词条 | Hteik Su Phaya Gyi |
释义 |
| honorific_prefix = Princess | name = Hteik Su Phaya Gyi | native_name = {{my|ထိပ်စုဘုရားကြီး}} | image = Royal Princess Hteik Su Phaya Gyi.jpg | alt = | caption = Princess at her home in Yangon | birth_name = | other_names = Su Su Khin, Pwar May | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1923|4|5|df=y}} | birth_place = Rangoon, British Burma {{small|(now Yangon)}} | residence = Yangon, Myanmar | death_date = | death_place = | death_cause = | resting_place = | nationality = | ethnicity = | religion = | known_for = granddaughter of King Thibaw | occupation = | parents = Ko Ko Naing Myat Phaya Galay | spouse = {{marriage|Maung Maung Khin|1943|1984|reason=died}} | children = | relatives = {{plainlist|
}} | alma_mater = | awards = | url = }}Princess Hteik Su Phaya Gyi ({{lang-my|ထိပ်စုဘုရားကြီး}}; born 5 April 1923, also known as Su Su Khin, Pwar May) is a Princess of Burma and most senior member of the Royal House of Konbaung. She is the daughter of Princess Myat Phaya Galay and granddaughter of the last king of Burma Thibaw Min and Supayalat.[1][2] Upon the death of her younger brother Taw Phaya in 2019, she became the last living grandchild of King Thibaw. BiographyHteik Su Phaya Gyi was born on 5 April 1923 in Rangoon, British Burma to parent, Mon royal descendant Ko Ko Naing and Princess Myat Phaya Galay who was the fourth daughter of King Thibaw and Queen Supayalat.[3][4] She spent her elementary school years at Catholic School in Moulmein. She employed at the US and Australian embassies in Rangoon, and later served as private school teacher.[5][6] In 1936, Hteik Su Phaya Gyi was engaged offer by Crown prince of Thailand Ananda Mahidol, brother of Bhumibol Adulyadej. But World War II has started at that time. That time Hteik Su Phaya Gyi was figuratively known "Queen of Thailand".[7] In 1943, she married Maung Maung Khin, brother of Khin Kyi, a wife of Taw Phaya Gyi. Maung Maung Khin died at Rangoon in 1984. She has three sons and two daughters. Being a documentary filmIn 2017, Hteik Su Phaya Gyi and her younger brother Taw Phaya, nephew Soe Win, niece Devi Thant Sin are appearance the main characters of We Were Kings, a documentary film by Alex Bescoby and Max Jones, the film premiered in Mandalay on 4 November 2017 at the Irrawaddy Literary Festival and also screened in Thailand at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand.[8] The film is not only a movie about Myanmar’s history, it is also a film about Burma's royal descendants of the last kings who lived the most unassuming life in modern Myanmar, unrecognised and unknown.[9] FamilyShe has three sons and two daughters:
Ancestry{{ahnentafel|collapsed=yes |align=center |boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc; |boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9; |boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc; |boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc; |boxstyle_5=background-color: #9fe; |1= 1. Hteik Su Phaya Gyi |2= 2. U Ko Ko Naing |3= 3. Mayat Phaya Galay |4= |5= |6= 6. Thibaw Min |7= 7. Supayalat |8= |9= |10= |11= |12= 12. Mindon Min (= 14) |13= 13. Prabha Devi |14= 14. Mindon Min (= 12) |15= 15. Hsinphyuma Shin |16= |17= |18= |19= |20= |21= |22= |23= |24= 24. Tharrawaddy Min (= 28) |25= 25. Chandra Mata Mahay (= 29) |26= 26. Maung Mey |27= |28= 28. Tharrawaddy Min (= 24) |29= 29. Chandra Mata Mahay (= 25) |30= 30. Sagaing Min |31= 31. Rajendra Ratna Devi }} References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.mmtimes.com/index.php/national-news/yangon/8857-lost-kingdom-the-forgotten-royal-family.html|title=Lost Kingdom: The forgotten Royal family|publisher=The Myanmar Times|accessdate=20 August 2018|date=25 November 2013|author=Kelly Macnamara}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com.my/news/regional/2013/11/08/lost-kingdom-myanmar/|title=Lost kingdom: Myanmar's forgotten royals|publisher=The Star (Malaysia)|accessdate=20 August 2018|date=8 November 2013|author=}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://frontiermyanmar.net/en/dinner-the-princess-burma|title=Dinner with the princess of Burma|publisher=Frontier Myanmar|accessdate=20 August 2018|date=19 April 2016|author=Jared Downing}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=https://asia.nikkei.com/Location/Southeast-Asia/Myanmar-Cambodia-Laos/Myanmar-s-living-royals-reclaim-their-past|title=Myanmar's living royals reclaim their past|publisher=The Nikkei|accessdate=20 August 2018|date=2 December 2017|author=Ben Dunant}} 5. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www.royalark.net/Burma/konbau19.htm |title=The Konbaung Dynasty (part 19) |publisher=Royal Ark |date= |accessdate=2012-02-15}} 6. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERUw00ELYH0|title=Interview with Hteik Su Phar Gyi|publisher=MM Cities YouTube Channel|date= |accessdate=}} 7. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.kumudranews.com/news/social/သီေပါမင္းအလြန္-ထိုင္း-ျမ/|title=သီပေါမင်းအလွန် ထိုင်း မြန်မာအနွယ် တော်ဝင်မိသားစုကြား ရွှေလမ်းငွေလမ်းခရီး|work=Kumudra|date=|accessdate=16 January 2018|language=en|deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170929104705/http://www.kumudranews.com/news/social/သီေပါမင္းအလြန္-ထိုင္း-ျမ/|archivedate=31 August 2018|df=}} 8. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.atimes.com/article/right-remember-myanmars-last-king/|title=The right to remember Myanmar’s last king|publisher=Asia Times|date=10 February 2018|accessdate=|author=Jim Pollard}} 9. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.mmtimes.com/news/we-were-kings-burmas-lost-royal-family.html|title=We Were Kings: Burma’s lost royal family|publisher=The Myanmar Times|date=2 November 2017|accessdate=|author=Zuzakar Kalaung}} External links
4 : 1923 births|Konbaung dynasty|Living people|People from Yangon Region |
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