Pindale Princess | |
Succession: | Queen of the Western Palace |
Reign: | 26 March 1853 – 26 July 1855 |
Predecessor: | Thiri Thu Yadana Mingala Dwei, Princess of Myadaung |
Successor: | Thiri Maha Thu Sanda Yadana Dewi, Princess of Yinge |
Succession1: | Princess of Pindale |
Reign1: | 8 July 1840 – 26 July 1855 |
Predecessor1: | Pindale Mintha |
Successor1: | Unknown |
Birth Place: | Amarapura Palace, Burma |
Death Date: | 26 July 1855 |
Death Place: | Amarapura Palace |
Burial Place: | Amarapura Palace |
Spouses: | --> Mindon Min |
Spouses-Type: | --> consort |
Consort: | yes |
Regnal Name: | Thiri Maha Thu Sanda Dewi |
Posthumous Name: | Pindale Princess |
Native Lang5: | -->my |
House: | Konbaung |
Dynasty: | Konbaung dynasty |
Father: | Tharrawaddy Min |
Mother: | Kanaung Mibaya, the Queen of the Northern Apartment |
Religion: | Theravada Buddhism |
Thiri Maha Thu Sanda Dewi (Burmese: သီရိမဟာသုစန္ဒာဒေဝီ, Pali: Sīrimahāsucandādevi), also known as the Princess of Pindale, was the first Queen of the Western Palace of Mindon Min, the tenth king of Konbaung dynasty.[1]
Pindale Princess, the eldest of two siblings, was born to Tharrawaddy Min and Kanaung Mibaya, the Queen of the Northern Apartment.[2] At the opening ceremony of her father's royal throne, held from 8 to 10 July 1840, she received the title of Thiri Thu Manla Wadi and the appanage of Pindale.[3] During the reign of Pagan Min, her royal title was Thiri Yadana Thu Sanda Dewi.[2]
When Mindon Min ascended the throne, she became the Queen of the Western Palace on 26 March 1853, which made her the queen of first rank.[2] On 16 June 1854, at the opening ceremony of Mindon's throne, she was honoured the title of Thiri Maha Thu Sanda Dewi.[2]
On 27 June 1855, she gave birth to a son at around 8:07 am who died two days later at 3:24 pm and a daughter at 10:30 pm who died at 4:12 am in the same day.[2]
She died on 26 July 1855 and was buried in her compound at the Amarapura Palace.[2] She was replaced by her younger sister Princess of Yinge as the second Queen of the Western Palace.