Myat Phaya Galay

Myat Phaya Galay
H.R.H. Princess Ashin Hteik Suhpaya Mayat Phaya Galay
Born25 April 1887
Ratnagiri, Bombay Presidency, British India
Died3 March 1936 (1936-03-04) (aged 48)
Moulmein, British Burma
Spouse
Ko Ko Naing
(m. 1920; died 1959)
Issue4 sons, 2 daughters:
HouseRoyal House of Konbaung
FatherThibaw Min
MotherSupayalat
ReligionTheravada Buddhism

Princess Myat Phaya Galay (Burmese: မြတ်ဖုရားကလေး; 25 April 1887 – 3 March 1936) was a Burmese royal princess and senior member of the Royal House of Konbaung. She was the fourth daughter of the last ruling king of Burma, King Thibaw, and his queen Supayalat.[1]

Biography

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Myat Phaya Galay was born on 25 April 1887 in Ratnagiri, British India, where the royals had been coerced by British authority to relocate to. She returned to Burma from Ratnagiri in 1915, and ordered to reside in Moulmein in 1932.

The princess was fluent in English and acted as the royal family's spokesperson airing their grievances in a document called Sadutta thamidaw ayeidawbon sadan (စတုတ္ထသမီးတော်အရေးတော်ပုံစာတမ်း The Fourth Royal Daughter Crisis Document); she was sent away by the colonial government to live in Moulmein where she spent the rest of her days.

Myat Phaya Galay was called "Rebel Princess" by the British as she wrote a manifesto demanding the return of her father's kingdom and the royal gems and jewelry taken in their annexation of the country. She was the author of "Private affairs by H.R.H. the fourth Princess, daughter of the late H.M. King Thibaw and his crowned Queen of Burma whose inner facts are unknown to the public" (1931).[2][3] She stirred up in the early 1930s by making a dramatic bid for the return of her father's kingdom. The British government came down like a sledgehammer and attempted to muzzle her by exiling her and her family to Moulmein, in Lower Burma. Here, distant from the influences and energy of the city that had been her father's capital, they hoped she would quietly settle down and not cause any more trouble.[4]

Myat Phaya Galay died at her mansion on West Cantonment Road, Moulmein on 3 March 1936 and her husband died in Rangoon in 1959. It was in Moulmein that the princess met an untimely death that raised many suspicions.[4] Her tomb is located near Kyaik Than Lan Pagoda, Moulmein (present-day Mawlamyine).

Marriage and issue

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Myat Phaya Galay married Ko Ko Naing, a former monk, in Rangoon on 1 July 1920. They had four sons and two daughters:

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References

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  1. ^ "In search of princess Phaya: Looking for Myanmar's forgotten royals in Ratnagiri". Hindustan Times. 25 February 2017.
  2. ^ Slow, Oliver. "Bringing home the king". Frontier Myanmar. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  3. ^ "In memory of Myat Phaya Galay, a princess of a woman". The Myanmar Times. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  4. ^ a b "The reign and banishment of burma's final monarch". Bangkok Post. 24 February 2013.