Myanmar History

Myanmar has a long and complex history. Many peoples have lived in the region and the history began. The first identifiable civilization is that of the Mon. The Mon probably began migrating into the area in about 300 BC, and their first kingdom Suwarnabhumi, was founded around the port of Thaton in about 300 BC. The Pyu arrived in Myanmar in the 7th century and established city kingdoms at Binnaka, Mongamo, Sri Ksetra, and Halingyi. During this period, Myanmar was part of an overland trade route from China to India. By 849, the Burmans had founded a powerful kingdom centered on the city of Bagan and filled the void left by the Pyu. The kingdom grew in relative isolation until the reign of Anawrahta (1044 - 77) who successfully unified all of Myanmar by defeating the Mon city of Thaton in 1057.

After the collapse of Bagan authority, Myanmar was divided once again. The Burmans had restablished themselves at the city of Ava by 1364, where Bagan culture was revived and a great age of Burmese literature ensued. The kingdom lacked easily defendable borders, however, and was overrun by the Shan in 1527. Surviors of the destruction of Inwa eventually established a new kingdom centered on Taungoo in 1531 led by Tabinshwehti (reigned 1531-50), who once again unified most of Myanmar. A popular Burmese leader named Alaungpaya drove the Bago forces out of northern Myanmar by 1753, and by 1759 he had once again conquered Pegu and southern Myanmar while also regaining control of Manipur. He established his capital at Rangoon, now known as Yangon. Myanmar was known to the West ever since western explorers had heard of it. Marko Polo was the earliest known westerner who discovered Myanmar and introduced to the West.


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Kawleikgyin Ne Win

Kawleikgyin Ne Win
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
Kawleikgyin Ne Win (Burmese: ကောလိပ်ဂျင်နေဝင်း, 1 October 1928 – 2 June 1983) was a two-time Burmese Academy Award winning Burmese film actor and director. Conceived Ne Win, he was given his well known moniker after his fruitful presentation film, Kawleikgyin (The Collegian), so as not to be mistaken for the late Burmese strongman of a similar name, Gen. Ne Win.
 

Myat Paya Lat

Myat Paya Lat
Myat Paya Lat
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Theippan Maung Wa

Theippan Maung Wa
Theippan Maung Wa
Photo credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Nanmadaw Me Nu

Nanmadaw Me Nu
The Queen's Brick Monastery
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Ludu U Hla

Ludu U Hla
Photo credit - www.wikipedia.org
 
Ludu U Hla (Burmese: လူထုဦးလှ; 19 January 1910 – 7 August 1982) was a Burmese writer, distributer, recorder, folklorist and social reformer whose productive compositions incorporate an extensive number of way breaking true to life works. He was hitched to kindred essayist and columnist Ludu Daw Amar.
 

Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung

Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung
U Kaung at age 50
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Ludu Daw Amar

Ludu Daw Amar
Portrait of Ludu Daw Amar in her youth
 

Mahasi Sayadaw

Mahasi Sayadaw
The Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Thakin Kodaw Hmaing

Thakin Kodaw Hmaing
Photo Credit - www.wikipedai.org
 

Mingun Sayadaw

Mingun Sayadaw
Statue of Mingun Sayadaw
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Queen Supayalat

Queen Supayalat
Queen Supayalat next to King Thibaw Min and her sister Princess Supayagyi
 

Ledi Sayadaw

Ledi Sayadaw
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 Ledi Sayadaw U Ñanadhaja (Burmese: လယ်တီဆရာတော် ဦးဉာဏဓဇ, 1 December 1846 – 27 June 1923) was a compelling Theravada Buddhist friar. He was perceived from a youthful age as being produced in both the hypothesis (Abhidharma) and routine of Buddhism as was respected as being academic.
 

U Thant, United Nations' Secretary General

U Thant
U Thant, who filled in as Secretary-General of the United Nations from 1961 to 1971. was going the world body when Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold was murdered in an air crash in September 1961.
 

Mogok Sayadaw U Vimala

Mogok Sayadaw U Vimala
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
 

Descendents of the Royal Family

 

Taunggwin Sayadaw

Taunggwin Sayadaw
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
The Taunggwin Sayadaw U Visuddha Silacaraha (တောင်ခွင်ဆရာတော် ဦးဝိသုဒ္ဓ သီလာစာရဟာ) was the last Buddhist friar to hold the workplace as Thathanabaing of Burma. The workplace was annulled after his demise in 1938 and no successor was ever named.
 

Nandawshay Sayar Tin

Nandawshay Sayar Tin
Photo Credit - www.moemaka.com
Nandashay Sayar Tin was the most famous Musician and Composer of Myanmar Music history. He was the composer of Myanmar National Anthem. Sayar Tin was born in 1892 at Mandalay.
 

Min Thu Wun

Min Thu Wun
Photo credit - www.wikipedia.org
Min Thu Wun (Burmese: မင်းသုဝဏ်; 10 February 1909 – 15 August 2004) was a Burmese artist, essayist and researcher who propelled another age abstract development called Khit-San (Testing the Times) in Burma. He is the father of Htin Kyaw, leader of Myanmar since 2016.
 

U Shwe Yoe @ U Ba Ga Lay

U Shwe Yoe
Photo Credit - www.wikipedia.org
U Shwe Yoe's original name was U Ba Ga Lay. He was a pioneer famous Cartoonist. Actor. Comedian and Dancer. U Ba Ga Lay invented Myanmar's most famous Dance and Character known as U Shwe Yoe. He was born in 1893. Pathein. the delta region of Myanmar. His parents were U Pho Thi and Daw Thae Mhone. both were teachers of Pathein High School. He died in 1945 at the age of 52.
 

Zawgyi(writer)

Zawgyi(writer)
Photo credit - www.wikipedia.org
Zawgyi (Burmese: ဇော်ဂျီ, conceived Thein Han (သိန်းဟန်, 12 April 1907 - 26 September 1990) was a recognized and driving Burmese artist, creator, abstract history specialist, commentator, researcher and scholastic.
 

Crown Prince Kanaung

Crown Prince Kanaung
Photo Credit - www.lostfootsteps.org
 

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