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Theinkha Bo

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Reign
  
1240s–1260

Spouse
  
Lady Myinsaing

Mother
  
?

Died
  
? Myinsaing?

Father
  
Binnaka Sawbwa

Parents
  
Binnaka Sawbwa

Issue
  
Athinkhaya, Yazathingyan, Thihathu, Atula Dewi

Children
  
Thihathu, Atula Dewi of Prome, Yazathingyan, Athinkhaya

Grandchildren
  
Saw Pale of Pinya, Uzana I of Pinya, Kyawswa I of Pinya, Shin Myat Hla of Prome, Saw Yun, Nawrahta of Kanni

People also search for
  
Thihathu, Yazathingyan, Athinkhaya

Great grandchildren
  
Saw Yan Naung of Prome, Swa Saw Ke

Theinkha bo top 7 facts


Theinkha Bo (Burmese: သိင်္ခဗိုလ်, [θèiɴkʰa̰ bò]) was the father of kings Athinkhaya, Yazathingyan and Thihathu of Myinsaing, the dynasty that replaced the Pagan Dynasty in 1297. His descendants founded the kingdoms that succeeded Pagan: Myinsaing, Pinya, Sagaing and Ava.

According to the Burmese chronicles, Theinkha Bo was born in Binnaka to the sawbwa (saopha) (chief) of the town. Some time after his elder brother succeeded the chieftainship, he and his brother got into a quarrel, which forced Theinkha Bo to leave town. He eventually settled at Myinsaing, a small town located in present-day Kyaukse District, and got married to a woman from a wealthy family there in 1260. The couple had four children. His three sons served in the Pagan army, and became commanders that King Narathihapate relied on. His youngest child married a son of the king.

Although the chronicles do not mention his ethnicity, British colonial era historians assumed that he was of Shan ethnicity based on the fact that his father was a sawbwa. The historian Michael Aung-Thwin has argued however that it is a mistake to equate the office with ethnicity, and that colonial scholarship grafted on Shan ethnicity to the so-called Shan brothers without any evidence.

References

Theinkha Bo Wikipedia