Hkamti Long

Hkamti Long
State of the Shan States
13th century–19..
Hkamti Long in a map from In farthest Burma - the record of an arduous journey of exploration and research through the unknown frontier territory of Burma and Tibet (1921)
History
  Conquered by Sam Long Hpa, ruler of Mongkawng 13th century
  Abdication of the last Saopha 19..
Area
  (estimate) 2,330 km2 (900 sq mi)
Population
  (estimate) 11,000 
Density 4.7 /km2  (12.2 /sq mi)

Hkamti Long (Burmese: Kantigyi; also known as Khamti Long) was a Shan state in what is today Burma. It was an outlying territory, located by the Mali River, north of Myitkyina District, away from the main Shan State area in present-day Kachin State. The main town was Putao.

History

Hkamti Long began as an outlying territory of the Shan state of Mongkawng and was settled by the Hkamti, a sub-group of the Shan people. The name means "Great Place of Gold" in the Hkamti Khamti language.[1] It gathered seven small principalities: Lokhun, Mansi, Lon Kyein, Manse-Hkun, Mannu, Langdao, Mong Yak and Langnu which were under the Hkamti Long was beyond the borders of the British Mandalay Division and was never brought under direct British rule, after the Shan states submitted to British rule after the fall of the Konbaung dynasty.

Hkamti Long was visited by traveller T. T. Cooper, British Agent at Bhamo, where he was murdered in 1878;[2] later also by colonels Macgregor and Woodthorpe in 1884-1885, by Errol Gray in 1892-1893, and by Prince Henry of Orleans in 1893. Towards the end of the 19th century the inhabitants were still mostly Shan, but they ended up being absorbed or expelled by the Kachin people and other dominant ethnic groups of the region.[3]

Rulers

The rulers of Hkamti Long bore the title of Saopha.[4]

Saophas

References

Coordinates: 27°19′N 97°25′E / 27.317°N 97.417°E / 27.317; 97.417

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