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Volumn 42, Issue 1, 2011, Pages 1-16

A tale of two kingdoms: Ava and Pegu in the fifteenth century

Author keywords

[No Author keywords available]

Indexed keywords

ETHNICITY; GEOPOLITICS; HEGEMONY; HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY; SOCIAL HISTORY;

EID: 79952928156     PISSN: 00224634     EISSN: 14740680     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S0022463410000512     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (11)

References (24)
  • 2
    • 79952953916 scopus 로고
    • 2nd edn (New York: Knopf)
    • I am aware of the large amount of scholarship that has successfully questioned some of the negative images of the 'medieval' world during the past several decades in the field of European history. For a good, representative example, see Brian Tierney's The Middle Ages, 2nd edn (New York: Knopf, 1974). But that kind of scholarship has yet to influence 'Burma' studies.
    • (1974) The Middle Ages
    • Tierney, B.1
  • 7
    • 84898191728 scopus 로고
    • Spirals in Burmese and early Southeast Asian history
    • Michael Aung-Thwin, 'Spirals in Burmese and early Southeast Asian history', Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 21, 4 (1991): 575-602.
    • (1991) Journal of Interdisciplinary History , vol.21 , Issue.4 , pp. 575-602
    • Aung-Thwin, M.1
  • 10
    • 84902912839 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • New Haven: Yale University Agrarian Studies Series
    • This is clearly contrary to the most recent work of James C. Scott, The art of not being governed: An anarchist history of Upland Southeast Asia (New Haven: Yale University Agrarian Studies Series, 2009). It argues for populations headed in the opposite direction; that is, away from the centres. That notion is quite contrary to the best primary evidence we have on the situation, where, if people fled at all, it was during enemy attack, and even then, they fled to other centres, not to the hills. And data he used as 'evidence' for flight during normal times in Myanmar were actually references to changing one's occupation from (say) crown service to non-crown service, not geographical flight from the centre to the periphery. Scott's treatment is an example par excellence of what I have earlier called 'privileging the periphery'.
    • (2009) The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia
    • Scott, J.C.1
  • 11
    • 33845331771 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Military technology transfers from Ming China and the emergence of Northern Mainland Southeast Asia (c. 1390-1527)
    • DOI 10.1017/S0022463403000456
    • Laichen Sun, 'Military technology transfers from Ming China and the emergence of northern mainland Southeast Asia (c. 1390-1527)', Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 34, 3 (2003): 495-517. (Pubitemid 44867129)
    • (2003) Journal of Southeast Asian Studies , vol.34 , Issue.3 , pp. 495-517
    • Sun, L.1
  • 13
    • 84902398242 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press)
    • For a recent, scholarly, and comprehensive treatment of this region, one should consult Leonard Y. Andaya, Leaves of the same tree: Trade and ethnicity in the Straits of Melaka (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2008). There are others who have dealt with this maritime region and period in Asia, all of whom cannot be cited here.
    • (2008) Leaves of the Same Tree: Trade and Ethnicity in the Straits of Melaka
    • Andaya, L.Y.1
  • 15
    • 0003647654 scopus 로고
    • Baltimore, MD: Penguin Books
    • Romila Tharpar, A history of India, vol. I (Baltimore, MD: Penguin Books, 1966).
    • (1966) A History of India , vol.1
    • Tharpar, R.1
  • 16
    • 79952923325 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • I use the term 'Second Pegu/Toungoo Dynasty' deliberately, whose rationale is contained the next note
    • I use the term 'Second Pegu/Toungoo Dynasty' deliberately, whose rationale is contained the next note.
  • 17
