Tawngpeng State Explained

Conventional Long Name:Tawngpeng
Common Name:Tawngpeng
Nation:the Shan States
Subdivision:State
Capital:Namhsan
Year Start:1793
Event Start:State founded
Year End:1959
Date End:Abdication of the last ruler
S1:Shan State
Flag S1:Flag of Shan State.svg
Image Map Caption:Tawngpeng State in a map of the Shan States
Stat Area1:2015
Stat Year1:1901
Stat Pop1:22681

Tawngpeng (Loi Lung in Shan) was a Shan state in what is today Myanmar. It belonged to the Northern Shan States.The capital was Namhsan (Om-yar).

History

The predecessor state was named Pappatasara. Not much is known about the history of the state before the 19th century, all that is available are legends.

Tawngpeng state was founded in 1753; it was the only Palaung kingdom in the former Shan States, the ruling family belonging to this ethnic group as well, although adopting the paraphernalia and the style of ethnic Shan rulers.[1] The people of the area are predominantly of the Ka-tur (Samlong) tribe.[2] The main industry of this mostly hilly state was tea production. Before British rule in Burma two successive saophas were executed and a further one was murdered.[3]

Rulers

The rulers of Tawngpeng State bore the title Saopha.[4]

Saophas

External links

22.95°N 106°W

Notes and References

  1. http://englishkyoto-seas.org/2014/02/vol-2-no-1-kojima-takahiro-nathan-badenoch/ From Tea to Temples and Texts: Transformation of the Interfaces of Upland-Lowland Interaction on the China-Myanmar Border
  2. [Mrs. Leslie Milne|Milne, Mrs. Leslie]
  3. https://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/pager.html?objectid=DS405.1.I34_V23_274.gif Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 23, p. 268.
  4. http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Myanmar_shankaren.html Shan and Karenni States of Burma