Nanda Bayin

Nanda Bayin
Nanda Bayin
နန္ဒဘုရင်
King of Burma
Reign 9 November 1581 – 19 December 1599 (&1000000000000001800000018 years, &1000000000000004000000040 days)
Predecessor Bayinnaung
Successor Nyaungyan
Issue
Mingyi Swa
Minyekyawswa I
Full name
Zeya Thiha (ဇေယျသီဟ)
House Toungoo
Father Bayinnaung
Mother Atula Thiri[1]
Born 1535
897 ME
Toungoo
Died 29 November 1600 (aged 65)
10th waning of Tazaungmon 962 ME
Toungoo
Burial Toungoo
Religion Theravada Buddhism

Nanda Bayin (Burmese: နန္ဒဘုရင်, pronounced [nàɴda̰ bəjɪ̀ɴ]; 1535–1600), was the king of the Toungoo Dynasty of Myanmar from 1581 to 1599. Nanda was the first son of King Bayinnaung. He was made the crown prince upon the ascension of his father in January 1551. As the crown prince, he led subjugation of Lanna and the sack of Vientiene in 1565. He also waged wars alongside his father against Ayutthaya that eventually led to the fall of the city in 1564 and 1569.

Bayinnaung died in 1581. Crown Prince Nanda succeeded his father as the king of Pegu and appointed his first son Minchit as the Crown Prince. Thadominthaw the viceroy of Ava (Nanda Bayin’s brother-in-law), however, didn’t attend the coronation audience due to the crown prince’s treatment to the crown princess who was Thadominthaw’s daughter. Nanda was enraged at the inobedience of his brother-in-law, ordered the massacre of people supporting the viceroy of Ava, and prepared a full-scale war against Ava.

Nanda also requested auxiliary troops from Prome, Toungoo, and Ayutthaya. The king was also to take Ava with the help of Prome and Toungoo and installed his son Minyekyawswa. The Siamese armies led by crown prince Naresuan, however, marched towards Pegu. Nanda hurried down south to stop the Siamese from reaching the capital, only to find out that the Siamese prince had returned and sacked Mon cities on the way.

In 1584, Nanda sent his armies into Siam led by the crown prince Mingyi Swa to subjugate the country. The campaign, however, failed. Nanda decided to lead the armies himself into Siam in 1586 and reached Ayutthaya but laid siege on the city for five months without success. Then Nanda decided to retreat but was followed and harassed by Siamese armies. In 1590, the king marched into Siam again with Mingyi Swa in the vanguard, but the crown prince was again defeated by the Siamese led by Naresuan.

Nanda then mustered all available forces at his disposal aganist the Siamese. In 1592, a very large campaign was organized and the Burmese armies amassed towards Ayutthaya led by the crown prince. The Burmese and Siamese battled near Ayutthaya. The Burmese crown prince and King Naresuan of Ayutthaya engaged a personal elephant battle, which resulted in Mingyi Swa’s death.

With the death of Mingyi Swa, Nanda appointed Minyekyawswa the viceroy of Ava as the crown prince. Nanda suffered several rebellions around the city of Martaban and Moulmein that led to the expansion of Siamese influence into the Mon state. In 1594, Naresuan, with the supports from the Mon rebels, marched towards Pegu and laid siege on the city but then retreated due to an aggressive defence by the viceroys of Prome and Toungoo.

In 1595, however, the viceroy of Prome who was Nanda’s son led a huge rebellion taking Toungoo and a large northern portion of the kingdom, proclaiming himself as an independent king. Nanda then lost trust in those close to him and requested the sons of tributary kings to be held hostage in Pegu. Viceroy of Toungoo Minye Thihathu then requested the King of Rakhine to invade Pegu and declared himself king of Toungoo. The Arakan invasion was countered by the crown prince but the crown prince then gave himself up to Toungoo – where he was killed by Natshinnaung, son of Minye Thihathu. Shocked by the death of his son and his own defeat, Nanda abdicated the throne to the King of Toungoo in 1599 and was captured to Toungoo – therefore his epithet Toungooyauk Min (တောင်ငူရောက်မင်း; the king who was captured to Toungoo).

