Minbyauk Thihapate
King of Sagaing / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For other people named Thihapate, see Thihapate (disambiguation).
Thihapate of Sagaing (Burmese: သီဟပတေ့, [θìha̰pətḛ]; also Minbyauk Thihapate, [mɪ́ɰ̃bjaʊʔ θìha̰pətḛ]; 1305–1364) king of Sagaing from 1352 to 1364. He came to power by being married to the powerful Princess Soe Min Kodawgyi. He led Sagaing during the most tumultuous period of the kingdom (1356−64). Despite a brief period of alliance with Pinya (1357−59), Sagaing had to face near-annual raids by the northern Shan state of Mong Mao (Maw) on its own. He lost power in April 1364 when Maw Shan forces sacked Sagaing. He escaped capture but was soon put to death by his stepson Thado Minbya at Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya, south of Sagaing.
Quick Facts Thihapate of Sagaing မင်းပြောက် သီဟပတေ့, King of Sagaing ...
Thihapate of Sagaing မင်းပြောက် သီဟပတေ့ | |
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King of Sagaing | |
Reign | 23 February 1352 – April 1364 |
Coronation | 23 February 1352 |
Predecessor | Tarabya II |
Successor | Thado Minbya |
Born | 28 October 1305 11th waxing of Tazaungmon 667 ME Pagan (Bagan)? Myinsaing Regency |
Died | c. May 1364 (aged 58) c. Nayon 726 ME Kya-Khat-Wa-Ya, Sagaing Kingdom |
Consort | Soe Min Kodawgyi |
Issue | Saw Taw Oo |
House | Sagaing |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
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