Min Aung Myat

Min Aung Myat
မင်းအောင်မြတ်
Queen of the Southern Palace
Tenure 1174 – c. 1185
Predecessor herself as Chief Queen
Successor Weluwaddy
Chief Queen Consort of Burma
Tenure 1171 – 1174
Predecessor Taung Pyinthe
Successor Weluwaddy
Born c. 1140s
Pagan (Bagan)
Died c. 1185
Pagan
Spouse Naratheinkha (c. late 1150s–1174)
Sithu II (1174–c. 1185)
Issue Saw Pyei Chantha
House Pagan
Mother Kyaungdawthe[1]
Religion Theravada Buddhism

Min Aung Myat (Burmese: မင်းအောင်မြတ်, pronounced [mɪ́ɴ ʔàʊɴ mjaʔ]; also Saw Aung Myat[2]) was the chief queen consort of King Naratheinkha,[1] and the Queen of the Southern Palace of King Sithu II of the Pagan Dynasty of Myanmar (Burma).[3] King Sithu I and Queen Khin U were her maternal grandparents.[1] Naratheinkha and Sithu II were her second cousins. She and Naratheinkha were married by their grandfather king.[1] She had a daughter Saw Pyei Chantha with Naratheinkha but their child died in early 1170s during the reign of Naratheinkha.[3]

She became a queen of her brother-in-law Sithu II in 1174 when Sithu II overthrew Naratheinkha. She retained the title Taung Pyinthe ("Queen of the Southern Palace") but was no longer the chief queen.[3][4] (Weluwaddy was the chief queen who partook in the coronation ceremony.[5]) According to the chronicle Yazawin Thit, no extant records say she had any children with Sithu II, and seemed to have died around the same time or right before as Weluwaddy since a new queen was raised to the rank of Taung Pyinthe, right after Weluwaddy's death in 1186.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 312
  2. Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 124
  3. 1 2 3 Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 317
  4. 1 2 Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 133
  5. Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 315

Bibliography

Min Aung Myat
Born: c. 1140s Died: c. 1185
Royal titles
Preceded by
herself
as Chief Queen
Queen of the Southern Palace
1174 – c. 1185
Succeeded by
Weluwaddy
as Chief Queen
Preceded by
Taung Pyinthe
Chief Queen Consort of Burma
1171 – 1174
Succeeded by
Weluwaddy
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.