Jump to content

Limban Mibaya

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Limban Mibaya
Limban Mibaya
Tenure1853 — 1878
Bornunknown
Amarapura
Died1893
Rangoon, Burma
Burial
Issue4 sons and a daughter including Salin Supaya
Regnal name
Thiri Thu Sandar Devi
HouseKonbaung
FatherTharbyu
MotherThakingyi

Thiri Thu Sandar Dewi, commonly known as Limban Mibaya (Burmese: လင်ပန်းမိဖုရား), was a queen of the fourth rank of King Mindon during the Konbaung dynasty.

Life and family

[edit]

Limban Mibaya was born to Tharbyu (also Minyon), mayor of Kanaung and Myanaung and his second wife Thakhingyi. She was the elder sister of Thetpan Mibaya.

Her father's first wife gave birth to Khin The, and so Limban Mibaya and the Queen of the Northern Palace were half-sisters (shared same father).[1]

When her father died, her mother married an officer of Kyaukpadaung and gave birth to Tharazein Mibaya, Maung Lay Nge, and Maung Thudaw. Thus, Limban Mibaya and Tharazein Mibaya were also half-sisters (shared same mother).

Life in palace

[edit]

Limban Mibaya became a kollotaw of Prince Mindon, at the age of 16. When King Mindon ascended the throne, she became a fourth-rank queen and received the appanage of Limban.

Limban Mibaya died in 1893, and buried at Wingabar mound of Ngahtatgyi Buddha Temple.[2]

Issues

[edit]

King Mindon and Limban Mibaya had four sons and a daughter, but second and third sons did not survive– only Salin Supaya, Kyapin Prince and Thiri Thu Dhammaraja Yanaung Prince were alive.[3]

Her eldest daughter, Salin Supaya, was the Tabindaing Princess (chief queen designate) during the reign of King Mindon.[4]

As the saying goes "Son Kyapin, daughter Salin," children of Limban Mibaya were the favorites of King Mindon.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Geary, Grattan (1886). Burma, After the Conquest: Viewed in Its Political, Social, and Commercial Aspects, from Mandalay. S. Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington.
  2. ^ "ငါးထပ်ကြီးဘုရားအနီးမှ ဆွေတော်မျိုးတော်များ သင်္ချိုင်းရှင်းတမ်း". ပဲ့တင်သံဂျာနယ်.
  3. ^ White, Herbert Thirkell (2011). Burma. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-60067-6.
  4. ^ a b Cocks, Samuel William (1919). A Short History of Burma. Macmillan and Company, limited.

See also

[edit]