Minbyauk Thihapate Explained

Type:monarch
Thihapate of Sagaing
Burmese: မင်းပြောက် သီဟပတေ့
Reign:23 February 1352 – April 1364
Coronation:23 February 1352
Succession:King of Sagaing
Predecessor:Tarabya II
Successor:Thado Minbya
Suc-Type:Successor
Spouse:Soe Min Kodawgyi
Issue:Saw Taw Oo
House:Sagaing
Birth Date:28 October 1305
11th waxing of Tazaungmon 667 ME
Birth Place:Pagan (Bagan)?
Myinsaing Regency
Death Date: May 1364 (aged 58)
Nayon 726 ME
Death Place:Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya, Sagaing Kingdom
Religion:Theravada Buddhism

Thihapate of Sagaing (Burmese: သီဟပတေ့, in Burmese pronounced as /θìha̰pətḛ/; also Minbyauk Thihapate, in Burmese pronounced as /mɪ́ɰ̃bjaʊʔ θìha̰pətḛ/; 1305–1364) king of Sagaing from 1352 to 1364. He came to power by being married to the powerful Princess Soe Min Kodawgyi. He led Sagaing during the most tumultuous period of the kingdom (1356−64). Despite a brief period of alliance with Pinya (1357−59), Sagaing had to face near-annual raids by the northern Shan state of Mong Mao (Maw) on its own. He lost power in April 1364 when Maw Shan forces sacked Sagaing. He escaped capture but was soon put to death by his stepson Thado Minbya at Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya, south of Sagaing.

Early life

Little is known about his early life or ancestry except that he was a grandson of the elder sister of Queen Pwa Saw of Pagan.[1] This means that he was a grandson of Queen Yadanabon and King Narathihapate of Pagan.[2] Since his father was a minister at the Sagaing court,[3] Thihapate likely entered the service of Sagaing monarchs. Then in late 1351/early 1352,[4] he married a recently widowed Princess Soe Min, daughter of the founder of the kingdom Saw Yun.[1] It is unclear if his marriage to Soe Min preceded the death of Soe Min's brother King Tarabya II, who died at age 25 in February 1352 and left no heirs apparent to take over the throne. With no heirs apparent ready to take over, the court elected Thihapate king (or regent).[5] His marriage to Soe Min may have been part of the election process.

Reign

His early reign was relatively peaceful. He continued Tarabya II's policy of peace with the cross-river rival Pinya. However, it was the calm before the storm. By 1355, the northern Shan state of Mong Mao had essentially achieved independence from the Mongols, and begun to look southward for expansion.[6] In the next dry season 1356−57, Shan troops raided northern Sagaing territory.[7] While Sagaing defenses held this time, Thihapate and Soe Min appeared to have recognized the eminent danger posed by the determined foe. They sought a closer alliance with Pinya. In 1357/58, they sent Princess Shin Saw Gyi, Soe Min's eldest daughter and Thihapate's stepdaughter, to King Kyawswa II of Pinya in a marriage of state.[8]

The alliance yielded no discernible benefit. Kyawswa II, who did not control much beyond the core Kyaukse capital region, simply did not have enough manpower to assist Sagaing and hold his southern vassals at the same time. When the next Shan raids came in 1358−59, Pinya's southern vassal Toungoo (Taungoo) promptly revolted, and raided Pinya from the south.[8] This allowed the Shan forces to overrun Sagaing and Pinya territories from the north. Kyawswa II died during the raids in March 1359.[9] So devastating were the raids that Pinya's new king Narathu withdrew from the alliance.[1]

Sagaing now faced the Shan threat on its own. In 1360/61, Thihapate appointed his eldest stepchild Thado Minbya governor of Tagaung, the northernmost Sagaing territory. But the teenage prince could do little to stem the raids. The Shan raiders not only overran Tagaung but also penetrated as far south as Pinya in 1362–63.[9] Subsequently, Pinya pursued an alliance with Mong Mao, and the two states agreed to a joint attack on Sagaing. In the following dry season, Shan forces again overran Tagaung, and Thado Minbya barely escaped. At Sagaing, Thihapate was furious at Thado Minbya for the latter's failure to defend Tagaung. He did not accept Thado Minbya warning that the season's raid was far larger, and sent his stepson to prison at Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya, south of Sagaing.[1]

