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Kyaswa
King of Burma

Kyaswa

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
King of Burma
Places
was
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Bagan, Mandalay Region, Myanmar
Place of death
Bagan, Mandalay Region, Myanmar
Age
53 years
Family
Father:
Htilominlo
Spouse:
Yaza Dewi of Pagan
Children:
Uzana of Pagan
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

This article is about the king named Kyaswa of Pagan, not to be confused with Kyawswa of Pagan.

Kyaswa (Burmese: ကျစွာ, pronounced: [tɕa̰zwà]; 1198–1251) was king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1235 to 1251. Kyaswa succeeded his father Htilominlo and was even more devout. Kyaswa's reign like his father's was largely peaceful but the depletion of the royal treasury due to large tax-free religious landholdings became more pronounced. The royal treasury was so depleted that Kyaswa had trouble completing a temple. The empire founded by Anawrahta over two centuries earlier was still peaceful but already on its last legs, unprepared for the internal disorders and external forces that were to come.

Early life

Kyaswa was born to Prince Zeya Theinkha and his wife Eindawthe. An inscription donated by his maternal aunt (younger sister of his mother) states that Kyaswa was born on Monday, 4 May 1198 at 4 o'clock in the morning. The date is two weeks later than 20 April 1198, given by the Zatadawbon Yazawin chronicle.

The table below lists the dates given by the four main chronicles.

ChroniclesBirth–DeathAgeReignLength of reign
Zatadawbon Yazawin (List of monarchs section)1197–1249521234–124915
Zatadawbon Yazawin (Horoscopes section)20 April 1198 – 1251531234–125117
Maha Yazawin1200–1234341219–123415
Yazawin Thit and Hmannan Yazawin1194–1250561234–125016


Reign

Kyaswa's reign like his father's was largely peaceful but the depletion of the royal treasury due to large tax-free religious landholdings became more pronounced. The royal treasury was so depleted that Kyaswa had trouble completing a temple. The devout king, unlike predecessors before him, did try to address the issue by reclaiming some of religious land from forest-dwelling monks. However public opinion against any seizure of monastic land forced him to return the land. Frustrated, the king left the administration of the kingdom to his son and his deputies, and spent his time composing religious writings, and giving his patronage only orthodox (Theravada) sects. The forest-dwelling monks neither needed his patronage nor feared his authority. Toward the end of his reign, forest-dwellers were openly offering meat and liquor to their devotees.

The king devoted to scholarship and promoting the dhamma with humanitarian policies. Unlike other Pagan kings, he would not resort to forced labor to build his temples. His Pyathada Temple in Pagan is much smaller than many temples built by his predecessors. In 1249, he issued a series of royal edicts (dated 22 April, 1 May and 6 May 1249) to be put up, carved on stone, in every village of more than 50 houses in the empire:

    Death

    The king died sometime between 1249 and 1251, according to the main chronicles. But since his son Uzana died in May 1256 after having reigned for 5 years, Kyaswa most probably died in early 1251 as reported by Zatadawbon Yazawin's horoscopes section. Scholarship provisionally accepts 1251 as the year of his death.

    The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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