaddy Kingdom from 1364 to 1388. He came to power by staging a coup against King Binnya U with the help of his brothers. Their ...
of Martaban 1371.[Pan Hla 2005: 62–63]
Binnya Nwe's rebellion
Kan-Kaung ruled the district without incident until 1383. Then in May 1383, his 15-year-old maternal half-brother Prince Binnya Nwe came to Dagon
Dagon ( he, דָּגוֹן, ''Dāgōn'') or Dagan ( sux, 2= dda-gan, ; phn, 𐤃𐤂𐤍, Dāgān) was a god worshipped in ancient Syria across the middle of the Euphrates, with primary temples located in Tuttul and Terqa, though many attes ...
(modern downtown Yangon) with a plan to raise a rebellion.[Pan Hla 2005: 94] The young prince had been deeply dissatisfied with his ailing father, as well as with his adoptive mother Princess Maha Dewi, the de facto power. As Dala was across the river from Dagon, Kan-Kaung was the first governor Nwe tried to recruit. Kan-Kaung himself had been concerned about the princess's rumored plan to put her lover Smim Maru on the throne, and told Nwe's emissaries that he would support Nwe.[Pan Hla 2005: 99–100]
His support was crucial for the nascent rebellion. He initially provided over 300 troops and war elephants[Pan Hla 2005: 130] before personally joining Nwe's camp at Dagon with additional men.[Pan Hla 2005: 149–151] When Nwe marched to Pegu in December 1383, Kan-Kaung stayed behind at Dala to guard the rear.[Pan Hla 2005: 155]
Final years
Kan-Kaung remained a steadfast supporter when Nwe became king on 4 January 1384 with the title of Razadarit. No other major vassal rulers—including viceroys Laukpya, Byattaba and Sam Lek—acknowledged the 16-year-old boy-king. Razadarit considered all of them in revolt although he could not yet take any action.[Pan Hla 2005: 171] Kan-Kaung survived Razadarit's initial round of purges at Pegu that removed anyone with a claim to the throne. The new king promptly had his brother-in-law Maru executed,[Pan Hla 2005: 160] and ordered his paternal half-brother Baw Ngan-Mohn imprisoned.[Pan Hla 2005: 185] In contrast, Kan-Kaung was allowed to keep his post at Dala.[Pan Hla 2005: 178]
Chronicles are mum about Kan-Kaung's activities in the next four plus years. Although his name is not explicitly listed as a Hanthawaddy commander in the chronicles, he presumably led the defense of his district in 1385–1387 when the northern Ava forces invaded the southern country to oust Razadarit.[Harvey 1925: 82–85] Dala was part of the defense line that stopped numerically superior Ava forces from advancing to Pegu.[Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 199]
Despite the success, the embattled king was suspicious about his half-brother's historical ties with Laukpya.[Pan Hla 2005: 130, 178] The viceroy of Myaungmya was the one that invited Ava to oust Razadarit.[Harvey 1925: 82][Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 195–196] Then in 1388, after he had conquered the Martaban province (modern day Mon State and southern Kayin State
Kayin State ( my, ကရင်ပြည်နယ်, ; kjp, ဖၠုံခါန်ႋကၞင့်, italics=no; ksw, ကညီကီၢ်စဲၣ်, ), also known by the endonyms Kawthoolei and Karen State, is a state of Myanmar. The ...
), Razadarit received intelligence that Kan-Kaung had entered into a secret alliance with Laukpya.[Pan Hla 2005: 178] The king sent a senior official named Smin Eindazeik to confirm the story. When the story was confirmed, Razadarit attacked Dala (probably in late 1388 or early 1389).[The chronicle ''Razadarit Ayedawbon'' (Pan Hla 2005: 178) only says Dala was attacked in 750 ME (29 March 1388 to 28 March 1389) in preparation of an attack on Myaungmya. The attack was most probably in the dry season (November 1388 to May 1389), and since Dala was taken with at most minimal fight, Dala likely fell in the early dry season (November/December 1388).] Kan-Kaung was arrested and executed and Razadarit appointed Kan-Kaung's son Baw Kyaw to succeed him as governor of Dala.[ Baw Kyaw was a loyal vassal to his uncle Razadarit; he also became a commander in the army and died in action in 1402.][Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 220][Pan Hla 2005: 228]
Ancestry
The prince was a grandson of King Saw Zein
Saw Zein ( my, စောဇိတ်, ; also known as Saw Zeik and Binnya Ran De; 1303–1330) was king of Martaban from 1323 to 1330. He inherited a newly independent kingdom from his elder brother Saw O but spent much of his reign putting down ...
of Martaban
Mottama ( my, မုတ္တမမြို့, ; Muttama mnw, မုဟ်တၟံ, ; formerly Martaban) is a town in the Thaton District of Mon State, Myanmar. Located on the west bank of the Thanlwin river (Salween), on the opposite side ...
, and a great grandson of King Loe Thai
Loe Thai ( th, เลอไทย, ) was the fourth king of the Sukhothai Kingdom (a historical kingdom of Thailand) from 1298 to 1323. He was preceded by his father Ram Khamhaeng the Great until the throne was usurped by his cousin Ngua Nam Thum ...
of Sukhothai. His maternal side hailed from a line of court ministers, ultimately from Senior Minister Bo Htu-Hpyet, who served at the court of King Wareru
Wareru ( mnw, ဝါရေဝ်ရောဝ်, my, ဝါရီရူး, ; also known as Wagaru; 20 March 1253 – 14 January 1307) was the founder of the Martaban Kingdom, located in present-day Myanmar (Burma). By using both diplomatic a ...
.[Pan Hla 2005: 45]
Notes
References
Bibliography
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{{s-end
Hanthawaddy dynasty
1350s births
1380s deaths