Karenni States

Karenni States
Princely States of British Burma

18th century–1959
1917 map of the Karenni States
Government Monarchy
History
 - Independence of the feudatory Karenni predecessor state. 18th century
 - Abdication of the Kayah rulers 1959
Area
 - 1901 8,106 km2 (3,130 sq mi)
Population
 - 1901 45,795 
Density 5.6 /km2  (14.6 /sq mi)
Karenni princes at the Delhi Durbar in 1903. The rulers of Bawlake, Kantarawadi and Kyebogyi standing in the back row.
Territories annexed by Thailand in the Shan and Karenni States during WWII in order to form the Saharat Thai Doem northern province.

The Karenni States, also known as Karen States, was the name formerly given to the states inhabited mainly by the Red Karen, in the area of present-day Kayah State, northern Burma. They were located south of the Federated Shan States and east of British Burma.

The British government recognized and guaranteed the independence of the Karenni States in an 1875 treaty with Burmese King Mindon Min, by which both parties recognized the area as belonging neither to Burma nor to Great Britain. Consequently, the Karenni States were never fully incorporated into British Burma. The Karenni states formed for a time the "Kayah State" in post-independent Burma,[1] but on 29 Apr 1959 both the Shan and the Kayah rulers formally surrendered their ruling powers to the Burmese government.[2]

History

There are no historical data on the Karenni States before the 19th century. According to local tradition in the early times of the Karenni states there was a principality led by a "Sawphya" that was under the overlordship of a Shan prince. This state finally became independent in the 18th century. In the 19th century the Karenni state was divided into five principalities (sawphyas).

British rule in Burma

In 1864 a Karenni prince requested the status of British protectorate for his state, but the British authorities did not show any interest. After the death of this prince in 1869 his two sons renewed the petition claiming that they feared Burmese ambitions on their state. The British refused again, but agreed to arbitrate before the King of Burma. Since the Burmese monarchy insisted in their demands on the Karenni territories, the British granted recognition to four states, Kyebogyi, Namekan (Nammekon), Naungpale and Bawlake, which became independent under British protection on 21 June 1875. Kantarawadi state, however, remained independent without official protection.[3]

The Karenni States were recognized as tributary to British Burma in 1892, when their rulers agreed to accept a stipend from the British government. An Assistant Superintendent of the Shan States was based at Loikaw as Agent of the British government. He was exercising control over the local Karenni Rulers, being supervised by the Superintendent at Taunggyi.[3] On 10 October 1922 the administrations of the Karenni states and the Shan states were officially unified in order to establish the Federated Shan States,[4] under a commissioner who also administered the Wa States. This arrangement survived the constitutional changes of 1923 and 1937. By the 1930s, the Mawchi Mine in Bawlake was one of the most important sources of tungsten in the world.

On 27 May 1942, during World War II, nearby Kengtung State was invaded and its capital captured by the Thai Phayap Army.[5] Following a previous agreement between Thai Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram and the Japanese Empire, in December the same year the Thai administration occupied Kengtung and Möngpan. The annexation by Thailand as Saharat Thai Doem northern province was formalised on 1 August 1943.[6] Thailand left the territory in 1945, but officially relinquished its claim over Kengtung State only in 1946 as part of the condition for admission to the United Nations and the withdrawal of all wartime sanctions for having sided with the Axis powers.[7]

Thailand left the territory in 1945, but officially relinquished its claim over Kantarawadi State only in 1946 as part of the condition for admission to the United Nations and the withdrawal of all wartime sanctions for having sided with the Axis powers.[8]

Post-independence Burma

The Constitution of the Union of Burma in 1947 proclaimed that the three Karenni States be amalgamated into a single constituent state of the union, called Karenni State. It also provided for the possibility of secession from the Union after 10 years. In 1952, the former Shan state of Mong Pai was added, and the whole renamed Kayah State, possibly with the intent of driving a wedge between the Karenni in Kayah State and the rest of the Karen people in Karen State, both fighting for independence.

States

There were five Karenni states, divided into two regions.

Western Karenni

The Western Karenni States were the four Karenni states located west of the Salween River:

Kantarawadi

Kantarawadi State was also known as "Eastern Karenni". It had an area of 2,500 square miles or 6,500 square kilometres and a population of 26,333 in 1901.[3] More than half of its territory was located east of the Salween River, an area that was annexed by Thailand during World War II.

See also

References

  1. Map of Shan States c.1910
  2. Shan and Karenni States of Burma
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 15, p. 36.
  4. "Myanmar Divisions". Statoids. Retrieved 2009-04-10.
  5. Thailand and the Second World War at the Wayback Machine (archived October 27, 2009)
  6. Shan and Karenni States of Burma
  7. David Porter Chandler & David Joel Steinberg eds. In Search of Southeast Asia: A Modern History. p. 388
  8. David Porter Chandler & David Joel Steinberg eds. In Search of Southeast Asia: A Modern History. p. 388

External links

Coordinates: 18°30′N 98°00′E / 18.500°N 98.000°E