Hsawnghsup | |||||||||
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State of the Shan States | |||||||||
1757–1959 | |||||||||
Hsawnghsup (Thaungdut) in a map of the Toungoo Kingdom | |||||||||
Capital | Thaungdut | ||||||||
Area | |||||||||
• 1901 | 932 km2 (360 sq mi) | ||||||||
Population | |||||||||
• 1901 | 7471 | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• State founded | 1757 | ||||||||
• Abdication of the last Saopha | 1959 | ||||||||
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Hsawnghsup was one of the outlying Shan princely states in what is today Burma.
The village of Thaungdut (Hsawnghsup) was formerly the residence of the Sawbwa of Hsawnghsup State. The capital is in the upper end of the Kabaw Valley.[1]
History
Hsawnghsup state was founded in 1757; the first ruler was Sao Kan Po. Little is known of the history of the state before it was annexed to British Burma except that it had been a vassal state of the Kingdom of Burma.[1]
Hsawnghsup formed an exclave located to the northwest of the Shan States, within the Upper Chindwin District of British Burma and bound to the west by the princely state of Manipur. Most of the territory of the state was dense forest.[1] In 1886 the ruler of Hsawnghsup remained loyal to the British during the rebellion of the prince of Wuntho.[2]
Rulers
The rulers of Hsawnghsup bore the title of Saopha.[3]
Saophas
- 1250 - 1270 Hso Sang Hpa, the son of Hso Kyaw Hpa of Mongyang State
- 1270 - 1298 Hso Hkarm Hpa son
- 1298 - 1316 Hso Suang Hpa son
- 1316 - 1350 Hso Saap Hpa son
- 1350 - 1380 Hso Soet Hpa son
- 1380 - 1412 Hso Soeng Hpa younger brother
- 1412 - 1436 Hso Kyoeng Hpa son
- 1436 - 1445 Hso Hken Möng son
- 1445 - 1460 Hso Kaa Hpa son
- 1460 - 1474 Hso Kaan Möng son
- 1474 - 1498 Hso Ngum Hpa son
- 1498 - 1514 Hso Parn Möng son
- 1514 - 1532 Hso Bouk Hpa son
- 1532 - 1560 Sao Kyeng Tai nephew
- 1560 - 1580 Hkam Hkat Hpa uncle
- 1580 - 1612 Khek Khom Hpa (Hso Khek Hpa) son of Sao Kyeng Tai
- 1612 - 1628 Hso Kyaung Hpa son
- 1628 - 1650 Hso Kiao Hpa son
- 1650 - 1659 Hso Sai Hpa son
- 1659 - 1663 Hso Sum Hpa son
- 1663 - 1689 Hso Tawn Hpa son
- 1689 - 1703 Hso Thoen Hpa younger brother
- 1703 - 1727 Hso Hkloung Hpa son
- 1727 - 1746 Hso Hkawng Hpa son
- 1746 - 1757 Hso Pat Hpa younger brother
- 1757 - 1760 Hso Kaa Möng younger brother
- 1760 - 1767 Hso Naw Hpa younger brother
- 1767 - 1774 Hso Hklee Hpa son
- 1774 - 1782 Hso Hub Hpa cousin
- 1782 - 1813 Hso Ngam Hpa son
- 1813 - 1827 Ka Lai Hkam son of Hso Hklee Hpa
- 1827 - 1834 Hso Oum Hpa -Regent son of Hso Ngam Hpa
- 1834 - 22 Oct 1880 Sao Möng Hkam son
- 1880 - 1893 Sao Hkam Yang son
- 1893 - 1899 Sao Tai Lung younger brother
- 1899 - 1910 Sao Naw Hkam (b. 1860) son of Sao Möng Hkam
- 1910 - 1959 Sao Hkun Hsawng (last saopha) son
References
- 1 2 3 Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 13, p. 217.
- ↑ The Pacification of Burma, by Sir Charles Haukes Todd Crosthwaite
- ↑ Ben Cahoon (2000). "World Statesmen.org: Shan and Karenni States of Burma". Retrieved 7 July 2014.
External links
- "Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan states"
- The Imperial Gazetteer of India
- "WHKMLA : History of the Shan States". 18 May 2010. Retrieved 21 December 2010.
24°26′N 94°42′E / 24.433°N 94.700°E