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Thado Minsaw of Prome

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Reign
  
1482–1526

Children
  
Bayin Htwe

Name
  
Thado of

Reign
  
1459 – 1482

Successor
  
Bayin Htwe


Predecessor
  
Mingyi Swa (as Viceroy)

Predecessor
  
Minye Kyawswa of Tharrawaddy

Consort
  
Myat Hpone Pyo of Prome Saw Myat Lay

Died
  
1526, Pyay, Myanmar (Burma)

Parents
  
Narapati I of Ava, Atula Thiri Maha Yaza Dewi of Ava

Grandchildren
  
Minkhaung of Prome, Laygyun Mibaya, Narapati of Prome, Salin Mibaya

Grandparents
  
Pagan Mibaya, Shin Myat Hla of Ava, Thinkhaya of Pagan, Mohnyin Thado

People also search for
  
Narapati I of Ava, Bayin Htwe

Thado Minsaw of Prome (Burmese: သတိုးမင်းစော, [ðədó mɪ́ɴsɔ́]; died 1526) was the founder of Prome Kingdom, and reigned the minor kingdom from 1482 to 1526. In 1524, he entered into an alliance with the Confederation of Shan States, and participated in the 1525 sack of Ava (Inwa).

Contents

Ancestry and early life

He was born Min Ba Saw (မင်းဘစော) to Narapati I of Ava and his chief queen Atula Thiri Maha Yaza Dewi of Ava. He was the seventh of the couple's eight children.

He had two elder brothers, four elder sisters and a younger sister. He was married to his first cousin Myat Hpone Pyo, who was the youngest daughter of his maternal uncle Minye Kyawswa II, governor of Prome. He grew up in Ava until 1459 when his father appointed him governor of Tharrawaddy, the southernmost town on the border with the Hanthawaddy Kingdom.

Governor of Tharrawaddy

His first dozen years at Tharrawaddy were non-eventful. He was reappointed to the post when his eldest brother Thihathura I succeeded the Ava throne in 1468. In late 1472/early 1473, Thado Minsaw entered into an alliance with his elder brother Mingyi Swa, the viceroy of Prome, to raise a rebellion against their brother. They expected to receive military aid from King Dhammazedi of Hanthawaddy but the plan did not materialize. Both brothers submitted to Thihathura in February 1473. Thihathura forgave his brothers and reappointed them to their former positions.

King of Prome

After Thihathura died in 1480, the new king Minkhaung II was greeted by a major rebellion by his brother Minye Kyawswa, the governor of Yamethin. In 1482, Thado Minsaw's another elder brother viceroy of Prome, Mingyi Swa also died. Thado Minsaw took advantage of the war between his nephews Minkhaung II and Minye Kyawswa in Upper Burma by taking over Prome, and declaring himself independent. He raised his brother Mingyi Swa's chief queen Saw Myat Lay as his chief queen. Minkhaung II managed to send an army to reclaim Prome. But the Avan army could not take Prome, and retreated after a month. Ava could not send another force again as the much more serious Yamethin rebellion (and rebellions by the Shan States of Mohnyin and Kale) consumed its resources for the next two decades. Prome became an independent kingdom with territories that included Tharrawaddy in the south and Myede in the north.

Thado Minsaw largely stayed out of the fighting in Upper Burma. He forged a peaceful relationship with Hanthawaddy, the most powerful kingdom in the region. He changed his policy in the 1520s when Ava was on its last legs suffering from the sustained assaults by Confederation of Shan States. He entered into a league with Sawlon, the confederation's leader. On 22 March 1525 (14th waning of Tabaung 886 ME), the combined armies of Confederation and Prome sacked the city of Ava. The king of Ava, Shwenankyawshin, who was Thado Minsaw's grandnephew, escaped. Prome and Confederation forces looted the city. The Prome armies brought back the famed poet monk Shin Maha Rattathara. Prome remained in a league with the Confederation, which continued its attacks on Ava.

Thado Minsaw died in 1526, and was succeeded by his son Bayin Htwe.

References

Thado Minsaw of Prome Wikipedia