Naranu Min Khayi ‹See Tfd›မင်းခရီ Ali Khan (အလီခင်) | |
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King of Arakan | |
Reign | 9 May 1433 – c. January 1459 |
Predecessor | Saw Mon |
Successor | Ba Saw Phyu |
Born | c. March 1392 Tuesday, c. Late Tagu 753 ME Launggyet |
Died | c. January 1459 (aged 66) c. Tabodwe 820 ME Mrauk-U |
Consort | Saw Pa-Ba Saw Pyinsa Saw Yin Mi Saw Khamout |
Issue | Saw San-Me Ba Saw Phyu Ba Saw Nyo Min Swe of Launggyet |
Father | Razathu II[1] |
Mother | Saw Hla Mway |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
Min Khayi (Burmese: မင်းခရီ, Burmese pronunciation: [mɪ́ɴ kʰəjì]; also spelled Meng Khari, Arakanese pronunciation: [máɴ kʰəɹì]; also known as Ali Khan; 1392–1459) was the second king of the Mrauk-U Kingdom from 1433 to 1459.
He began his reign as a vassal of the Bengal Sultanate, and successfully unified the entire Arakan coastline (present-day Rakhine State) in 1437. He then took full advantage of the political turmoil in Bengal by seizing Ramu, the southernmost territory of his erstwhile overlord,[2][3] and raiding as far north as Chittagong.[4] In 1455, his kingdom finally achieved recognition by Ava, which had long interfered in the affairs of Arakan, as a sovereign state.[5] His 25-year reign brought much needed stability to the Arakan littoral, and prepared his nascent kingdom for future expansions by his successors.[3]
The earliest extant work of Arakanese literature in Burmese script, Rakhine Minthami Eigyin was composed during his reign in 1455.[6]
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