Supayalat
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Supayalat (13 December 1859 - 24 November 1925) was the last queen of Burma who reigned in Mandalay (1878-1885), born to King Mindon Min and Queen of Alenandaw (literally Middle Palace, also known as Hsinbyumashin or Lady of the White Elephant).[1] She was married to her half-brother, Thibaw Min, who became the last king of the Konbaung dynasty in 1878, upon Mindon Min's death. She is best known for engineering a massacre of 80 to 100 royal family members, to prevent potential rivals from usurping Thibaw's power [2], although she had always denied any knowledge of the plot, which may have been hatched by her mother together with some of the ministers, including the chancellor Kinwon Min Gyi U Kaung.[3][4]
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[edit] Self-anointed queen
Princess Hteik Supayalat aka Princess of Myadaung, with the official title of Sri Suriya Prabha Ratna Devi, was the second of three daughters (lat means second or middle) born to Mindon and Hsinbyumashin[1], daughter of Bagyidaw (Mindon's uncle) and Nanmadaw Me Nu, and the third of Mindon's four highest ranking queens. The three other queens of Mindon had no children, and Hsinbyumashin became more powerful after the death of the chief queen Setkya Devi. Thibaw, on the other hand, was the son of a middle-ranking queen, Queen of Laungshe. He was however learned in the Buddhist scriptures and also educated by the missionary Dr. Marks[5], and became one of Mindon's favourite sons. The ambitious Hsinbyumashin, after putting him on the throne, offered her oldest daughter Hteik Supayagyi, Princess of Mong Nawng, to be his queen, but during the royal wedding ceremony Supayalat pushed in next to her sister to be anointed queen at the same time, breaking ancient custom. Her sister's marriage was never consummated, and Supayalat was said to have forced monogamy on a Burmese king for the first and the last time in history, even though Thibaw also subsequently married her youngest sister Hteik Supayalay, Princess of Yamèthin.[3] Supayalat was only 19 and Thibaw 20 when they ascended the lion throne (Thihathana palin).
[edit] Exile
Their reign lasted just seven years when Thibaw Min was defeated in the Third Anglo-Burmese War and forced to abdicate by the British in 1885. On 25 November 1885 they were taken away in a covered carriage, leaving Mandalay Palace by the southern gate of the walled city along the streets lined by British soldiers and their wailing subjects, to the River Irrawaddy where a steamboat called Thuriya (Sun) awaited. Thibaw was 27 and Supayalat 26.
Supayalat never lost her composure, and was said to have asked a British tommy by the wayside for a light to smoke a Burmese cheroot.[2][6] She was pregnant and accompanied by her husband, their two daughters, her two sisters, and her mother; the rest of their party followed on foot. The troops had nicknamed her 'Soup Plate', and in the commotion and haste that attended their abduction, some of the crown jewels had disappeared including a large ruby called Nga Mauk that Colonel Sladen had insisted on being handed over for safekeeping.[4][7] Thibaw saw an opportunity in 1911 when King George V visited India, and wrote for the return of the Burmese crown jewels, but only received a reply that Col. Sladen had died in 1890. Nga Mauk was believed to have subsequently turned up as the largest ruby on the British crown; it was recognised by Princess of Kyundaung in whose charge the ruby used to be.[8]
On 10 December 1885 the royal family, minus the queen mother and Supayagyi who were sent to Dawei, was taken to Madras where their third daughter was born, and in April the next year they were moved to Ratnagiri on the west coast where they could no longer look across the Bay of Bengal to the land they had been forced to leave. Supayalat gave birth to her fourth and youngest daughter in 1887; they were not given a proper residence commensurate with their status until 1911 when Thibaw Palace was built by the government. In 1914 the royal princesses had an ear-piercing ceremony (nahtwin mingala) according to Burmese custom. Some of the family members, court officials and entertainers including the famous orchestra of Sein Beida and the harpist Deiwa Einda Maung Maung Gyi from Burma were permitted to attend the ceremony. Although Supayalat's first born was a boy he did not survive infancy, and she had also lost another daughter.
