MarketPwa Saw
Company Profile

Pwa Saw

Pwa Saw was a chief queen consort of King Narathihapate of the Pagan Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). She is remembered as witty, wise, and beautiful, and as someone who exercised political influence for four decades during one of the most difficult periods in the country's history. Historians are divided as to whether the chronicle narratives contain more myth than fact.

Background
Much of her life known in Burmese popular culture is from the Burmese chronicles from the 18th and 19th centuries. Inscriptional evidence tells a far different story. Modern historians are divided on whether the chronicle narratives contain more myth than fact. According to the chronicles, Saw Hla Wun was born to a wealthy farming family in a small village named Hseit-htein Kanbyu () in the Mount Popa region 1240–44. Apparently, a precocious child, Hla Wun became well known in the region for her intellect and supposed clairvoyance at a young age. One November, King Uzana, who was en route to Mount Popa to pay respects to the Mahagiri spirit there, heard the news about her, and had her brought before him. The king is said to have been greatly impressed by her intelligence, and made her a junior queen of his. However, a contemporary inscription dedicated by the queen herself states that she was a granddaughter of King Kyaswa and Queen Saw Mon Hla. She was the second child of seven; she had an elder sister Yadanabon, three younger brothers and two younger sisters. Her mother was an elder sister of Queen Thonlula, the chief queen of Uzana. It means that Hla Wun was a niece of Thonlula, as well as a first cousin, once removed of Uzana. ==Reign==
Reign
Uzana years Her initial years at Pagan (Bagan) were uneventful. She remained a junior queen of Uzana who spent much of his time hunting elephants around the country. She soon became a widow in May 1256 when the king suddenly died from a hunting accident near Dala (modern Yangon). The young queen had no children with the late king. Chief queen built by Narathihapate Her days as dowager queen were short. According to the chronicles, she became the chief queen of her step-son Narathihapate, who was put on the throne by the powerful court. But inscriptional evidence shows that Narathihapate's first chief queen was her elder sister Yadanabon, and Hla Wun became the chief queen only in 1262 after her sister's death. Most of the time, however, her job appeared to have been to control the wild, destructive excesses of the king, whom the chronicles describe as "an ogre", who was "great in wrath, haughtiness and envy, exceeding covetous and ambitious." Using her wit, she could often, though not always, overrule his impulsive, careless, paranoid decisions and talk him into making wiser decisions. Some were of far more consequence: she, with the help of the Primate, got the king to issue a decree stating that his death sentences be suspended for a fortnight to allow his anger to cool. In exile Hla Wun remained loyal to the end but she had long lost respect for the king. In 1287, the king officially became a Mongol vassal in exchange for a Mongol withdrawal from northern Burma, and planned to return to Pagan. The queen advised him not to return to the upcountry without having first raised a substantial army, for much of the country was in revolt, and to avoid the Prome route, for she believed Thihathu, the viceroy of Prome, was not trustworthy. The king discarded her advice on both counts. He replied that he would raise an army at Prome with the help of his son Thihathu. The royal family sailed up the Irrawaddy with a small group of guards. At Prome, as she predicted, Thihathu's men seized the royal flotilla, and Thihathu asked his father to choose between taking the poisoned food and dying by sword. The king asked his chief queen one last time for advice. On her advice, he bestowed his royal ring to her, prayed that "may no male-child be ever born to him again in all his future existences before attaining the nirvana", and consumed his last meal. Thihathu did spare her life. ==Kingmaker==
Kingmaker
Narathihapate's death officially marked the end of the two-and-a-half-century-old Pagan Empire. The country was in chaos, with each region claiming a king. Now, the dowager queen, Hla Wun managed to return to Pagan, hoping to restore the kingdom. At Pagan, she became the leader of the remaining old court. A year and a half after her husband's death, on 30 May 1289, she put one of Narathihapate's sons, Kyawswa, on the throne. For some reason, she did not choose her only son (and child) Yazathu as king. Though it is not universally accepted, one assessment of the inscriptional evidence finds that she may have died 1295/1296. The standard Burmese chronicles Maha Yazawin and Hmannan Yazawin say she lived longer, anointing at least one more king of Pagan. Hmannan says she lived to at least 1313 when she gave her official blessing to the coronation of Thihathu of Myinsaing (not the patricide Thihathu of Prome). According to the chronicles, she was hugely disappointed by the ineffectual Kyawswa whose real authority did not extend beyond a small region around Pagan. The real power in central Burma now belonged to the three former Pagan commanders and brothers from the nearby Myinsaing. She felt betrayed when Kyawswa, who wanted to counter the rising power of the brothers, decided to become a vassal of the Mongols in 1297. Though she did not care much for the three brothers, whom she viewed as usurpers, she plotted with them to remove Kyawswa. In December 1297, she persuaded Kyawswa to visit Myinsaing, ostensibly to lead a dedication ceremony of a monastery. Kyawswa felt secure and went to Myinsaing. But as soon as the ceremony was over, he was arrested, dethroned, and forced to become a monk in the very monastery he had just dedicated. She had to accept the arrangement although she never fully acknowledged the presence of a new dynasty in Upper Burma. Nevertheless, she remained the symbol of the old dynasty, and her imprimatur was still much sought after. According to Hmannan, Thihathu asked her to anoint him as the rightful successor of Pagan at his coronation ceremony at Pinya. The queen flat out refused; in fact, she was quite insulting in her reply. It was only after Thihathu sent another humble letter that she relented. ==Historicity==
Historicity
The historical Queen Pwa Saw did exist. In fact, a 1966 analysis of the contemporary inscriptions by Ba Shin finds that there were at least three Pwa Saws: Saw Min Waing, Saw Hla Wun and Saw Thitmahti. (There was also a fourth Pwa Saw in the Pinya period; she was Mi Saw U.) All three queens left a number of stone inscriptions at the temples and monasteries they donated. For example, a 1301 stone inscription found within the walls of the Hsutaungbyei Pagoda states that on 20 July 1301 one Queen Pwa Saw dedicated 3000 palm trees during an illness of the king, • The personal name of Narapathihapate's chief queen Pwa Saw was Saw Hla Wun. The chronicles do not mention her personal name. • Saw Hla Wun was of royal descent. The chronicles' account that she was a commoner country girl is incorrect. • Hla Wun became the chief queen only in 1262, not at the coronation of Narathihapate [in November 1256]. • She was likely dead by 1295/96. The paper cites a 1302 inscription by Thitmathi, which mentions that her elder sister the queen had died before Kyawswa's dethronement [in 1297]. It is unclear if the paper has been peer-reviewed. Not all of the points seem to be accepted by scholarship. ==In popular culture==
In popular culture
Queen Pwa Saw is remembered as witty, wise, and beautiful, exercising political influence for 40 years during one of the most difficult periods in Burmese history. • A song about her by Dora Than EMoe-hnaung Thandin A-Kha (မိုးနှောင်းသံထင်အခါ), a 2022 novel by Khin Mya Zin ==Notes==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com