    • 79952912259 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • That decision by the Toungoo leadership to make Pegu its capital inadvertently creates a modern historiographic issue which raises the question of whether this dynasty should be called the 'Toungoo Dynasty' and period, the current convention in the Western historiography of Myanmar. It also raises the question of whether 'its' successor, the Second Ava Dynasty (as the chronicles had it) should therefore be called the 'Later' or 'Restored Toungoo' Dynasty, terms used by D.G.E. Hall and Victor Lieberman, respectively. Yet, neither appellation ('Later' or 'Restored Toungoo') can be found in indigenous historiography for that dynasty. There, it is called the 'Second Ava Dynasty'. The reason for these two different perspectives is the criterion each considers valid in naming dynasties and organising Myanmar's history. In the Western historiography of Myanmar, genealogy is the ultimate criterion, whereas for indigenous chroniclers, it is sacred place. The term 'Later' and/or 'Restored' Toungoo Dynasty was used because it was begun by a member of Bayinnaung's royal family (hence, genealogical). The second, in contrast, was determined by the perceived visit of the Buddha to Ava. Any dynasty that rules from such a Buddha-prophesied city was given the name of that city regardless of who founded it. And because Ava became the seat of such a dynasty for the second time, the Burmese chronicles called it the 'Second Ava Dynasty'. Since the differences in the criteria for naming dynasties, in turn, directly affect the organising of Myanmar's history into distinct periods (and hence, the way we understand, analyse and write about that history), the question that remains for us historians is whether our (exogenous) criteria should ignore and pre-empt their (indigenous) criteria in the conceptualisation and organisation of what is essentially their history
  • 18
    • 84974284440 scopus 로고
    • An age of commerce in Southeast Asia? Problems of regional coherence - A review article
    • For an extended and detailed critique of the 'watershed' thesis, see Victor Lieberman, 'An age of commerce in Southeast Asia? Problems of regional coherence - A review article', Journal of Asian Studies, 54, 3 (1995): 796-807.
    • (1995) Journal of Asian Studies , vol.54 , Issue.3 , pp. 796-807
    • Lieberman, V.1
  • 19
    • 79952906461 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • I use 1942 as the date for the effective end of British rule when the Japanese and Myanmar nationalist forces drove the colonial forces out of the country
    • I use 1942 as the date for the effective end of British rule when the Japanese and Myanmar nationalist forces drove the colonial forces out of the country.
  • 20
    • 79952922522 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Of course, the number of years given depends on how one counts: beginning with the First Anglo-Burmese War of 1824-26 and ending with 1948 at formal independence, or beginning with 1885-86 at complete annexation and ending with 1942 when the Japanese invaded. I am using the latter.
  • 21
    • 79952965784 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. Michael Aung-Thwin, trans. Than Than Win, University of Hawai'i Center for Southeast Asian Studies Translation Series (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Center for Southeast Asian Studies)
    • See the 'introduction' to Ma Ma Lay's Blood bond, ed. Michael Aung-Thwin, trans. Than Than Win, University of Hawai'i Center for Southeast Asian Studies Translation Series (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 2004), pp. 4-10.
    • (2004) Blood Bond , pp. 4-10
    • Lay, M.M.1
  • 23
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    • 1948 and Burma's myth of independence
    • ed. Josef Silverstein (Ithaca: Cornell University Press)
    • I consider the coup of 1962, amongst other things, an expression of the desire to reject certain Western modernisms and a return to traditional norms, while at the same time to invoke other modernisms such as 'revolution' and 'socialism'. See Michael Aung-Thwin, '1948 and Burma's myth of independence',in Independent Burma at forty years: Six assessments, ed. Josef Silverstein (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1989), pp. 19-34.
    • (1989) Independent Burma at Forty Years: Six Assessments , pp. 19-34
    • Aung-Thwin, M.1
  • 24
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    • note
    • The image created of the Myanmar government today by the Western media, even the vocabulary and some of the phrases used, are nearly synonymous with those found during the nineteenth century in the Western language media and British government reports regarding the Burmese monarchy. This is no mere accident; it is part of the demonisation process of 'the Other', invariably found in colonial (and in this case, neo-colonial) situations.


* 이 정보는 Elsevier사의 SCOPUS DB에서 KISTI가 분석하여 추출한 것입니다.