The abdicated king survived for another year in captivity in Toungoo but was assassinated by Natshinnaung in November 1600.[2]

Notes

  1. ^ Tun Aung Chain (2004). Selected Writings of Tun Aung Chain. Myanmar Historical Commission. p. 119. 
  2. ^ Htin Aung (1967). A History of Burma. New York and London: Cambridge University Press. pp. 137–140. 

External links

Nanda Bayin
Born: 1535 Died: 29 November 1600
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Bayinnaung
King of Burma
9 November 1581 – 19 December 1599
Succeeded by
Nyaungyan
Royal titles
Preceded by
Bayinnaung
Heir to the Burmese Throne
11 January 1551 – 9 November 1581
Succeeded by
Mingyi Swa

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Nanda Bayin — ▪ king of Myanmar also spelled  Nandabayin   flourished 16th century       king of the Toungoo dynasty of Burma whose reign (1581–99) ended with the dismemberment of the empire established by his father, Bayinnaung.       Upon coming to the… …   Universalium

  • Nandabayin — Nanda, Nanda Bayin ou Nandabayin (birman နန္ဒဘုရင်), fut le quatrième souverain de la dynastie Taungû de Birmanie de 1581 à 1599. Son règne, marqué par des révoltes et une guerre à mort contre le royaume d Ayutthaya, se conclut par la quasi… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Naresuan — This article is about the Siamese king. For other uses, see Naresuan (disambiguation). Naresuan The Great สมเด็จพระนเรศวรมหาราช King of Ayutthaya Royal statue of King Naresuan at Naresuan university, Phitsanulok province, Thail …   Wikipedia

  • Maha Thammaracha — Phra Maha Thammarachathirat (Thai: พระมหาธรรมราชาธิราช 1516 1590) or Somdet Phra Sanphet I (Thai: สมเด็จพระสรรเพ็ชญ์ที่ 1) or formerly known as Khun Phiren Thorathep (Thai: ขุนพิเรนทรเทพ)was the first King of Ayutthaya kingdom (1569 to 1590) of… …   Wikipedia

  • Maha Thammarachathirat — Phra Maha Thammarachathirat (Thai: พระมหาธรรมราชาธิราช) or Somdet Phra Sanphet I (Thai: สมเด็จพระสรรเพ็ชญ์ที่ 1) or formerly known as Khun Phiren Thorathep (Thai: ขุนพิเรนทรเทพ)was the first King of Ayutthaya kingdom of the Sukhothai dynasty… …   Wikipedia

  • Nong Sa Rai, Battle of — ▪ Asian history       (1593), in Southeast Asian history, military encounter between the Tai (Thai) kingdom of Ayutthaya and the Toungoo dynasty of Myanmar (Burma) which put an end to the aggression that had been waged intermittently by Myanmar.… …   Universalium

  • Bayinnaung — Infobox Monarch name =Bayinnaung title =Monarch caption = reign =Toungoo Dynasty: 1551 1581 coronation = othertitles = full name = predecessor =Tabinshwehti successor =Nanda Bayin suc type = heir = queen = consort = spouse 1 = spouse 2 = spouse 3 …   Wikipedia

  • Смерть от смеха — Смерть от смеха  достаточно редкое и специфическое[уточнить] явление, при котором длительный и зачастую неконтролируемый смех является причиной наступления биологической смерти человека. В большинстве случаев длительный смех становится… …   Википедия

  • Thailand (Siam) and Burma —    By the 16th century, two powerful states flourished in the valleys of the the Chao Phraya and Irrawaddy (Ayeyarwady) Rivers, the Siamese Tai state of Ayuthaya and the Toungoo Dynasty of the Burmans (Bamars), whose king, Tabinshwehti (r. 1531… …   Historical Dictionary of Burma (Myanmar)

  • King Naresuan (film) — This article is about a 2007 Thai historical drama film. For other uses, see Naresuan (disambiguation). The Legend of King Naresuan Thai movie poster. Directed by …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”