Taingda Mingyi U Pho Explained

Order:Member of the Legislative Council of Burma
Term Start:December 1885
Term End:c. 1886
Predecessor:Position established
Successor:Unknown
Office1:Senior Minister of the Hluttaw
Monarch1:Thibaw Min
Term Start1:23 March 1883
Term End1:30 November 1885
Predecessor1:Unknown
Successor1:Position disestablished
Office2:Lord of Taingda
Monarch2:Thibaw Min
Term Start2:22 January 1879
Term End2:30 November 1885
Predecessor2:Taingda Princess
Successor2:Position disestablished
U Pho
ဦးဘိုး
Death Date:31 May 1896
Sunday, 6th waning of Nayon 1258 ME
Birth Place:Konbaung Burma
Death Place:Rangoon, British Burma
Allegiance:Konbaung dynasty
Serviceyears:?–1885
Rank:Agga Maha Thenapati (Commander in chief)
Branch:Royal Burmese armed forces
Commands:Southern Tavoy Regiment

Taingda Mingyi U Pho (Burmese: တိုင်တား မင်းကြီး ဦးဘိုး, in Burmese pronounced as /táiɰ̃dà mɪ́ɰ̃dʑí ʔú pʰó/; – 31 May 1896) was a Burmese official of the royal courts of King Mindon and King Thibaw during the Konbaung dynasty.[1] [2] He became the most powerful official at King Thibaw's court and held several key positions, including Minister of the Interior, Minister of Defense, and Senior Minister of the Hluttaw. Taingda was seen as an opponent of Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung and the leader of the conservative faction that advocated for war with the British.[3]

Life

Maung Pho was born into minor nobility who served in the newly conquered kingdom of Arakan during the reign of King Bodawpaya. His father, Maha Mingyi Kyawswa, was governor of Sandoway (Thandwe). His date of birth is not known. He was appointed to the position of (လက်ဖက်ရည်တော်) shortly after King Mindon ascended to the throne. Later he held several positions, such as second-in-command of the military unit for Salin, Saku, Kyapin, and Legaing; governor of Mindon and seven hill districts, commander of the Southern Tavoy Regiment, count of .[4] [5]

When King Mindon died in 1878, U Pho felt powerful enough to offer the throne to the late king's son, Prince Thibaw.[6] He played a major role in the massacre of around forty members of the Burmese royal family.[7] He was an ally of Queen Hsinbyumashin, who ordered almost all possible heirs to the throne to be killed, so that her daughter Supayalat and son-in-law Thibaw Min would become queen and king.[8] [9] In return, King Thibaw soon after his accession to the throne appointed him the (Minister of the Elite Infantry) with the title of Mingyi Minkhaung Maha Kyawhtin on 23 November 1878.[10] On 22 January 1879, he was appointed the Minister of the Interior and granted the appanage of (a town between Sidoktaya and Minbu) and became known as Taingda Mingyi (Lord of Taingda).[11] On 23 March 1883,[12] he was promoted to Agga Maha Thenapati Wungyi (Minister of Defense), while also serving as (lit. "Minister of the Royal Daughter").[4]

Right after the Third Anglo-Burmese War, Taingda briefly served in the incoming British administration.[13] He and Kinwun were the first two Burmese to be appointed to the Legislative Council of Burma. However, the British soon detained Taingda, charging him with creating unrest in the country, and exiled him to Cuttack, Odisha State, India.[14] In 1890, the British sent him back to Burma.

He died on 31 May 1896 (Sunday, 6th waning of Nayon 1258 ME) in Rangoon (Yangon).[15]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Wills, Arthur Winkler . Sunny Days in Burma . 1905 . Midland Counties Herald Press . en.
  2. Book: Shah, Sudha . The King In Exile: The Fall Of The Royal Family Of Burma . 14 June 2012 . Harper Collins . 978-93-5029-598-4 . en.
  3. Book: Fielding, Harold . Thibaw's Queen . 1899 . Harper . en.
  4. Book: Mranʻ māʹ lvatʻ lapʻ reʺ kruiʺ pamʻʺ mhu samuiṅʻʺ: Mranʻ mā tuiṅʻʺ raṅʻʺ sāʺ tuiʹ e* lakʻ nakʻ cvai kuiṅʻ toʻ lhanʻ reʺ, 1885–1895 . 1986 . ʾA chaṅʻʹ mraṅʻʹ Paññā Ūʺ cīʺ Ṭhāna . my.
  5. Book: Preschez, Philippe . Kunʻʺ bhoṅʻ khetʻ praṅʻ sacʻ mranʻ mā chakʻ chaṃ reʺ samuiṅʻʺ . 1976 . Cā pe Bimānʻ . my.
  6. Web site: ရတနာပုံ၏နိဒါန်းနှင့်နိဂုံး အမှတ်စဉ်(၁၄၃) 'Introduction and conclusion of Yadanabon'. Dagon Khin Khin Lay. 21 November 2022 . Myawady Webportal.
  7. Book: Bunge, Frederica M. . Burma, a Country Study . 1983 . Headquarters, Department of the Army . en.
  8. Web site: ကုန်းဘောင်ခေတ်ဖြစ်ပွားခဲ့တဲ့ နန်းတွင်းတရားဝင်လူသတ်ပွဲကြီး . 21 November 2022 . Myanmarload.
  9. Book: Ṅayʻ (Moṅʻ.), Phe . Sī po maṅʻʺ e* Nokʻ chuṃʺ Neʹ rakʻ myāʺ . 2006 . Khyui teʺ saṃ Cā pe. 102 . my.
  10. Book: Takkasuilʻ paññā padesā . 1969 . Takkasuilʻ Myāʺ ʼUpʻ Khyupʻ Reʺ Ruṃʺ . my.
  11. (Maung Maung Tin Vol. 3 2004: 337): 1st waxing of Tabodwe 1240 ME = 22 January 1879
  12. (Maung Maung Tin Vol. 3 2004: 391): 1st waning of Late Tagu 1244 ME = 23 March 1883
  13. Book: Ngwe Tayi Magazine . 1979. Ūʺ Ēi Moṅʻ. . my.
  14. Book: Blackburn . Terence R. . Executions by the Half-dozen: The Pacification of Burma . 2008 . APH Publishing . 978-81-313-0403-7 . en.
  15. Book: Kyan, Daw . Padetharit Myanmar Naingngan Ei Zat-thein (Padesarājʻ Mranʻ mā nuiṅʻ ṅaṃ e* jātʻ simʻʺ) . 1978 . Department of Historical Research, Ministry of Culture . my.