Achievement Showcase
Toungoo Taungoo Empire is a nation led by 9this President U Thein Sein on the continent of South America. Toungoo Taungoo Empire's government is a Absolute Monarchy with very conservative social policies. Economically, Toungoo Taungoo Empire favors left wing policies. The official currency of Toungoo Taungoo Empire is the Antarctica$. At 158 days old, Toungoo Taungoo Empire is a mature nation. Toungoo Taungoo Empire has a population of 3,967,990 and a land area of 30,000.00 sq. miles. This gives it a national average population density of 132.27. Pollution in the nation is almost non-existent. The citizens' faith in the government is completely depleted with an approval rating of 0%.
Capital city:Nay Pyi Taw
Largest city:Yangon:
Burmese alphabet :
Ethnic groups:8-KaChin,KaYar,KaYin,Chin,Bamar,Mon,RaKhine,Shan
Bamar
Flag of the Dobama Asiayone (1935)
A 1912 painting depicts members of the Bamar court in royal attire paying homage to the
KaYin
Flag of the Karen National Unionwidge
Karen woman in traditional attire, 1912
Rakhine
Flag of the Rakhine State
A Rakhine girl tosses water at revelers during the Thingyan.
Shan
National flag of the Shan people
Mon
Mon girl wearing traditional dress in
Chin
Chin women
Kachin
Kachin women in traditional dress
Figurines representing the nine Kachin subgroups
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Bagan:
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Military
Soilders.Motto(s)
ရဲသော်မသေ၊ သေသော်ငရဲမလား။ ("If you are brave, you will not die, and if you die, hell will not come to you.")
ရဲရဲတက်၊ ရဲရဲတိုက်၊ ရဲရဲချေမှုန်း။ ("Bravely charge, bravely fight, and bravely annihilate.")
တပ်နှင့်ပြည်သူမြဲကြည်ဖြူ သွေးခွဲလာသူတို့ရန်သူ။ ("Military and the people in eternal unity, anyone attempting to divide them is our enemy.")
Flag Of Myanmar Military
Commander-in-Chief (Army)
Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
Deputy Commander-in-Chief (Army)
Vice-Senior General Soe Win
Spokesperson of the Commander-in-Chief (Army)
Zaw Min Tun
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.• Pagan era
el Pagan Empire c. 1210.
Kingdom of Pagan
ပုဂံခေတ်
23 December 849။
Population | |
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Pagan Empire c. 1210. Pagan Empire during Sithu II's reign. Kengtung and Chiang Mai are also claimed to be part of the Empire according to the Burmese chronicles. Pagan incorporated key ports of Lower Burma into its core administration by the 13th century. | |
Status | Kingdom |
Capital | Pagan (Bagan) (849–1297) |
Common languages | Old Burmese, Mon, Pyu |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism, Hinduism, Animism |
Government | Monarchy |
• 1044–77 | Anawrahta |
• 1084–1112 | Kyansittha |
• 1112–67 | Sithu I |
• 1174–1211 | Sithu II |
• 1256–87 | Narathihapate |
Legislature | None (rule by decree) (before King Htilominlo) Hluttaw (after King Htilominlo) |
Historical era | Middle Ages |
23 March 640 | |
23 December 849 | |
• creation of Burmese alphabet | 984 and 1035 |
1050s–60s | |
• Peak | 1174–1250 |
1277–87 | |
17 December 1297 | |
1300–01 | |
• c. 1210 | 1.5 to 2 million |
Currency | silver kyat |
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• Taungoo era
16 October 1510။
Toungoo Empire at its greatest extent (1580)
The restored Taungoo or Nyaungyan Dynasty c. 1650
Population | |
---|---|
Capital | Toungoo (Taungoo) (1510–39) Pegu (Bago) (1539–99) Ava (Inwa) (1599–1613) Pegu (Bago) (1613–35) Ava (Inwa) (1635–1752) |
Common languages | Official show Regional |
Religion | Official show Minority |
Government | Absolute Monarchy |
• 1485-1530 | Mingyi Nyo |
• 1530–50 | Tabinshwehti |
• 1550–81 | Bayinnaung |
• 1605–28 | Anaukpetlun |
• 1629–48 | Thalun |
• 1733–52 | Mahadhammaraza Dipadi |
Legislature | Hluttaw |
History | |
• Founding of dynasty | 1485 |
• Independence from Ava | 16 October 1510 |
1510–1599 | |
1599–1752 | |
• End of dynasty | 23 March 1752 |
• Census | 1,982,000 - 2,313,000[citation needed] |
Currency | Ganza kyat and silver kyat |
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• Konbaung era
Konbaung Empire
ကုန်းဘောင်ဧကရာဇ်နိုင်ငံတော် (Burmese)
29 February 1752။
Konbaung Empire in 1824
Konbaung Empire in 1767
Area | |
---|---|
Population | |
Capital | |
Common languages | Burmese |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism (official) |
Demonym(s) | Burmese |
Government | Absolute monarchy |
Monarch | |
• 1752–1760 | Alaungpaya (first) |
• 1763–1776 | Hsinbyushin |
• 1782–1819 | Bodawpaya |
• 1853–1878 | Mindon Min |
• 1878–1885 | Thibaw (last) |
Legislature | Hluttaw |
Historical era | Early modern period |
• Founding of dynasty | 29 February 1752 |
• Reunification of Burma | 1752–1757 |
1759–1812, 1849–1855 | |
1765–1769 | |
• Conquest of Arakan | 1785 |
1824–1826, 1852, 1885 | |
• End of dynasty | 29 November 1885 |
1824[7] | 794,000 km2 (307,000 sq mi) |
• 1824 | 3,000,000[8] |
Currency | kyat (from 1852) |
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• Colonial era
1 January 1886။
British Burma
(1824–1886)
ဗြိတိသျှဘားမား (Burmese)
byaitish bharrmarr
Top: Official Flag
Bottom: National Flag (1939–1948)
A Japanese Map of British Burma in 1943
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• Independence from the United Kingdom
4 January 1948။
• Independence from the United Kingdom
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• 1962 coup d'état
2 March 1962။
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• 1988 coup d'état
18 September 1988။
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• Current constitution
31 January 2011။
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• 2021 coup d'état
1 February 2021။
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Population | |
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• 2022 estimate | 55,770,232[11] (26th) |
• Density | 196.8/sq mi (76.0/km2) (125th) |
GDP (PPP) | 2024 estimate |
• Total | $283.572 billion[12] (64th) |
• Per capita | $5,200[13] (146th) |
GDP (nominal) | 2024 estimate |
• Total | $68.006 billion[14] (87th) |
• Per capita | $1,250[15] (167th) |
Gini (2017) | 30.7[16] medium inequality (106th) |
HDI (2022) | 0.608[17] medium (144th) |
Currency | Kyat (K) (MMK) |
Time zone | UTC+06:30 (MMT) |
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Points of Interest & Landmarks (137)
Sacred & Religious Sites (241)
Private Sightseeing Tours (213)
These rankings are informed by Tripadvisor data—we consider traveller reviews, ratings, number of page views, and user location.