The royal princesses were named as follows:
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- Hteiksu Myatpayagyi (1880 - 1947) married an Indian guard at Thibaw Palace.
- Hteiksu Myatpayalat (1882 - 1956) married a Burmese courtier at Thibaw Palace; neither of these unions met with the royal parents' approval.
- Hteiksu Myatpaya aka Madras Supaya (1886 - 1962) returned to Burma with her mother, and married a grandson of Mindat Min, her great uncle and brother of King Mindon.
- Hteiksu Myatpayalay (1887 - 1935), the youngest and brightest, was fluent in English and acted as the royal family's spokesperson airing their grievances in a document called Sadutta thamidaw ayeidawbon sadahn (The Fourth Royal Daughter Crisis Document); she married a Burmese lawyer, and was sent away by the colonial government to live in Moulmein where she spent the rest of her days.
[edit] Return
Supayalay, who had remained childless, looked after her four royal nieces, and died in 1912. When King Thibaw died in 1916 at the age of 58 after 30 years in exile, Supayalat fought in vain for the right to take her husband's body back to be buried with proper funeral rites in Burma. She refused to give up the bodies of both her sister and her husband, buried in the grounds of their palace, to the authorities who eventually took them by force to be buried in Ratnagiri in 1919.[4] The queen did not attend the funeral although she did send two of the royal princesses to the ceremony. The tombs of the king and Supayalay were later joined by that of Pahtama thamidaw (First Royal Daughter) who died in 1947.
Supayalat returned to Rangoon in 1919. She was not allowed to return to Mandalay, and when she died six years later in 1925 shortly before her 66th birthday, although the colonial government declared the day of her funeral a national holiday, the royal family's request for her to be buried in Mandalay was also refused. Her funeral was, however, held with pomp and ceremony as befitted a Burmese queen, organised by the Saophas of Yaunghwe and Thibaw. Her body lay in state, shielded under eight white royal umbrellas, attended by 90 Buddhist monks and the British Governor Sir Harcourt Butler with a guard of honour of the Mounted Police complete with a 30 gun salute.
She had lived on a pension and in her last days her closest adviser was Thakin Kodaw Hmaing, the great writer and nationalist leader, who revered her for her defiant stand against colonialism and who had witnessed at the age of nine the fall of the monarchy and the abduction of the royal couple in Mandalay.[3][9] Hmaing was a boarder at Myadaung Monastery built by the queen who never had the chance to conduct an opening ceremony (yeizetcha, literally 'pour drops of water', in order to call on the goddess of earth to witness the good deed) as it had only been recently completed. She had never regarded herself as beholden to the British who she believed robbed her of her kingdom with all the wealth and riches therein. Supayalat lies buried at the foot of the Shwedagon Pagoda in Kandawmin Gardens between the tombs of Aung San Suu Kyi's mother Khin Kyi and the former UN Secretary General U Thant.[9]
[edit] Supayalat in literature
- The Lacquer Lady - a novel by F. Tennyson Jesse
- The Glass Palace - a novel by Amitav Ghosh
- The City of Gem - a novel by Joanna Trollope
- Mandalay - a poem by Rudyard Kipling
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Buyers, Christopher. The Royal Ark - Burma:The Konbaung Dynasty.
- ^ a b Champeon, Kenneth (July 2003). The Last Queen of Burma. The Irrawaddy. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
- ^ a b c Khin Maung Soe (February 2007). The Tragic Queen. The Irrawaddy. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
- ^ a b c The Bandoola Journal (February 2007). A Teatime Tete-à-Tete. The Irrawaddy. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
- ^ Marks, John Ebenezer (1917). Forty Years in Burma. Hutchinson & Co.. Retrieved on 2007-03-09.
- ^ Thant Myint U. The Making of Modern Burma 1. Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Dr. Sein Tu. Rubies of Myanmar.
- ^ Shwebo Mi Mi Gyi - translated from Burmese. The Royal Ruby (Padamyar Ngamauk). Myanmar's Net Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-03-10.
- ^ a b Khin Maung Soe (November 2006). Burma's Tomb Raiders. The Irrawaddy. Retrieved on 2007-03-09.