Le Than Bwa

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Le_Than_Bwa an entity of type: Thing

Le Than Bwa (Burmese: လယ်သံဘွား, Burmese pronunciation: [lɛ̀ ðàɴ bwá]; also known as Hsan Hpa, died 1459/60) was sawbwa (ruler) of Onbaung from the 1420s to 1459/60. Initially a vassal of Ava, the sawbwa kept his small Shan-speaking state independent from 1426 to 1444. He is known in Burmese history for his 1425 assassination of King Thihathu of Ava. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Le Than Bwa
rdf:langString Le Than Bwa
rdf:langString Hsan Hpa
rdf:langString လယ်သံဘွား
rdf:langString Le Than Bwa
rdf:langString Hsan Hpa
rdf:langString လယ်သံဘွား
xsd:integer 62934315
xsd:integer 1057165355
rdf:langString Successor
xsd:integer 1400
xsd:integer 821 1459
rdf:langString Kham Yut Bwa
rdf:langString Monarch
rdf:langString Min Nyo
rdf:langString Narapati I
rdf:langString by 1425 – 1459/60
rdf:langString Kham Yut Bwa
rdf:langString sawbwa
rdf:langString by 1425 – 1459/60
rdf:langString Le Than Bwa (Burmese: လယ်သံဘွား, Burmese pronunciation: [lɛ̀ ðàɴ bwá]; also known as Hsan Hpa, died 1459/60) was sawbwa (ruler) of Onbaung from the 1420s to 1459/60. Initially a vassal of Ava, the sawbwa kept his small Shan-speaking state independent from 1426 to 1444. He is known in Burmese history for his 1425 assassination of King Thihathu of Ava. The assassination paved the way for his ally Prince Min Nyo of Kale to seize the Ava throne three months later. However, he deserted Nyo at a critical juncture in the subsequent war between Nyo and Gov. Thado of Mohnyin in 1426, clearing the way for Thado's accession. Yet he never submitted to Thado, and exerted pressure on Ava by actively supporting the rebellion of Prince Minye Kyawhtin to the 1440s. But the Chinese invasions forced him to submit to Ava in 1444. He died in 1459/60, and was succeeded by his son Kham Yut Bwa with Ava's military help.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 14854
xsd:gYear 1459
xsd:gYear 1425

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