Thihapate II of Taungdwin သက်တော်ရှည် သီဟပတေ့ | |
---|---|
Governor of Taungdwin | |
Reign | by 1364 – c. 1401 |
Predecessor | Thihapate I of Taungdwin |
Successor | Thihapate III of Taungdwin |
Monarch | Narathu of Pinya (?–1364?) Uzana II of Pinya (1364) Thado Minbya (1366–1367) Swa Saw Ke (1367–1400) Tarabya (1400) |
Born | c. 1330s Pinya Kingdom |
Died | ? Ava Kingdom |
Spouse | daughter of Thettawshay of Myinsaing |
Issue | Shin Myat Hla of Ava Thiri Zeya Thura of Pakhan |
House | Pinya |
Father | Thray Sithu |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
Thettawshay Thihapate (Burmese: သက်တော်ရှည် သီဟပတေ့, [θɛʔdɔ̀ʃè θìha̰pətḛ]) was governor of Taungdwin from the 1360s to c. 1401 during the late Pinya and early Ava periods. After Pinya fell to King Thado Minbya of Sagaing in 1364, he became one of several Pinya vassals that refused to submit to the new king, who went on to found the Ava Kingdom in 1365. He finally submitted to Thado Minbya in 1366 after his town came under siege by Ava forces. He became a loyal vassal of Ava afterwards, and participated in Ava's military campaigns to the early 1390s. He was the father of Queen Shin Myat Hla, the chief queen consort of King Mohnyin Thado.