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==