Its primary meaning is "pleasant and lovely". Ramaññadesa and
Suvannabhumi are names referring to the Mon heartland in the remote past which covered
Myanmar and
Thailand. The name Ramaññadesa and Suvannabhumi may be the Indianized and they were used in the old Indian literature. These two names also occurred in the two oldest chronicles of
Ceylon known as
Dipavamsa and
Mahavamsa composed in the 4th century and 6th century respectively. Its sinicized name is Ling-yang which had been mentioned in the
Chinese accounts between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD. The two Wu envoys took notes about a place named Ling-yang in AD 220. After subdued by Burmese refugees in 1057 AD and Thai refugees in 1287 AD, Ramaññadesa, centered at
Pegu as its capital, and being referred as the
Mon Kingdom of Peguans (Hanthawadi) by the 14th and 15th centuries notes of Sri Lankan and Europeans, decreased by lower Burma only which is annexed by the Burmese king
Alaungpaya in 1757 AD. == Critics ==