Kyaswa of Sagaing

{{other people|Kyaswa}}

{{Infobox royalty

| type = monarch

| name = Kyaswa of Sagaing
{{lang-my-Mymr|စစ်ကိုင်း ကျစွာ}}

| image =

| caption =

| reign = {{circa}} August 1339 – {{circa}} March 1349

| coronation =

| succession = King of Sagaing

| predecessor = Anawrahta I

| successor = Anawrahta II

| suc-type = Successor

| reg-type = Chief Minister

| regent = Nanda Pakyan

| spouse = Saw Pa Oh

| issue = Saw Sala

| issue-link =

| full name =

| house = Myinsaing

| father = Saw Yun

| mother = Saw Hnaung

| birth_date = 9 April 1323
Saturday, 4th waxing of Kason 685 ME

| birth_place = Sagaing, Sagaing Kingdom

| death_date = {{circa}} March 1349 (aged 25)
{{circa}} Late Tagu 710 ME

| death_place = Sagaing, Sagaing Kingdom

| date of burial =

| place of burial =

| religion = Theravada Buddhism

| signature =

}}

{{Contains special characters|Burmese}}

Kyaswa of Sagaing ({{langx|my|ကျစွာ}}, {{IPA|my|tɕa̰zwà|pron}}; also known as Kyawswa; 1323–1349) was king of Sagaing from 1339 to 1349. The eldest son of the founder of the kingdom Saw Yun (r. 1315−27) was placed on the throne by Chief Minister Nanda Pakyan who ran the country.

Early life

Kyaswa was born to Queen Saw Hnaung and King Saw Yun of Sagaing on 9 April 1323.Zata 1960: 43, 70 He was the second of the couple's four children, and a grandson of kings Thihathu of Pinya and Kyawswa of Pagan. His father died in February 1327.Than Tun 1959: 126 Because Kyaswa, the eldest son, was not yet four years old, his half-uncle Tarabya I succeeded the throne, marrying Saw Hnaung as his chief queen.Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 389 Though it is unclear if Tarabya ever planned to hand over the reins to Kyaswa when the latter became an adult, Kyaswa, as the eldest son of Saw Yun and as the eldest son of Tarabya's chief queen Saw Hnaung, was at least the heir presumptive.

The arrangement lasted until 1335/36 when Tarabya's own son Shwetaungtet overthrew his father and seized the throne. Fearing the life of her children, Saw Hnaung with the help of Chief Minister Nanda Pakyan sent the children (and Thado Hsinhtein, the husband of the eldest child Soe Min) to Mindon, deep inside Pinya's territory. For the next three years, Saw Hnaung, who may have even become a lover of Nanda Pakyan, kept bribing the powerful minister to keep quiet.Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 390

Accession

Then a series of events led Kyaswa to the throne. In 1339, Shwetaungtet, having discovered their whereabouts, came to Mindon with an expeditionary force, and brought them back to Sagaing. But upon return to the palace, loyalists of the deposed king Tarabya ambushed and killed Shwetaungtet although they were later defeated by the palace guards. Nanda Pakyan had Tarabya executed, and placed Kyaswa on the throne.Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 391 Kyaswa took the reign name of Thiri Tri Bhawanaditya Pawara Dhamma Yaza at his accession.

Reign

His first act as king was to reappoint Nanda Pakyan as the Chief Minister and Commander-in-Chief with the title of Thubarit. The 16-year-old monarch essentially allowed Nanda Pakyan's court to continue running the kingdom. His reign was largely peaceful. In Central Burma, he secured peace with Sagaing's cross-river rival Pinya by marrying Saw Pa Oh, daughter of King Uzana I of Pinya.Than Tun 1959: 127 (The peace between the two kingdoms was maintained even after Uzana I was pushed out by Kyawswa I between 1340 and 1344.) In the north, the Shan states were still fighting a war of independence against their Mongol overlords, and were not yet the threat they would become to Central Burmese states in the late 1350s.Than Tun 1964: 278

His reign lasted over nine years. Surviving inscriptions from the era report no particular issues during his reign. Kyaswa left an inscription in 1343/44 at the Thamanda Pagoda (on the route between Mindon and Sagaing) where he and his two queens donated land and a monastery. The inscription also recounts his exile in Mindon and the attack by Shwetaungtet. Another contemporary inscription states the king gave presents to his nephew Prince Rahula (future King Thado Minbya) on 24 January 1347.Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 175, footnote 9 He died {{circa}} March 1349.Contemporary inscriptions suggest a few weeks' gap between Kyaswa's death and Nawrahta Minye's accession. One inscription (Than Tun 1959: 127) says Kyaswa died in 710 ME (29 March 1348 to 28 March 1349). An inscription donated by Minye himself (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 175, footnote 2) states that he came to power in 711 ME (29 March 1349 to 28 March 1350), and shows that he was still alive on Sunday, 13th waning of Tazaungmon 711 ME (8 November 1349). Since an inscription by Princess Soe Min (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 175−176) shows that Kyaswa's successor Minye reigned for seven months in 711 ME, Minye came to power no earlier than 14th waning of Tagu 711 ME (17 April 1349). But if the inscription referenced in (Than Tun 1959: 127) is accurate, Kyaswa died no later than 28 March 1349, the last day of 710 ME.