Thihapate had expected another round of raids through the countryside but not a siege to the capital itself. He was surprised when the Shan forces laid siege to Sagaing on three sides. Pinya blockaded the port although the blockade was porous. In April 1364, Shan forces broke through, and entered the city. While panicked people of Sagaing crossed the Irrawaddy toward Pinya, Thihapate and the royal family slipped away by boat to Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya. But at Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya, Thado Minbya was waiting for him. The prince, who had been freed from prison by court officials allied with him, ordered the execution of his stepfather, and seized the throne.[8]

Chronicle reporting differences

The royal chronicles do not agree on his birth and death dates.

SourceBirth–DeathAgeReignLength of reignReference
Zatadawbon Yazawin28 October 1305 – 136458
(59th year)
1355 – 13649[10]
Maha Yazawin 1312 – May 136452
(53rd year)
1354/55 – April 136410[11] [12]
Yazawin Thit 1310 – 1364/6554
(55th year)
23 February 1352 – 1364/6513[13]
Hmannan Yazawin 1310 – May 136411 February 1353 [sic] – April 136413 [sic][14]
Hmannan (reconciled)23 February 1352 – April 136412

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Hmannan Vol. 1: 392
  2. Chronicles have no record of Queen Yadanabon. (Ba Shin 1982: 37): Her existence and her relationship to Pwa Saw is known by per a contemporary inscription dedicated by Queen Pwa Saw herself: Pwa Saw was the second child of seven, and had an elder sister, Queen Yadanabon.
  3. The terse language of Zatadawbon Yazawin is ambiguous. (Zata 1960: 44) says he was a "son of Amat Yo" ("အမတ်ရိုးသား"). It could technically mean that he was son of an amat (court minister) named Yo, or it could more likely mean that he was of the lineage of ministers. Furthermore, Zata mentions Chief Minister–General Nanda Pakyan in the prior sentence. It is not clear at least in modern Burmese if the amat in the following sentence refers to Nanda Pakyan or to a new concept entirely. Since Nanda Pakyan put the three prior kings of Sagaing on the throne, the powerful minister may have put his own son Thihapate on the throne. Later chronicles may have found Zata's reporting ambiguous as well. None of the later chronicles explicitly mentions who the father of Thihapate was.
  4. (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 385): Princess Soe Min's first husband Thado Hsinhtein of Tagaung was still alive in 1351 when he and Soe Min met King Kyawswa II of Pinya to negotiate a truce.
  5. Chronicles do not agree on his status. Zatadawbon Yazawin (Zata 1960: 82) considers him a regent (min nge, မင်းငယ်) while other major chronicles (Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 272–273), (Yazawin Thit 2012: 176−177), (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003:392−393) all consider him king. The Yazawin Thit chronicle (Yazawin Thit 2012: 178−179) discusses other historical sources that considered Thihapate regent but it ultimately lists him as king.
  6. Than Tun 1964: 278
  7. Than Tun 1959: 129
  8. Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 384–385
  9. Than Tun 1959: 124
  10. (Zata 1960: 82): He was born on Monday, 10th nekkhat of the 8th month of 667 ME = 11th waxing of Tazaungmon 667 ME = Thursday, 28 October 1305. Zata lists him as a Monday born but Hmannan (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 393) says he was born on a Saturday.
  11. Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 272–273
  12. (Maha Yazawin Vol. 1 2006: 272–273): He lost power in Kason 726 ME (1 April 1364 – 30 April 1364), and was killed by Thado Minbya around the fall of Pinya in Nayon (1 May 1364 to 29 May 1364).
  13. Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 176–177
  14. (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 391–392) says Minbyauk Thihapate, a Saturday born, ascended the throne on Thursday, 9th waxing of Tabaung 714 ME (11 February 1353), which is a typographical error. The Yazawin Thit chronicle (Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 175–176), which Hmannan referenced, says Thursday, 9th waxing of Tabaung 713 ME (23 February 1352). The 1353 date is inconsistent with Hmannan's own reporting a page later that Thihapate was dethroned in his 13th year of reign in April 1364 (Kason 726 ME). It means he came to power in 1352, not 1353. The actual date per (Than Tun 1959: 127) was as reported in Yazawin Thit, 23 February 1352.