Laungshe Mibaya

Thiri Mahamingala Thupabadewi
Sirimahāmaṅgalasupabhādevī
Queen Dowager of Burma
Tenure1878–1881
Successornone
Born1825 (1825)
Ava
Diedafter 1890
Shan State
Burial
SpouseMindon Min
Issue
HouseKonbaung
FatherMaung Mey
MotherShin U
ReligionTheravada Buddhism
Tomb of Laungshe Queen.

Thiri Mahamingala Thupabadewi (Burmese: သီရိမဟာမင်္ဂလာသုပဘာဒေဝီ; Pali: Sirimahāmaṅgalasupabhādevī; 1825 – after 1890), commonly known as the Laungshe Mibaya or Queen of Laungshe (Burmese: လောင်းရှည် မိဖုရား), was a royal princess and senior queen consort of King Mindon during the Konbaung dynasty. She was the queen mother of the Konbaung dynasty's last king, Thibaw Min.[1] Being a cousin of King Mindon, she was promoted to a Nanzwe Mibaya[note 1] and received the appanage of Laungshe when he ascended the throne.

Among her other children included 3 daughters, the Mong Kung Princess, Pakhangyi Princess, Meiktila Princess.[2]

She was of Shan extraction, it's seems her grandmother by her father name "Kham Ing" is a daughter of the Sawbwa of Thibaw (Hsipaw).[3] As Queen Dowager she enjoyed some power and a White House was built for her residence. However the Madalay's chronicle reported she died on 1 June 1881 which is fake news for political reasons, but by reality she died no evidence exists but after 1890 there are still photograph of her living in the palace of Sawbwa of Loikaw in Shan State in those era, which nowadays is in Kayah State.

Family

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  • Issue
  1. Mong Kung Princess (1853 – 1862)
  2. Pakhangyi Princess (1858 – 1911)
  3. Thibaw Min (1859 – 1916)
  4. Meiktila Princess (1860 – 1896)

Notes

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  1. ^ King Mindon created a special position called Nanzwe Mibaya for his four queens– Yinge Mibaya, Laungshe Mibaya, Magway Mibaya and Seindon Mibaya. It's between Nanya Mibaya (first rank) and Ahsaungya Mibaya (second rank).

References

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  1. ^ Kawanami, Hiroko (2013-01-01), "6 Scholastic Lineage and Nuns' Education", Renunciation and Empowerment of Buddhist Nuns in Myanmar-Burma, Brill, pp. 159–191, ISBN 978-90-04-24572-3, retrieved 2024-05-30
  2. ^ Hardiman, John Percy (1900). Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States. superintendent, Government printing, Burma.
  3. ^ List of Ancient Monuments in Burma (I. Mandalay Division). Vol. 1. Rangoon: Office of the Superintendent, Government Printing, Burma. 1910.

See also

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