Born
Mya Than on 23 May 1929 in
Myaing,
Pakokku Township,
Magway Division,
Myanmar, he was the eldest of seven children to Paw Tint and his wife Hlaing. Mya Than Tint entered
Rangoon University in 1948, the year Burma gained independence from
Great Britain, and received a degree in philosophy, political science and English literature in 1954. His writing career began in 1949 when his first short novel “Refugee” () was published in
Tara () Magazine (No. 21, Vol. 3, 1949). His first translated work was Malva and other short stories by Gorky.He published many short and full-length novels, documentaries and translated works in his 50-year writing career.
Dataung Ko Kyaw Ywei, Mee Pinle Ko Hpyat Myi (Across the Mountain of Swords and the Sea of Fire) () (1973) is considered to be his greatest masterpiece. He also wrote historical documentaries like “Breeze over Taungthaman Lake” (). Also a prolific translator of Western literature into Burmese, Mya Than Tint introduced his readers to world classics like
War and Peace (),
Gone with the Wind (လေရူးသုန်သုန်), and
Dream of the Red Chamber (). He won the
Myanmar National Literature Award five times for translation
War and Peace(1972),
Gone with the Wind (1978),
Dream of the Red Chamber (1988),
City of Joy () (1992) and
Beyond Love () (1995). As a political prisoner, Mya Than Tint was jailed from 1963 to 1972 by
Ne Win's military regime that seized power from a democratic government in 1962. He was initially incarcerated in Rangoon's notorious
Insein Prison, but later transferred with other political prisoners to the
Coco Islands penal colony in the
Indian Ocean until his release three years later. At the age of 68, he died in his home in
Sanchaung Township in
Rangoon of a
brain hemorrhage after an accidental fall from a staircase in the early morning of February 18, 1998. He was cremated at the Hteinpin cemetery in Rangoon. == Literary works ==