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To help you learn more about Myanmar, we provide the comprehensive and educational history resource from the early establishment to the recent development of Myanmar. We continue making research and gathering the information to make for a hub of Myanmar history guide. You will get all and more by clicking the sections below.
MYANMAR HISTORY
• Mon Tai Shan • British rule
• Pyu • World War II and Japan
• Pagan Kingdom • Japanese surrender
• Ava and Pegu • Independent Burma
• Toungoo Dynasties • Military Era I
• Konbaung Dynasty • Military Era II
• War with Britain  
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Pagan Kingdom
 
THE PAGAN KINGDOM
To the north another group of people, the Bamar, also began to settle in the area. By 849, they had founded a powerful kingdom centred on the city of Pagan (spelled Bagan today) filling the void left by the Pyu. The kingdom grew in relative isolation until the reign of Anawrahta (1044-77) who successfully unified all of Myanmar by defeating the Mon city of Thaton in 1057. Consolidation was accomplished under his successors Kyanzittha (1084–1112) and Alaungsithu (1112-67), so that by the mid-12th century, most of continental Southeast Asia was under the control of either the Pagan Kingdom or the Khmer Empire. The Pagan kingdom went into decline as more land and resources fell into the hands of the powerful Sangha (monkhood) and the Mongols threatened from the north. The last true ruler of Pagan, Narathihapate (1254-87) felt confident in his ability to resist the Mongols and advanced into Yunnan in 1277 to make war upon them. He was thoroughly crushed at the Battle of Ngasaunggyan, and Pagan resistance virtually collapsed. The king was assassinated by his own son in 1287, precipitating a Mongol invasion in the Battle of Pagan; the Mongols successfully captured most of the empire, including its capital, and ended the dynasty in 1289 when they installed a puppet ruler in Myanmar.