Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Uzana of Bassein

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Reign
  
12?? – 1287

Spouse
  
Saw San

Mother
  
House
  
Pagan Kingdom

Successor
  
Father
  
Religion
  
Theravada Buddhism

Predecessor
  
Died
  
1287, Pathein, Myanmar (Burma)

Parents
  
Narathihapate, Saw Nan of Pagan

Grandparents
  
Uzana of Pagan, Su Le Htone

People also search for
  
Narathihapate, Kyawswa of Pagan

Uzana of Bassein (Burmese: ဥဇနာ, [ʔṵzənà]; d. 1287) was the eldest son of King Narathihapate, the last sovereign king of the Pagan Empire, and the heir-presumptive of the Pagan throne. Uzana, son of Queen Saw Nan and a grandnephew of powerful Queen Shin Saw, was granted Bassein (Pathein) in fief. Uzana was one of Narathihapate's sons ruling the southern parts of the kingdom. Uzana ruled the Irrawaddy delta from Bassein while his half-brothers Thihathu and Kyawswa ruled Prome and Dala (modern Twante) respectively.

In 1285, Narathihapate fled Pagan (Bagan) to Lower Burma in panic as the Mongol invasion advanced. In 1287, Thihathu, Viceroy of Prome (Pyay), arrested his father and forced the king to take poison. To refuse would have meant death by the sword, and with a prayer on his lips that in all his future existences "may no male-child be ever born to him again", the king swallowed the poison and died.

Having killed the king, Thihathu next tried to kill off his two rival half-brothers, Uzana and Kyawswa as they were also potential claimants to the throne. Thihathu first went to Bassein, entered Uzana's chambers, and hacked Uzana, who laid sick in his chamber, to pieces. He then sailed to Dala to kill Kyawswa. At the Dala harbor, as he tried to shoot one of the guards with his crossbow, he accidentally killed himself by his own arrow.

References

Uzana of Bassein Wikipedia


Similar Topics