Maung Khaing

Sitke
Khaing
ခိုင်

KSM
Magistrate of the Provincial Civil Service of Rangoon
In office
c. 1855  c. 1875
Preceded by New office
Governor of Dala
In office
1853  c. 1855
Personal details
Born c. 1810s[note 1]
Shwegyin, Konbaung Burma
Died in or after 1875[note 2]
British Burma
Spouse(s) Htu[1]
Children Ywet[1]
Parents Myat Phyu[1]
Religion Theravada Buddhism
In Burmese names, Maung is an honorific, not a surname.

Maung Khaing (Burmese: မောင်ခိုင်, pronounced: [màʊɴ kʰàɪɴ]; also spelled Maung Khine) was the first Magistrate of Yangon (Rangoon) in the early British colonial period of Myanmar (Burma). Khaing's father was Gov. Myat Phyu of Shwegyin, who had defected to the British in 1832, and became Magistrate of North Moulmein (Mawlamyaing).[2] After the Second Anglo-Burmese War, his father-in-law Htaw Lay and Khaing used their influence with the colonial government to stop the occupation forces' pillaging of Buddhist shrines around Yangon, and restored the war damaged Shwedagon Pagoda.[3]

Both Khaing and Htaw Lay were awarded the title of KSM (Kyet-tha-yay-saung Shwe-salwe-ya Min), the highest honor for public service bestowed by the colonial government.[2] The colonial government named two wide streets in downtown Yangon after Khaing and Htaw Lay.[4] The two street names survived the renaming of Yangon streets until 1989.[5]

Notes

  1. Given that Khaing married Htaw Lay's 2nd daughter Htu a few years after 1832 per (Oung 2007: 24), he was probably born in the 1810s.
  2. He was still alive in 1875. (Moore 2013: 244): An 1875 inscription on four stones (95 x 75 cm) donated by Htaw Lay’s daughters and Khaing to Naungdawgyi Pagoda installed on the northeast corner of the Shwedagon platform commemorates their gift, including 25 viss, 63 ticals, and 14 annas of gold.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Oung 2007: 191
  2. 1 2 Oung 2007: 24
  3. Myaing 2005: 60–61
  4. Singer 1995: 73
  5. Aung Myoe 2006: 8

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.