Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The fall of Mandalay
- 1 Kings and distant wars
- 2 The Irrawaddy valley in the early nineteenth century
- 3 The Court of Ava
- 4 Empire and identity
- 5 The grand reforms of King Mindon
- 6 Revolt and the coming of British rule
- 7 Reformists and royalists at the court of King Thibaw
- 8 War and occupation
- 9 A colonial society
- Conclusion: The making of modern Burma
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction: The fall of Mandalay
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The fall of Mandalay
- 1 Kings and distant wars
- 2 The Irrawaddy valley in the early nineteenth century
- 3 The Court of Ava
- 4 Empire and identity
- 5 The grand reforms of King Mindon
- 6 Revolt and the coming of British rule
- 7 Reformists and royalists at the court of King Thibaw
- 8 War and occupation
- 9 A colonial society
- Conclusion: The making of modern Burma
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Late in the afternoon, on 29 November 1885, King Thibaw of Burma appeared at the steps of his summer palace, holding the hand of his queen and half-sister Supayalat. The evening before, a British expeditionary force under the command of General Sir Harry Prendergast had entered Mandalay unopposed and had ordered the king's immediate and unconditional surrender. A request to remain in the city for another day had been rejected by General Prendergast and, instead, Thibaw was given a few more hours to collect his possessions and leave his kingdom forever. And so, after a brief interview with the gentleman from The Times, the last of the Konbaung monarchs abdicated his throne and began his journey into exile.
Thibaw and Supayalat were accompanied by their three young daughters and other close family, as well as by several ministers of state and an entourage of servants carrying trunks full of treasure and royal costumes. Riding in an ordinary ox-drawn carriage, they slowly made their way out though the Kyaw Moe gate to the south and then towards the steamer Thooreah anchored in the Irrawaddy river three miles away. Several hundred British soldiers, men of the 67th Hampshire Regiment, escorted the royal party as they emerged unceremoniously from the walled city and proceeded through the thick crowds of ordinary people who had gathered to watch. As Thibaw made his way past, the townspeople seemed only then to realise that he was being taken away. Thousands prostrated themselves on the ground alongside the road to the pier. Some cried out and several stones and clumps of earth were thrown at the scarlet-coated troops marching alongside the carriage.
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- The Making of Modern Burma , pp. 1 - 11Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001