Nyaungyan Min

Nyaungyan Min
ညောင်ရမ်းမင်း
King of Toungoo
King of Burma
Reign19 December 1599 – 5 November 1605
Coronation25 February 1600
PredecessorNanda
SuccessorAnaukpetlun
Chief MinistersMaha Okka Dhamma and Maha Okka Thena
King of Ava
Reign19 April 1597 – 19 December 1599
PredecessorBaya Yawda and Let-Yway-Gyi Myin-Hmu (Co-Administrators)
SuccessorHimself (as King of Toungoo)
Born8 November 1555
Friday, 11th waning of Tazaungmon 917 ME
Pegu (Bago)
Died5 November 1605(1605-11-05) (aged 49)
Saturday, 11th waning of Tazaungmon 967 ME
near Hsipaw (Thibaw)
Burial7 November 1605
Sandamuni Pagoda, Ava (Inwa)
ConsortThiri Maha Dhamma Yaza Dipadi Dewi
Khin Me, the daughter of Min Letya and the great granddaughter of Tabinshwehti
Issue
among others...
Anaukpetlun
Thalun
Names
Thiha Thura Dhamma Yaza
HouseToungoo
FatherBayinnaung
MotherKhin Pyezon
ReligionTheravada Buddhism

Nyaungyan Min (Burmese: ညောင်ရမ်းမင်း [ɲàʊɰ̃jáɰ̃ mɪ́ɰ̃]; 8 November 1555 – 5 November [O.S. 26 October] 1605) was king of the Toungoo dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1599 to 1605. He is also referred to as the founder of the restored Toungoo dynasty or Nyaungyan dynasty for starting the reunification process following the collapse of the First Toungoo Empire.

A son of King Bayinnaung by a minor queen, Nyaungyan gradually emerged as a power in Upper Burma in the mid-1590s. When major vassal rulers renounced their ties with King Nanda in 1597, he too broke away by seizing Ava (Inwa). But he stayed out of myriad wars in the low country. Instead, he methodically consolidated his base in the upcountry, and went on to acquire the surrounding cis-Salween Shan states until his death in 1605. He also rebuilt the economy of Upper Burma, and (re-)established several social, financial and military standards, many of which would be retained to the end of the Toungoo dynasty in 1752. His efforts paved the way for his eldest son and successor Anaukpetlun to restore major portions of the Toungoo Empire in the next two decades.