Kale Kye-Taung Nyo

Kale Kye-Taung Nyo
ကလေး ကျေးတောင် ညို
King of Ava
Reignby 9 November 1425 – 16 May 1426
PredecessorMin Hla
SuccessorMohnyin Thado
Chief MinistersBaya Gamani and Yazathingyan[note 1]
Governor of Kale (Kalay)
Reignc. December 1406 – November 1425
PredecessorAnawrahta (acting)
SuccessorShan Say-Hu[1]
MonarchMinkhaung I (1406–1421)
Thihathu (1421–1425)
Min Hla (1425)
Bornc. 10 October 1385
Tuesday, c. 7th waxing of Tazaungmon 747 ME
Ava (Inwa)
Ava Kingdom
Diedc. late May 1426 (aged 40)
c. late Nayon 788 ME
Pe-Lun Taung, Shwesettaw
Ava Kingdom
SpousesSaw Nant-tha (1400s–?)
Shin Bo-Me (1425–1426)
HousePinya
FatherTarabya
MotherMin Hla Myat
ReligionTheravada Buddhism

Kale Kye-Taung Nyo (Burmese: ကလေး ကျေးတောင် ညို, [kəlé tɕédàʊɰ̃ɲò]; also spelled Kale Kyetaungnyo or Kalekyetaungnyo;[note 2] 1385–1426) Tai name Hso Kyaing Hpa (သိူဝ်ၸႅင်ႈၾႃႉ) was king of Ava from 1425 to 1426, and governor of Kale Kye-Taung (Kalay) from 1406 to 1425. A top military commander during the reigns of kings Minkhaung I and Thihathu of Ava, Prince Min Nyo came to power in 1425 by overthrowing his eight-year-old nephew King Min Hla with the help of his lover Queen Shin Bo-Me. But Nyo himself was overthrown less than seven months later in 1426 by his fellow senior commander and long-time rival Gov. Thado of Mohnyin.

The eldest son of King Tarabya of Ava, Prince Nyo was the heir presumptive during his father's brief reign in 1400. He did not succeed to the throne but became a son-in-law of the successor, his half-uncle King Minkhaung I (r. 1400–1421), who in 1406 sent him to govern Kale, a remote Shan state in the northwest. The prince proved a loyal and able vassal, keeping the frontier region quiet while leading several campaigns in Ava's long running war against Hanthawaddy Pegu between 1408 and 1423. Nyo and Thado rose to be the deputy commanders-in-chief in 1412, and after the death of Crown Prince Minye Kyawswa in 1415, the duo became the leading commanders of the Ava military.

Nyo was initially loyal to Minkhaung's successor King Thihathu (r. 1421–1425). After having led the successful 1422–1423 campaign against Pegu, he quietly turned against his half-cousin the king, who spent much of his time away from the palace. The prince became involved with Bo-Me, a disenchanted queen of Thihathu, and the couple managed to have Thihathu assassinated in 1425. Three months later, Bo-Me's faction assassinated Thihathu's successor Min Hla, and placed Nyo on the throne.

The new king never had firm control beyond the Ava (Inwa) capital region. He received only tepid support from the vassals in the south, and almost no support in the north where his rival Thado was based. After losing the subsequent brief civil war, Nyo and Bo-Me fled the capital in 1426, and he died on the run a few days later. Like his father, Nyo reigned less than seven months. He is sometimes referred to as the last king of the founding dynasty of Ava.


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  1. ^ Yazawin Thit Vol. 1 2012: 225, footnote 3