Yadanabon of Pinya

For other people with similar names, see Yadanabon.
Yadanabon of Pinya
ရတနာပုံ
Queen of the Northern Palace of Pinya
Tenure 7 February 1313 – c. February 1325
Predecessor new office
Successor unknown
Queen of the Northern Palace of Pinle
Tenure 1300s – 7 February 1313
Predecessor new office
Successor disestablished
Born c. 1280s
Linyin
Died Pinya
Spouse unnamed
Thihathu
Issue Tarabya I
Saw Yun
Saw Pale
House Pinya
Religion Theravada Buddhism

Yadanabon (Burmese: ရတနာပုံ, pronounced: [jədənàbòʊɴ]) was one of the two queens consort of King Thihathu of Pinya. She was also the mother of kings Saw Yun and Tarabya I of Sagaing.

The queen was a commoner from a small village called Linyin, located somewhere in the north. She may have been an ethnic Shan.[note 1] In 1298, she was a widow with a 1-year old child travelling south when she met Thihathu, who was on a hunting trip. Thihathu, who had just founded the Myinsaing Kingdom with his two elder brothers, took her as a concubine. She gave birth to his first male child, Saw Yun, a year later. She remained a concubine until after she gave birth to a daughter, Saw Pale. She was raised to be the Queen of the Northern Palace.[1]

The queen's descendants include kings of Sagaing from Saw Yun to Tarabya II, as well as King Thado Minbya, the founder of Ava Kingdom.[note 2] Furthermore, chief queens consorts of Ava Shin Bo-Me and Shin Myat Hla were her descendants.[1]

Notes

  1. The chronicles (Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 371–372) do not mention her ethnicity, stating only that she was from the north. But British colonial scholarship calls her an ethnic Shan (and indeed Thihathu and his brothers full Shans): See (Phayre 1967: 59–60) and (Harvey 1925: 75–81), for example.
  2. See the regnal list of Sagaing in (Harvey 1925: 366).

References

  1. 1 2 Hmannan Vol. 1 2003: 371–372

Bibliography


Yadanabon of Pinya
Born: c. 1280s Died: ?
Royal titles
New title Queen of the Northern Palace of Pinya
1313–1325
Succeeded by
unknown
New title Queen of the Northern Palace of Pinle
1300s–1313
None
Myinsaing Kingdom renamed as Pinya Kingdom
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.