Thihathu သီဟသူ |
|
---|---|
King of Myinsaing–Pinya | |
Reign | 7 February 1313 – February 1325 |
Coronation | 7 February 1313 |
Predecessor | new office |
Successor |
Uzana I (as King of Pinya) Saw Yun (as King of Sagaing) |
Co-Regent of Myinsaing | |
Reign | 17 December 1297 – 7 February 1313 |
Coronation | 20 October 1309 |
Predecessor | new office |
Successor | himself (as King of Myinsaing–Pinya) |
Viceroy of Pinle | |
Reign | 19 February 1293 – 17 December 1297 |
Predecessor | new office |
Successor | Kyawswa I (as Governor) |
Born | 1265 Monday, 627 ME Myinsaing |
Died |
c. February 1325 (aged 59) 686 ME Pinya |
Consort |
Mi Saw U Yadanabon |
Issue |
Uzana I (stepson; adopted) Tarabya I (stepson) Saw Yun Kyawswa I Nawrahta Saw Pale |
House | Myinsaing |
Father | Theinkha Bo |
Mother | Lady Myinsaing |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
Thihathu (Burmese: သီဟသူ, pronounced: [θìha̰ðù]; 1265–1325) was a co-founder of the Myinsaing Kingdom, and the founder of the Pinya Kingdom in today's central Burma (Myanmar). Thihathu was the youngest and most ambitious of the three brothers that successfully defended central Burma from Mongol invasions in 1287 and in 1300–01. He and his brothers toppled the regime at Pagan in 1297, and co-ruled central Burma. After his eldest brother Athinkhaya's death in 1310, Thihathu pushed aside the middle brother Yazathingyan, and took over as the sole ruler of central Burma. His decision to designate his adopted son Uzana I heir-apparent caused his eldest biological son, Saw Yun to set up a rival power center in Sagaing in 1315. Although Saw Yun nominally remained loyal to his father, after Thihathu's death in 1325, the two houses of Myinsaing officially became rival kingdoms in central Burma.
Thihathu was born in 1265 to a prominent family in Myinsaing in Central Burma. His father Theinkha Bo was a younger brother of the sawbwa (chief) of Binnaka, and had fled to Myinsaing after a dispute with his brother in 1260. Traditional (British colonial era) scholarship identifies his father as an ethnic Shan. But the historian Michael Aung-Thwin has rejected the assertion, given that no historical evidence any kind exists to support the claim. At any rate, Theinkha Bo married a daughter of a wealthy banker at Myinsaing. Thihathu was the third child of the couple's four children. He had two elder brothers Athinkhaya and Yazathingyan and a younger sister Hla Myat.