Tarabya of Toungoo

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Reignc. April 1440 – 2 January 1446
PredecessorSaw Oo II
SuccessorMinkhaung I
Tarabya of Toungoo
တောင်ငူ တရဖျား
Viceroy of Toungoo
Reignc. April 1440 – 2 January 1446
PredecessorSaw Oo II
SuccessorMinkhaung I
MonarchMinye Kyawswa I
Governor of Yanaung
Reignc. May 1439 – c. April 1440
MonarchMinye Kyawswa I
Governor of Amyint
Reignc. February 1434 – c. May 1439
MonarchMohnyin Thado (1434−39)
Minye Kyawswa I (1439)
Bornc. 1390s
Died2 January 1446
6th waxing of Tabodwe 807 ME[note 1]
Toungoo (Taungoo)
IssueMinkhaung I
FatherTarabya I of Pakhan
ReligionTheravada Buddhism

Tarabya of Toungoo (Burmese: တောင်ငူ တရဖျား, pronounced [tàʊɴŋù təɹəbjá]) was viceroy of Toungoo from 1440 to 1446. Prior to Toungoo, he had held governorships at Amyint and Yanaung.

He was a son of Gov. Tarabya I of Pakhan, and younger brother of Queen Saw Min Hla.[1] He was appointed governor of Amyint with the title of Tarabya in early 1434 by King Mohnyin Thado.[note 2] In 1439, King Minye Kyawswa I succeeded the Ava throne, and appointed Tarabya governor of the strategic town of Yanaung in the Prome region as a step to regain Toungoo which had been in revolt since 1426.[2]

In 1440,[note 3] Tarabya partook in the Ava expedition to Toungoo that retook the region. For his success, Tarabya was appointed viceroy of Toungoo.[2]

According to the Toungoo Yazawin chronicle, a court astrologer predicted in 1442 that the viceroy would die at midnight on 5th waxing of Tabodwe 807 ME (1 January 1446). Angered by the prediction, he sent the astrologer to jail. The chronicle continues that the viceroy died at the midnight of 1 January 1446 as he was taking a shower.[3] His son Minkhaung succeeded, and freed the astrologer from jail.[4]

Tarabya ruled for nearly six years.[3] Tarabya was a brother-in-law of Crown Prince Minye Kyawswa of the Forty Years' War fame. Moreover, starting with the Maha Yazawin chronicle, all royal chronicles identify Tarabya of Toungoo as an ancestor (paternal great-great-great grandfather) of King Bayinnaung of Toungoo Dynasty.[5]

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