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Binnya Waru

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King of Hanthawaddy
Binnya Waru
ဗညားဗရူး
King of Hanthawaddy
Reign1446–1451
PredecessorBinnya Ran I
SuccessorBinnya Kyan
Bornc. 1418
Pegu (Bago)
Died30 May 1451
New moon (15th waning) of Nayon 813 ME
Pegu
ConsortYe Mibaya
HouseWareru
FatherBinnya Bye
MotherShin Sawbu
ReligionTheravada Buddhism
This article contains Burmese script. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Burmese script.

Binnya Waru (Burmese: ဗညားဗရူး, pronounced [bəɲá bəjú]; Mon: ဗညားဗရောဝ်; c. 1418–1451) was the 12th king of the Hanthawaddy Kingdom in Burma from 1446 to 1451. He was a nephew and adopted son of King Binnya Ran I after whom he succeeded to the Hanthawaddy throne. The king was known for his strict disciplinary rule. He reportedly liked to travel around the kingdom disguised as a commoner to observe the affairs firsthand, and meted out justice even to those who committed petty crimes. Binnya Waru was killed by his first cousin Binnya Kyan, son of King Binnya Dhammaraza, in 1451.

Brief

Binnya Waru was born to Shin Sawbu, a daughter of King Razadarit and Binnya Bye, Razadarit's nephew. He had two sisters Netaka Taw and Netaka Thin. His father died in 1419. In 1423, his mother Shin Sawbu was sent to Ava as a present to King Thihathu of Ava by his uncle Crown Prince Binnya Ran. A year later, after Binnya Ran became king after poisoning King Binnya Dhammaraza, another one of his uncles, Binnya Ran adopted the parent-less Waru as his own. In 1430, his mother Shin Sawbu fled Ava and returned to Pegu. But none of her children, Waru included, recognized her since she had been away for seven years.

He ascended the throne in 1446 after his uncle Binnya Ran I's death. He reigned for about five years.

Historiography

Various Burmese chronicles do not agree on the key dates of the king's life.

Chronicles Birth–Death Age Reign Length of reign Reference
Maha Yazawin (1724) 1420/21–June 1450 29 or 30 1446–June 1450 4
Slapat Rajawan (1766) c. 1434 –1459/60 25 1456/57–1459/60 4
Mon Yazawin (Shwe Naw) (1785) 26 5
Hmannan Yazawin (1832) 1418/19–June 1450 31 or 32 1446–June 1450 4

Notes

  1. Chronicles do not agree on his death year or the manner in which he died. According to Slapat Rajawan, he died in the year in which the court astrologers specifically had advised him not to declare the year as a great leap year (with both leap month and leap day) for he would surely die. The king, the chronicle continues, refused saying that he would not alter the schedule, and he died on the night of the leap day (New moon / 15th waning of Nayon). Main chronicles Maha Yazawin and Hmannan Yazawin say that he was assassinated in Waso 812 ME (10 June 1450 to 8 July 1450), having reigned for four years. But 812 ME was not a leap year, while 813 ME was a great leap year; the king likely died on New Moon of Nayon 813 ME (30 May 1451).
  2. (Maha Vol. 2 2006: 82): He was assassinated in Waso 812 ME (10 June 1450 to 8 July 1450).
  3. Slapat is inconsistent. (Schmidt 1906: 129) says the king died in 821 ME (1459/60) after having reigned 4 years in his 26th year (aged 25). But the chronicle (Schmidt 1906: 121) also says he came to power in 818 ME (1456/57), which means he could not have ruled for 4 years. Furthermore, he could not have born c. as the chronicle suggests since his father had been dead for at least 10 years in 1434.

References

  1. ^ Harvey 1925: 116
  2. Phayre 1967: 81–84
  3. Shwe Naw 1922: 50–55
  4. Hmannan Vol. 2 2003: 92

Bibliography

Binnya Waru Hanthawaddy DynastyBorn: c. 1418 Died: 30 May 1451
Regnal titles
Preceded byBinnya Ran I King of Hanthawaddy
1446–1451
Succeeded byBinnya Kyan
Royal titles
Preceded byBinnya Ran I Heir to the Hanthawaddy Throne
14?? – 1446
Succeeded byDhammazedi
Burmese monarchs
Pagan dynasty
849–1297
Myinsaing and Pinya Kingdoms
1297–1364
Sagaing Kingdom
1315–1364
Kingdom of Ava
1364–1555
Hanthawaddy Kingdom
1287–1539, 1550–1552
Mrauk U Kingdom
1429–1785
Prome Kingdom
1482–1542
Toungoo dynasty
1510–1752
Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom
1740–1757
Konbaung dynasty
1752–1885
  • Regent or Co-Regent
  • Mongol vassal (1297)
  • Confederation of Shan States (1527–55)
  • Brief revival (1550–52)
  • Vassal of the Confederation of Shan States (1532–42)
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