词条 | Kehsi Mansam |
释义 |
|native_name = |conventional_long_name =Kehsi Mansam (Kyithi Bansan) |common_name = Kehsi Mansam State |nation = the Shan States |subdivision = State |era = |year_start = 1860 |date_start = |event_start= Independent from Hsenwi |year_end = 1959 |date_end = |event_end= Abdication of the last Myoza |event1 = |date_event1 = |p1 =Hsenwi State |s1 =Shan State |flag_p1 = |flag_s1 = Flag of the Shan State.svg |image_flag = |image_coat = |image_map =Shan States-Map.png |image_map_caption = Kehsi Mansam State in a map of the Shan States |capital = Kehsi |stat_area1 = 1017 |stat_year1 =1901 |stat_pop1 =22062 |footnotes = }}Kehsi Mansam (also known as Kehsi Mangam and as Kyithi Bansan) was a Shan state in what is today Burma. It belonged to the Eastern Division of the Southern Shan States. Its capital was Kehsi town, located by the Nam Heng River. The state included 378 villages and the population was mostly Shan, but there were also some Palaung people (Yins) in the area[1] HistoryKehsi Mansam became independent from Hsenwi State in 1860. It was a tributary of Burma until 1887, when the Shan states submitted to British rule after the fall of the Konbaung dynasty. Kehsi Mansam included the small substate of Kenglon (Kenglön), located in the southeastern part and almost totally encircled by Kehsi Mansam. In 1926 Kenglon State was incorporated into Kehsi Mansam.[2] RulersThe rulers of the state bore the title Myoza.[3]
References1. ^Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 15, p. 196. 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.zum.de/whkmla/region/seasia/xshan.html|title=WHKMLA : History of the Shan States|date=18 May 2010|accessdate=21 December 2010}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Myanmar_shankaren.html|title=World Statesmen.org: Shan and Karenni States of Burma|author=Ben Cahoon|year=2000|accessdate=21 December 2010}} External links
1 : Shan States |
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