Pagan kingdom

Pagan kingdom
ပုဂံပြည်
849–1287
Pagan empire, c.1210.
Pagan kingdom during Sithu II's reign. Kengtung and Chiang Mai are also claimed to be part of the empire according to the Burmese chronicles. Pagan incorporated key ports of lower Burma into its core administration by the 13th century.
StatusKingdom, Empire
CapitalPagan (849–1287)
Common languagesOld Burmese, Mon, Pyu
Religion
Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism, Hinduism, Animism
GovernmentMonarchy
 1044–1077
Anawrahta
 1084–1112
Kyansittha
 1112–1167
Sithu I
 1174–1211
Sithu II
 1256–1287
Narathihapate
LegislatureNone
Historical eraMiddle Ages
 Burmese calendar begins
23 March 640
 Founding of kingdom
23 December 849
 creation of Burmese alphabet
984 and 1035
1050s–60s
 Peak
1174–1250
1277–87
17 December 1287
1300–01
Population
 c. 1210
1.5 to 2 million
CurrencyKyat
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Pyu city-states
Mon city-states
Yuan dynasty
Myinsaing kingdom
Hanthawaddy kingdom
Möng Mao
Shan States

21°10′20″N 94°51′37″E / 21.17222°N 94.86028°E / 21.17222; 94.86028 The Pagan kingdom (Burmese: ပုဂံပြည် Băgam pyi [bəɡàɰ̃ kʰɪʔ]; lit.'Bagan state'), also known as the Pagan dynasty, was the first Burmese kingdom to unify the regions that would later constitute modern-day Myanmar. Pagan's 250-year rule over the Irrawaddy valley and its periphery laid the foundation for the ascent of Burmese language and culture, the spread of Bamar ethnicity in Upper Myanmar, and the growth of Theravada Buddhism in Myanmar and in mainland Southeast Asia.

The kingdom grew out of a small 9th-century settlement at Pagan (present-day Bagan) by the Mranma people, the predecessor to the modern Bamar ethnicity. Over the next two hundred years, the small principality gradually grew to absorb its surrounding regions until the 1050s and 1060s when King Anawrahta founded the Pagan Empire, presumably for the first time unifying under one polity the Irrawaddy valley and its periphery. By the late 12th century, Anawrahta's successors had extended their influence farther to the south into the upper Malay Peninsula, to the east at least to the Salween river, in the farther north to below the current China border, and to the west, in northern Arakan and the Chin Hills. In the 12th and 13th centuries, Pagan, alongside the Khmer Empire, was one of two main empires in mainland Southeast Asia.

The Burmese language and culture gradually became dominant in the upper Irrawaddy valley, eclipsing the Pyu, Mon and Pali norms by the late 12th century. Theravada Buddhism slowly began to spread to the village level although Vajrayana, Mahayana, Brahmanic, and animist practices remained heavily entrenched at all social strata. Pagan's rulers built over 10,000 Buddhist temples in the Bagan Archaeological Zone of which over 2,000 remain. The wealthy donated tax-free land to religious authorities.

The kingdom went into decline in the mid-13th century as the continuous growth of tax-free religious wealth by the 1280s had severely affected the crown's ability to retain the loyalty of courtiers and military servicemen. This ushered in a vicious circle of internal disorders and external challenges by the Arakanese, Mons, Mongols and Shans. Repeated Mongol invasions (1277–1301) toppled the four-century-old kingdom in 1287. The collapse was followed by 250 years of political fragmentation that lasted well into the 16th century.