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Singyan Thakin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Singyan Thakhin (Burmese: ဆင်ကြန်သခင်), also known by her title Kinwun Mingyi Gadaw (Burmese: ကင်းဝန်မင်းကြီးကတော်; 1793 — 1862[1]), was a Burmese court official who served as the Amaydawkhan Gadawgyi (အမေးတော်ခံကတော်ကြီး) in the royal court of King Mindon. She was the first wife of Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung. She was granted the appanage of Singyan and was therefore known as Singyan Thakhinma (lit. 'mistress of Singyan').[2]

Biography

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According to the royal chronicles, she was a lady-in-waiting during the reign of King Bagyidaw. Some historians claim that the Singyan Princess was a minor queen consort of King Pangan.[3] As a queen of the fourth rank, she was granted the appanage of Thanlyin.[4]

In another account, she was said to be married to a royal justice U Bo who was granted the title of Minhla Thiri Kyawhtin during the reign of King Tharawaddy. She became a widow when U Bo died.[5]

In 1851, Prince Mindon ordered to the 59-year-old widow, Singyan Thakin, to married a 30-year-old the Clerk of the Royal Treasury (ရွှေတိုက်စာရေး), Maung Kaung, and they served together at the royal court.[6][7]

There was no issue by their marriage.[8] Kinwun adopted the two sons of the brother of his second wife, Shwe Me.[9][10]

References

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  1. ^ 20 rā cu Mranʻ mā cā reʺ cha rā myāʺ nhaṅʻʹ cā cu cā raṅʻʺ (in Burmese). Khyui Teʺ Saṃ Cā pe. 2003.
  2. ^ Taṅʻ (Ūʺ), Phe Moṅʻ (1987). History of Burmese literature (in Burmese). Nramʻ ̋cā cañʻ.
  3. ^ Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 398
  4. ^ O, Rvhe U. (1986). Ta khyinʻ ka thaṅʻ rhāʺ khaiʹ so puggilʻ krīʺ myāʺ (in Burmese). Rhve Simʻ Sāʺ Panʻʺ khyī nhaṅʻʹ Cā pe.
  5. ^ Huxley, Andrew (Winter 2001). "Positivists and Buddhists: The Rise and Fall of Anglo-Burmese Ecclesiastical Law". Law & Social Inquiry. 26 (1). Blackwell Publishing: 126. doi:10.1111/j.1747-4469.2001.tb00173.x. JSTOR 829045. S2CID 144644106.
  6. ^ 20 rā cu Mranʻ mā cā reʺ cha rā myāʺ nhaṅʻʹ cā cu cā raṅʻʺ (in Burmese). Khyui Teʺ Saṃ Cā pe. 2003.
  7. ^ O, Rvhe U. (2001). Mranʻ māʹ cā chui toʻ myāʺ (in Burmese). Cacʻ saññʻ toʻ Cā pe.
  8. ^ ငါ့ဓား ငါ့သွေး ငါ့ဧရာဝတီ (in Burmese). Moṅʻ Kyoʻ Ññvanʻʹ nhaṅʻʹ ʾa poṅʻʺ ʾa saṅʻʺ. 1968.
  9. ^ Ko, Taw Sein (1913). Burmese Sketches, by ... British Burma Press.
  10. ^ Society, Burma Research (1934). "The Journal".

Bibliography

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