Jump to content

Prince of Pyinzi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ViewingHabit (talk | contribs) at 21:03, 24 August 2023 (#suggestededit-add 1.0). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Prince of Pyinzi (Template:Lang-my; also Duke of Pyinzi) was a hereditary title given to the royal prince who was granted the appanage of Pyinzi as liege-lord or myosa, which is equivalent to a duke.

Of the five princes who received the appanage of Pyinzi during the Konbaung dynasty, three were sons of monarchs and two, Prince Shwe Aing and Prince Pu, were royal relatives. Prince Naga, Prince Pu and Prince Thado Minye died during the reign of a single king – King Mindon.[1]

King Bagyidaw also governed Pyinzi as one of his appanages when he was the crown prince.[1]

Prince Naga and Prince Pu showed interest in the Mahāgīta (a collection of classical songs) and are frequently discussed in academic circles. Although they both composed Mahāgīta songs, no evidence survives to indicate which songs were written by whom.[1]

Prince Shwe Aing

Prince Shwe Aing was born to Minye Thinkathu Maung Pyay, the Prince of Kyauksauk (a son of Alaungpaya's younger brother Maung Shwe Ya and Khin Wa), and Khin Ama (a daughter of Minhla Kyawthu the Major of Ava). He was known as the First Pyinzi Prince.[1]

Prince Naga (1771 – 1855)

Prince Naga, known as the Second Pyinzi Prince, was born to King Hsinbyushin and Thanlyin Mibaya[2] and married Min Shwenga, a daughter of King Hsinbyushin and Queen Ratanadevi. He was famous for writing lyrics for eight chapters of the Yama Zatdaw,[3] a Burmese version of Ramayana translated from Siamese in 1789.[4]

Prince Myosit

Born to King Singu and the Queen of the Middle Palace, Prince Myosit, the Third Pyinzi Prince, was a nephew of Prince Naga, the Second Pyinzi Prince. Along with his father, he was executed by Bodawpaya in 1782.[1]

Prince Pu (1813 – 1862)

Prince Pu was a son of the Prince of Toungoo, a younger brother of King Bagyidaw, and the Princess of Tagaung, and was known as the Fourth Pyinzi Prince.[5] "Myan Char Mye Ko", a patpyoe, is one of his classical compositions.[6] His two daughters were also writers, following in their father's footsteps.

Prince Thado Minye

Receiving the appanage of Pyinzi after the death of Prince Pu in 1862, a son of King Mindon and the first Queen of the Northern Apartment, Thado Minye became known as the Fifth Pyinzi Prince. He was a victim of the Myingun Myinkhondaing rebellion which broke out in 1866.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Than Swe, Maung (Dawei) (1999). Konbaung Shindan. Yar Pyae. pp. 58–65.
  2. ^ ဒေါ်.), အမာ (လူထု (1989). မြန်မာမဟာဂီတ (in Burmese). ကြီးပွားရေးစာပေတိုက်.
  3. ^ နိုင် (ရာမည.), ကိုကို (2001). မြန်မာ့စောင်း သိကောင်းစရာနှင့် တတ်ကောင်းစရာ (in Burmese). ပုံနှိပ်ရေးနှင့် စာပေထုတ်ဝေရေး လုပ်ငန်း.
  4. ^ ပြည်), ဘတင် (ဦး,ရွှေ (1966). မြဝတီ စာပေဂီတ (in Burmese). လူငယ်စာပေ.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ သမိန်, လှ (1955). မြန်မာကျမ်းပြုပုဂ္ဂိုလ်များနှင့် စာဆိုတော်ကြီးများအတ္ထုပတ္တိ ပေါင်းချုပ်နှင့် ပြုစုသောစာပေများစာရင်း (in Burmese). ပညာနန္ဒပုံနှိပ်တိုက်.
  6. ^ ဆရာ.), တင် (ဗေလုဝ (1974). ဂီတာလင်္ကာရဒီပနီ၊ ဆို ဂီတသိပ္ပံ အခြေခံ (in Burmese). ဣစ္ဆာသယ ပိဋကတ်စာပုံနှိပ်တိုက်.
  7. ^ လှ, တိုး (2004). နှစ်ဆယ်ရာစု၏ မဟာလူသား: အရှင်ဝိစိတ္တသာရာဘိဝံသ၊ တိပိဋကဓရ ဓမ္မဘဏ္ဍာဂါရိက (in Burmese). Myanmar Historical Commission.