Family

Kyaswa had at least two queens. One of his queens was Saw Pa Oh; their daughter Saw Sala later became a queen of King Uzana II of Pinya.

Chronicle reporting differences

The royal chronicles do not agree on his birth and death dates.

width=100% class="wikitable"
style="background-color:#B9D1FF" width=15% | Source

! style="background-color:#B9D1FF" width=15% | Birth–Death

! style="background-color:#B9D1FF" width=5% | Age

! style="background-color:#B9D1FF" width=15% | Reign

! style="background-color:#B9D1FF" width=5% | Length of reign

! style="background-color:#B9D1FF" width=5% | Reference

Zatadawbon Yazawin

| 9 April 1323 – 1344

| rowspan="2" | 20
(21st year)

| 1339–1344

| rowspan="2" | 5

| Zata's horoscope section (Zata 1960: 70) says he was born on Saturday, 4th nekkhat of the 1st month of 658 ME. But 658 ME is a typographical error since Zata's own regnal lists section (Zata 1960: 43) says he was born in 685 ME. Saturday, 4th waxing of Kason 685 ME = 9 April 1323.

Maha Yazawin

| {{circa}} 1324–1344/45

| 1339/40–1344/45

| Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 271

Yazawin Thit

| rowspan="2" | {{circa}} 1318–1349/50

| rowspan="2" | 31
(32nd year)

| rowspan="2" | 1339/40–1349/50

| rowspan="2" | 10

| rowspan="2" | See (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 174) and (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 391) for the chronicles' death year and implied birth year for Kyaswa. Yazawin Thit rejects earlier chronicles' birth date of 1323/24, and pushes it to {{circa}} 1318 because it (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 173) has Saw Yun dead by 30 April 1322 (Friday, 1st waning of Kason 684 ME). Yazawin Thit and Hmannan, which follows Yazawin Thit, are incorrect according to a contemporary inscription (Than Tun 1959: 126), which shows that Saw Yun died on or before 5 February 1327 (Full moon of Tabaung 688 ME). This means Yazawin Thit's "correction" was most probably unwarranted, and Kyaswa likely was born in 1323/24 as reported in earlier chronicles.

Hmannan Yazawin

Ancestry

{{ahnentafel

|collapsed=yes |align=center

|title=Ancestry of King Kyaswa of Sagaing

|boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc;

|boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9;

|boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc;

|boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc;

|boxstyle_5=background-color: #9fe;

|1= 1. Kyaswa

|2= 2. Saw Yun

|3= 3. Saw Hnaung of Sagaing

|4= 4. Thihathu

|5= 5. Yadanabon of Pinya

|6= 6. Kyawswa of Pagan

|7= 7. Saw Soe of Pagan

|8= 8. Theinkha Bo

|9= 9. Lady Myinsaing

|10= 10. unnamed

|11= 11. unnamed

|12= 12. Narathihapate

|13= 13. Shin Hpa of Pagan

|14= 14. Yazathingyan of Pagan

|15= 15. Saw Khin Htut of Pagan

}}

Notes

{{Reflist|group=note}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book | author=Royal Historians of Burma | title=Zatadawbon Yazawin | year=c. 1680 | edition=1960 | editor=U Hla Tin (Hla Thamein) | publisher=Historical Research Directorate of the Union of Burma}}
  • {{cite book | last=Kala | author-link=U Kala | first=U | title=Maha Yazawin | publisher=Ya-Pyei Publishing | location=Yangon | year=1724 | edition=2006, 4th printing | language=my | volume=1–3}}
  • {{cite book | author=Maha Sithu | author-link=Maha Sithu of Twinthin | title=Yazawin Thit | publisher=Ya-Pyei Publishing | location=Yangon |orig-date=1798 |date=2012| language=my | volume=1–3 | editor=Myint Swe |editor2=Kyaw Win |editor3=Thein Hlaing}}
  • {{cite book | author=Royal Historical Commission of Burma | author-link=Royal Historical Commission of Burma | title=Hmannan Yazawin | volume=1–3 | year=1832 | location=Yangon | language=my | edition=2003 | publisher=Ministry of Information, Myanmar}}
  • {{cite journal | author=Than Tun | author-link=Than Tun | title=History of Burma: A.D. 1300–1400 | journal=Journal of Burma Research Society | date=December 1959 | volume=XLII | number=II}}
  • {{cite book | author=Than Tun | author-link=Than Tun | title=Studies in Burmese History | volume=1 | language=my | location=Yangon | publisher=Maha Dagon | year=1964}}

{{S-start}}

{{S-hou|Myinsaing Dynasty|9 April|1323|{{circa}} March|1349}}

{{S-reg}}

{{S-bef|before=Anawrahta I}}

{{S-ttl|title=King of Sagaing|years={{circa}} August 1339 – {{circa}} March 1349}}

{{S-aft|after=Anawrahta II}}

{{S-end}}

{{Burmese monarchs}}

Category:Myinsaing dynasty

Category:Sagaing dynasty

Category:1349 deaths

Category:1323 births

Category:14th-century Burmese monarchs