Mongpan State

This article is about one of the former Shan States. For the present-day administrative division, see Mong Pan Township. For the town, see Mong Pan.
Not to be confused with Mongpawn State
Mongpan
State of the Shan States

1637–1959
Möng Pan State in an Imperial Gazetteer of India map
Capital Mong Pan
History
  State founded 1637
  Abdication of the last Saopha 1959
Area
  1901 3,703 km2 (1,430 sq mi)
Population
  1901 16,629 
Density 4.5 /km2  (11.6 /sq mi)
Map of the Shan States showing the four trans-Salween districts that were annexed by Thailand in WW II.

Mongpan or Möngpan was a Shan state in what is today Burma. It belonged to the Eastern Division of the Southern Shan States.

The town of Mong Pan was formerly the residence of the Sawbwa of Mongpan State. The capital is in the middle of a fertile plain. Most of the other areas of the state are mountainous, rich in teak forests. Loi Hkilek, a 2,133 high mountain is located in Mongkyawt District.[1]

History

According to legend there had been a predecessor state. Mongpan state was founded in 1637, but little is known of the history of the state before the times of British Burma.[1]

The four districts of Mongtang, Monghang, Mongkyawt and Monghta, located to the east beyond the east bank of the Salween were claimed by Siam, but the British upheld the view that they belonged to the Cis-Salween Sawbwa of Mongpan. In 1888 Siamese troops were posted in the four trans-Salween districts; Siam also claimed a further district, Monghsat, but posted no troops there.[2]

In 1889 the British formed the 1889-90 Anglo-Siamese Boundary Commission, in order to solve the difficulties with Siam concerning the trans-Salween dependencies of Mawkmai, Mongpan, and Karenni. This commission however, would not successful for Siam declined to join it at the last moment. Nevertheless, the commission went ahead despite the lack of agreement from the Siamese government and brought about the partition of these tracts and their incorporation into British Burma. British troops forced the Siamese garrisons to withdraw from the territories of the trans-Salween that were deemed not to belong to Siam. Finally the demarcation of the new frontier was carried out by the joint 1892-3 Anglo-Siamese Boundary Commission.[3]

Between December 1943 and 1945 the occupying Japanese allowed the government of Siam to annex all four districts of Mongpan State east of the Salween as part of the Saharat Thai Doem territory.[4]

Rulers

The rulers of Mongpan bore the title of Saopha after 1867; their ritual style was Kambawsa Mahawuntha Thirdamaraza.[5]

Myozas

Saophas

See also

References

External links

Coordinates: 20°06′N 98°37′E / 20.100°N 98.617°E / 20.100; 98.617

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, January 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.