vertical_align_top
View:
Images:
S · M

Former countries in Burmese history

This list has 9 sub-lists and 29 members. See also History of Burma, Former countries in Southeast Asia, Political history of Myanmar
FLAG
      
favorite
Kingdom of Mrauk U
Kingdom of Mrauk U 3 L, 10 T
Lan Xang
Lan Xang 2 L, 1 T
Shan States
Shan States 2 L, 53 T
Pagan kingdom
Pagan kingdom 1 L, 4 T
Nanzhao
Nanzhao 1 L, 4 T
  • Pagan Kingdom
    Pagan Kingdom Kingdom in present-day Burma (849-1297)
     0    0
    rank #1 ·
    21°10′20″N 94°51′37″E / 21.17222°N 94.86028°E
  • Manipur (princely state)
    Manipur (princely state) Predecessor of the modern Indian state Manipur
     0    0
    rank #2 ·
    The Manipur Kingdom, also known as Meckley, was an ancient kingdom at the India–Burma frontier. Historically, Manipur was an independent kingdom ruled by a Meitei dynasty. But it was also invaded and ruled over by Burmese kingdom at various point of time. It became a protectorate of the British East India Company from 1824, and a princely state of British Raj in 1891. It bordered Assam Province in the west and British Burma in the east, and in the 20th century covered an area of 22,327 square kilometres (8,621 sq mi) and contained 467 villages. The capital of the state was Imphal.
  • Sri Ksetra Kingdom
    Sri Ksetra Kingdom Ancient Pyu city-state in Southern Burma
     0    0
    rank #3 ·
    Sri Ksetra (Śrī Kṣetra, Burmese: သရေခေတ္တရာ ပြည်, Sanskrit: श्री क्षेत्र, lit. 'Field of Fortune' or 'Field of Glory'), located along the Irrawaddy River at present-day Hmawza, was once a prominent Pyu settlement. The Pyu occupied several sites across Upper Myanmar, with Sri Ksetra recorded as the largest, the city wall enclosing an area of 1,477 hectares, although a recent survey found it enclosed 1,857 hectares within its monumental brick walls, with an extramural area of a similar size, being the largest Southeast Asian city before Angkor times. Issues surrounding the dating of this site has meant the majority of material is dated between the seventh and ninth centuries AD, however recent scholarship suggests Pyu culture at Sri Ksetra was active centuries before this.
  • Kingdom of Mrauk U
    Kingdom of Mrauk U Arakan Kingdom
     0    0
    rank #4 ·
    The Kingdom of Mrauk-U (Arakanese: မြောက်ဦး ဘုရင့်နိုင်ငံတော်) was a kingdom that existed on the Arakan littoral from 1429 to 1785. Based in the capital Mrauk-U, near the eastern coast of the Bay of Bengal, the kingdom ruled over what is now Rakhine State, Myanmar and southern part of Chittagong Division, Bangladesh. Though started out as a protectorate of the Bengal Sultanate from 1429 to 1531, Mrauk-U went on to conquer Chittagong with the help of the Portuguese. It twice fended off the Toungoo Burma's attempts to conquer the kingdom in 1546–1547, and 1580–1581. At its height of power, it briefly controlled the Bay of Bengal coastline from the Sundarbans to the Gulf of Martaban from 1599 to 1603. In 1666, it lost control of Chittagong after a war with the Mughal Empire. Its reign continued until 1785, when it was conquered by the Konbaung dynasty of Burma.
  • Konbaung dynasty
    Konbaung dynasty Dynasty ruling Myanmar from 1752 to 1885
     0    0
    rank #5 ·
    The Konbaung dynasty (Burmese: ကုန်းဘောင်မင်းဆက်), also known as the Third Burmese Empire (တတိယမြန်မာနိုင်ငံတော်), was the last dynasty that ruled Burma from 1752 to 1885. It created the second-largest empire in Burmese history and continued the administrative reforms begun by the Toungoo dynasty, laying the foundations of the modern state of Burma. The reforms, however, proved insufficient to stem the advance of the British Empire, who defeated the Burmese in all three Anglo-Burmese Wars over a six-decade span (1824–1885) and ended the millennium-old Burmese monarchy in 1885. Pretenders to the dynasty claim descent from Myat Phaya Lat, one of Thibaw's daughters.
  • Lan Xang
    Lan Xang Kingdom in Southeast Asia from 1353 to 1707
     0    0
    rank #6 ·
    Lan Xang or Lancang was a Lao kingdom that held the area of present-day Laos from 1353 to 1707. For three and a half centuries, Lan Xang was one of the largest kingdoms in Southeast Asia. The kingdom is the basis for Laos's national historic and cultural identity.
  • Kingdom of Pong
    Kingdom of Pong Former monarchy in Asia
     0    0
    rank #7 ·
    The Kingdom of Pong or Pong Kingdom was an ethnically Tai state that controlled several smaller states along the frontier of what is now Myanmar, China and Northeast Indian states of Assam, Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh.
  • Waithali
    Waithali Place in Rakhine State, Burma
     0    0
    rank #8 ·
    Waithali (Burmese: ဝေသာလီမြို့, Pali: Vesālī) located in today's northern Rakhine State, Myanmar, was the capital of the Waithali Kingdom from 370 to 818. The former capital site is approximately 70 kilometres (43 mi) north-east of Sittwe, and east of Ram Chaung, a tributary of the Kaladan river. Like much of northern Rakhine State, Waithali is in a hilly locale. Like its predecessor, Dhanyawadi, the former capital site has fallen into ruin and much of it is now deserted. Only a few temples and traces of the old city wall remain. The site is about an hour's bus ride from Mrauk U.
  • Dhanyawadi
    Dhanyawadi Human settlement
     0    0
    rank #9 ·
    Dhanyawaddy (Burmese: ဓညဝတီ; Pali: Dhaññavatī) was the capital of the first Arakanese Kingdom, located in what is now Northern Rakhine State, Myanmar. The name is a corruption of the Pali word Dhannavati, which means "large area or rice cultivation or the rice bowl". Like many of its successors, the Kingdom of Dhanyawadi was based on trade between the East (pre-Pagan Myanmar, Pyu, China, the Mons), and the West (Indian subcontinent).
  • Arakan
    Arakan Historic coastal region in Southeast Asia
     0    0
    rank #10 ·
    Arakan (or) is the historical geographical name of Rakhine State, Myanmar (formerly Burma). The region was called Arakan for centuries until the Burmese military junta changed its name in 1989. The people of the region were known as Arakanese.
Desktop | Mobile
This website is part of the FamousFix entertainment community. By continuing past this page, and by your continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the Terms of Use. Loaded in 0.39 secs.
Terms of Use  |  Copyright  |  Privacy
Copyright 2006-2025, FamousFix