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Burma |
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First Burmese Empire
AD 1044 - 1287
Capital: Pagan. |
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Second Burmese Empire
AD 1531/46 - 1752 |
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1529 - 1584 |
The
Thai kingdom of
Ayutthya
is conquered by the Burmese.
The Thais are eventually able to regain their capital. |
1558 - 1613 |
The Burmese conquer the
Thai Lan Na capital
of Chiang Mai. |
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1662 |
The last Ming
Chinese emperor is captured while
fleeing the Manchus. He is handed back and executed. |
? - 1675 |
Ingsemang |
Also ruled Thai kingdom of
Lan Na. |
1672 - 1727 |
The Burmese
regain control of the Thai kingdom of
Lan Na. |
1675 - 1707 |
Chephutarai |
Also ruled Thai kingdom of
Lan Na. |
1707 - ? |
Mangraenara |
Also ruled Thai kingdom of
Lan Na. |
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1765 - 1767 |
The Burmese invade
Ayutthaya again and,
this time, succeed, only to be thrown out two years later. |
? - 1771 |
Abhayagamani |
Also ruled Thai kingdom of
Lan Na. |
1763 |
The Burmese conquer
the Thai Lan Na
capital of Chiang Mai. |
1768 - ? |
Moyagamani |
Also ruled Thai kingdom of
Lan Na. |
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1824 - 1826 |
The First Anglo-Burmese war ends with the Treaty of Yandabo, according to
which Burma cedes the Arakan coastal strip, between Chittagong and Cape
Negrais, to
British India. |
1852 - 1853 |
Britain annexes lower Burma, including Rangoon, following the Second
Anglo-Burmese war. |
1853 - 1878 |
Mindon Min |
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1878 - ? |
Thibaw |
Son. |
1885 - 1886 |
During the reign of
Thibaw there is much violence in the country.
Britain captures Mandalay after a brief battle,
and Burma becomes a province of British
India. |
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Modern Burma
Under the last of the
Burmese kings the country
was unstable, and in a campaign which began in 1885
Britain captured
the capital of Mandalay after a brief battle. Burma became a province of British
India, with territory
which was captured by
Siam
in the 1780s being returned. |
1937 |
Britain separates Burma from
India and makes it a crown colony. |
1948 |
Burma is granted independence from
British rule. |
1962 |
There is a military coup led by Gen Ne Win, who abolishes the federal system
and inaugurates 'the Burmese Way to Socialism'. The country is ruled by a
mostly faceless military dictatorship. |
1981 |
Ne Win
relinquishes the presidency to San Yu, a retired general, but continues as
chairman of the ruling Socialist Programme Party. |
1987 - 1989 |
Currency devaluation wipes out many people's savings and triggers
anti-government riots. In 1988, thousands of Burmese are killed in the
riots. The following year the dictatorship changes the country's name to
Myanmar. The two versions of the country's name mean the same thing, and one
is derived from the other. Burmah, as it was spelt in the 19th Century, is a
local corruption of the word Myanmar. The change is recognised by the United
Nations, and by countries such as
France
and Japan, but not
by the United States and the
United Kingdom. |
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