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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zabwedaung Mibaya
Mallādevī
Queen of fourth rank
Born Shin Hlaing
Died1857
Mandalay
Burial
Spouse Mindon Min
Issue1 son and 3 daughters, including:
Regnal name
Mallādevī
(မလ္လာဒေဝီ)
House Konbaung
Religion Theravada Buddhism

Zabwedaung Mibaya ( Burmese: စားပွဲတောင်မိဖုရား), born Shin Hlaing and known by her royal titles, Thiri Mingala Yuza Mahe ( Burmese: သီရိမင်္ဂလာရုဇာမဟေ; Pali: Sirimaṅgalarujāmahe) and Maladewi ( Burmese: မလ္လာဒေဝီ; Pali: Mallādevī), was a queen of fourth rank of King Mindon Min during the Konbaung dynasty. She was later promoted to Devi-level queen.

Zabwedaung Mibaya was the sister of Lamaing Wun, minister of Lamaing. [1] She had three daughters and a son, but only two daughters survived. [2] She died in 1857 at Mandalay.[ citation needed]


References

  1. ^ Collection of Thet-Kayit: Money Lending Contracts of Myanmar Rural Area in Kon-baung Period. Aichi University. 1999.
  2. ^ J.P. Hardiman (1900). Gazetteer Of Upper Burma and the Shan States Part I Vol II. Rangoon: Superintendent, Government Printing, Burma.[ page needed]

See also

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zabwedaung Mibaya
Mallādevī
Queen of fourth rank
Born Shin Hlaing
Died1857
Mandalay
Burial
Spouse Mindon Min
Issue1 son and 3 daughters, including:
Regnal name
Mallādevī
(မလ္လာဒေဝီ)
House Konbaung
Religion Theravada Buddhism

Zabwedaung Mibaya ( Burmese: စားပွဲတောင်မိဖုရား), born Shin Hlaing and known by her royal titles, Thiri Mingala Yuza Mahe ( Burmese: သီရိမင်္ဂလာရုဇာမဟေ; Pali: Sirimaṅgalarujāmahe) and Maladewi ( Burmese: မလ္လာဒေဝီ; Pali: Mallādevī), was a queen of fourth rank of King Mindon Min during the Konbaung dynasty. She was later promoted to Devi-level queen.

Zabwedaung Mibaya was the sister of Lamaing Wun, minister of Lamaing. [1] She had three daughters and a son, but only two daughters survived. [2] She died in 1857 at Mandalay.[ citation needed]


References

  1. ^ Collection of Thet-Kayit: Money Lending Contracts of Myanmar Rural Area in Kon-baung Period. Aichi University. 1999.
  2. ^ J.P. Hardiman (1900). Gazetteer Of Upper Burma and the Shan States Part I Vol II. Rangoon: Superintendent, Government Printing, Burma.[ page needed]

See also


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