Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
people/1140s

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Naratheinkha

King of Burma from 1171 to 1174

Naratheinkha

King of Burma from 1171 to 1174

FieldValue
typemonarch
nameNaratheinkha
နရသိင်္ခ
titleKing of Pagan
reignc. February 1171 – c. May 1174
successionKing of Burma
predecessorNarathu
successorSithu II
suc-typeSuccessor
reg-typeChief Minister
regentAnanda Thuriya
spouseMin Aung Myat (1171–74)
Saw Lat (1171–74)
Saw Ahlwan (1171–74)
Weluwaddy (1174)
regnal nameŚrī Tribhuvanāditya Pavaradhammarāja Dānapati
housePagan
fatherNarathu
motherMyauk Pyinthe
birth_date20 August 1141
Wednesday, 2nd waning of Tawthalin 503 ME
birth_placePagan (Bagan)
death_dateMay 1174 (aged 32)
death_placePagan
religionTheravada Buddhism

နရသိင်္ခ | suc-type = Successor | reg-type = Chief Minister Saw Lat (1171–74) Saw Ahlwan (1171–74) Weluwaddy (1174) | issue-link = Wednesday, 2nd waning of Tawthalin 503 ME

Naratheinkha (, ; 1141–1174) was a king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1171 to 1174. He appointed his brother Narapati Sithu heir apparent and commander-in-chief. It was the first recorded instance in the history of the dynasty that the king had given up the command of the army. The king was assassinated by Aungzwa, one of Sithu's servants, after the king had raised one of Sithu's wives to queen.

According to G.H. Luce, there is no inscriptional evidence that Naratheinkha or any kings between 1165 and 1174 ever existed. Other historians such as Htin Aung do not agree with Luce's "conjecture".

Early life

Naratheinkha was the eldest son of Narathu and Queen Myauk Pyinthe. Chronicles do not agree on his date of birth.Zatadawbon Yazawin's horoscope section (Zata 1960: 66) says he was born on Wednesday, 17th day of 6th month of 503 ME (Wednesday, 18 August 1141). But Yazawin Thit corrects the year to 496 ME. Also note that Hmannan Yazawin's, dating for this king is inconsistent with its own narrative. Hmannan like all other chronicles agrees that Naratheinkha was older than Sithu II who was born in 1138. However, it had Naratheinkha's birth year as 1140. The reason for the contradiction is that Hmannan for some reason suddenly switches to Maha Yazawin's dates for this king (34 years of age, 3 years of reign), while having followed Yazawin Thit's dating for nearly all of the prior Pagan kings. The table below lists the dates given by the four main chronicles. Scholarship provisionally accepts the birth date as given in Zata's horoscopes section.

ChroniclesBirth–DeathAgeReignLength of reign
Zatadawbon Yazawin (List of monarchs section)1142–1173311170–11733
Zatadawbon Yazawin (Royal horoscopes section)1141–1175341170–11753
Maha Yazawin1130–1164341161–11643
Yazawin Thit1134–1174401171–11743
Hmannan Yazawin1140–1174341171–11743

Naratheinkha grew up at the court of King Sithu I. He was not even in the line of succession as the heir apparent was his uncle Min Shin Saw. When he reached manhood, he married his second cousin Min Aung Myat, who like him was a grandchild of King Sithu I in marriage ceremony presided by the king himself.

In 1167, Naratheinkha suddenly became the heir apparent to the throne after his father assassinated both Sithu I and Min Shin Saw.

Reign

Aung Zwa

Naratheinkha came to power in 1171 after his father was killed by the assassins sent by the king of Pateikkaya, an Indian kingdom in the west. At accession, he made his brother Narapati Sithu the heir apparent and commander in chief. He assumed the regnal name "Śrī Tribhuvanāditya Pavaradhammarāja Dānapati" (ၐြီတြိဘုဝနာဒိတျပဝရဓမ္မရာဇဒါနပတိ).

During his reign, a group of Burmese monks who had visited Sri Lanka, led by Shin Uttarajiva, returned to Bagan refusing to accept the validity of the Shin Arahan derived Kanchipuram-Thaton school, creating a schism. Naratheinkha supported the new school and sent numerous monks to be re-ordained in Sri Lanka, however, the old order and the schisms would last another two centuries.

The new king was popular but his downfall soon came, according to the chronicles, due to his interest in Weluwaddy, a queen of Sithu. The king actually passed over marrying her but regretted the decision later after his brother took her. In 1174, Naratheinkha made up an excuse to send Sithu to the front in the far north at Ngasaunggyan (present-day Yunnan) to suppress a supposed rebellion. When he had confirmed that Sithu's army was at a distant fort, the king raised his sister-in-law to queen.

On his way to the frontier, Sithu got hold of the news by a messenger on horseback.(Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 314–315): In a case of killing the messenger, the messenger, Nga Pyei, was executed by Sithu, reportedly for the messenger having rested his horse and spent a night sleeping on the way there. When his anger subsided, Sithu regretted the decision and gave Nga Pyei a formal burial. He was made a nat (spirit) that governs the islet, the site of his burial, now called Shwe Pyei Shin Kyun. Knowing he had been misled, Sithu then selected Aung Zwa, a commander from his army, to lead the effort to assassinate the king. Aung Zwa led a team of 80 soldiers, and sped down the river by boat without pause. At Pagan, the team infiltrated the palace, and Aung Zwa himself killed the king.

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. Htin Aung 1967: 50–51
  2. Harvey 1925: 53–54
  3. Than Tun 1964: 128
  4. Coedès 1968: 167
  5. Htin Aung 1970: 42–43
  6. Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 124, footnote 3
  7. Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 348
  8. Zata 1960: 40
  9. Zata 1960: 66
  10. Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 311–312
  11. This was a significant change because it was the first recorded instance in the history of the dynasty that the king had given up the command of the army. Even a weak king like [[Saw Lu]] never gave up the command.(Htin Aung 1967: 50): Narathu may have been the first king to give up the command but it was never officially recorded in the chronicles.
  12. Hlaing, Nwe Ni. (2013). "The concepts of Kingship in Bagan with Special Emphasis on the titles of Bagan Kings". Mandalay University Research Journal.
  13. Hall, D.G.E.. (1960). "Burma". Hutchinson University Library.
  14. Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 313–315
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Naratheinkha — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report