Religious Sites
Historic Sites
An area of 42 sq km houses thousands of richly decorated pagodas & temples.
Beaches
By KCMyint
Bodies of Water
By koz403
I saw some fishermen rowing boats with the legs.
Flea & Street Markets
Architectural Buildings
By devina1991
Lookouts
By suwandi88
Mountains
This extinct volcano contains the shrine of the Mahagiri Nat spirits.
Religious Sites
By 61gaild
10. National Kandawgyi Botanical Gardens
National Parks
This copy of London's Kew Gardens was built in 1917.
Points of Interest & Landmarks
By 645lasithag
Religious Sites
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U Bein Bridge | |
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Characteristics | |
History | |
Location | |
U Bein Bridge | |
Coordinates | 21°53′29″N 96°3′22″E |
Carries | 1 Lane |
Crosses | Taungthaman Lake |
Locale | Amarapura Township, Myanmar |
Official name | U Bein Bridge, Amarapura |
Other name(s) | Taungthaman Bridge |
Design | Wooden Foot Bridge (Teak Bridge) |
Total length | Foot bridge 3,967 ft (1,209 m) or 482 spans or 0.75 miles (1.2 km) (total bridge) (1086 posts) |
Width | 1 traffic lane |
Construction start | 1849 |
Construction end | 1851 |
|
The bridge was built from wood reclaimed from the former royal palace in Inwa. It features 1,086 pillars that stretch out of the water, some of which have been replaced with concrete. Though the bridge largely remains intact, there are fears that an increasing number of the pillars are becoming dangerously decayed. Some have become entirely detached from their bases and only remain in place because of the lateral bars holding them together. Damage to these supports have been caused by flooding as well as a fish breeding program introduced into the lake which has caused the water to become stagnant. The Ministry of Culture’s Department of Archaeology, National Museum and Library plans to carry out repairs when plans for the work are finalised.[1]
From 1 April 2009, eight police force personnel have been deployed to guard the bridge. Their presence is aimed at reducing anti-social behaviour and preventing criminal activities, with the first arrest coming in September 2013 when two men were reported for harassing tourists.[8]
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Inle Lake | |
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Ramsar Wetland | |
Inle Lake | |
Location | Shan State |
Coordinates | 20°33′N 96°55′E |
Type | Polymictic lake |
Primary outflows | Nam Pilu |
Basin countries | Myanmar |
Surface area | 44.9 sq mi (116 km2) |
Average depth | 5 ft (1.5 m) (dry season) |
Max. depth | 12 ft (3.7 m) (dry season; +5 ft in monsoon season) |
Surface elevation | 2,900 ft (880 m) |
Official name | Inlay Lake Ramsar Site |
Designated | 5 December 1974 |
Reference no. | 2356[1] |
Inle Lake
Location of Inle Lake
The watershed area for the lake lies to a large extent to the north and west of the lake. The lake drains through the Nam Pilu or Balu Chaung on its southern end. There is also a hot spring on its northwestern shore.
Large sections of the lake are covered by floating plants. Its clear and slightly alkaline waters (pH 7.8–8) are home to a diverse fauna and many species found nowhere else in the world (endemics).[2] There are more than 35 native species of fish, including 17 endemics. Some of these, notably the Sawbwa barb, red dwarf rasbora, emerald dwarf rasbora, Lake Inle danio, Inle loach and the Inle snakehead, are of minor commercial importance for the aquarium trade. Several fish that are not native have been introduced.[2][3] Additionally, the lake is home to about 45 species of freshwater snails, 30 of them endemic,[2] along with a small endemic freshwater crab, Inlethelphusa acanthica.[4] It hosts approximately 20,000 migratory gulls in November to January.[5]
In June 2015, it became Myanmar's first designated place of World Network of Biosphere Reserves.[6] It was one of 20 places added at the Unesco's 27th Man and the Biosphere (MAB) International Coordinating Council (ICC) meeting.[7] Since 2018 it has been designated as a protected Ramsar site.[1] Today the lake's environment is under serious pressure due to pollution, siltation, eutrophication, overfishing and introduced species, including the highly invasive water hyacinth. The endemic predatory fish Systomus compressiformis might already be extinct.[2]
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