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Polity that includes all territories militarly occupied by the Toungoo Kingdom that are not part of a specific military territory.
Establishment
January 1539: First Toungoo siege of Prome (1538-39).
January 1539: Battle of Naungyo.
January 1539: Toungoo used a stratagem to create a split in the Hanthawaddy camp, providing misinformation about the loyalty of the ministers. Takayutpi fall into the trap and executed the ministers. Then when Toungoo launched another invasion in late 1538, with 7000 troops, Takayutpi was helpless, and decided to evacuate his capital rather than fight. Toungoo forces took Pegu without firing a shot.
Chronology
Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation
Was a military conflict that took place in present-day Lower and Central Burma (Myanmar) between the Toungoo Dynasty, and the Ava-led Confederation of Shan States, Hanthawaddy Pegu, and Arakan (Mrauk-U).
1.1.First Tongoo Siege Of Prome
First Toungoo siege of Prome (1538-39).
January 1540: End of the First Toungoo siege of Prome (1538-39).
1.2.Second Tongoo Siege Of Prome
Second Toungoo siege of Prome (1541-42).
December 1541: Second Toungoo siege of Prome (1541-42).
May 1542: Prome ruler Minkhaung accepted the offer of amnesty of the Toungoo, and surrendered.
1.3.Ava Offensive (1544)
Was a military offensive by the Ava Kingdom against the Toungoo Kingdom.
January 1544: Battle of Prome.
1.4.Toungoo Offensive (1544)
Was a military offensive by the Toungoo Kingdom against the Ava Kingdom.
March 1544: In 1544, the Toungoo Kingdom, led by King Tabinshwehti, successfully captured the city of Pagan after the Confederation armies were forced to retreat following the fall of Salin. This military occupation marked a significant turning point in the ongoing conflict for control of the region.
March 1544: Battle of Salin.
January 1545: Battle of Salin (1544-45).
April 1545: Sithu Kyawhtin II returned with a 7000-strong army (2000 horses, 15 elephants). Though his army was outnumbered more than two-to-one, Sithu Kyawhtin I chose to make a stand. But Salin's defenses were breached on the second day. Inside the city, Sithu Kyawhtin I fought atop his war elephant, and even engaged Sithu Kyawhtin II, who was also on his war elephant. In the end, Toungoo troops won the battle.
Was a military conflict between the Toungoo Kingdom, and the Hanthawaddy Kingdom and its allies the Prome Kingdom and the Confederation of Shan States that took place in present-day Lower Burma (Myanmar) between 1534 and 1541.
January 1540: Toungoo now held two out of the three Hanthawaddy provinces (the Irrawaddy delta and Pegu).
June 1541: Whole Hanthawaddy Kingdom conquered conquered by burma.
Was a military conflict that took place in Arakan from 1545 to 1547 between the Toungoo Dynasty and the Kingdom of Mrauk U.
January 1547: Launggyet, a city in Burma, fell on 23 January 1547 to the forces of Toungoo Kingdom.
February 1547: The two sides involved in the agreement were the Taungoo forces, led by King Tabinshwehti, and the Kingdom of Mrauk-U, led by King Min Bin. The agreement allowed for an orderly withdrawal of Taungoo forces from Mrauk U, which began on 2 February 1547.
3.1.First campaign of the Toungoo-Mrauk-U War (1545-47)
Was the invasion of Arakan by Toungoo forces.
December 1546: Mrauk U land forces evacuated Thandwe.
Were a series of wars fought between Burma and Siam from the 16th to 19th centuries.
4.1.Burmese-Siamese War (1547-1549)
Was a war between the Toungoo dynasty of Burma and the Ayutthaya Kingdom of Siam.
4.1.1.Invasion of mainland Siam (1548-1549)
Was a Burmese invasion of Siam during the Burmese-Siamese War (1547-1549).
October 1548: On 14 October 1548 (13th waxing of Tazaungmon 910 ME), the Burmese three armies left Martaban to start the invasion. The armies marched along the Ataran river toward the Three Pagodas Pass, entered Siam along the Khwae Noi River to the town of Sai Yok.
November 1548: About a month into the invasion, mid-November 1548, the King of Burma then continued his march eastward, capturing the villages of Ban Thuan, Kaphan Tru and Chorakhe Sam Phan.
February 1549: King Tabinshwehti of the Toungoo Kingdom encamped his army directly north of the Siamese capital of Ayutthaya on a field called the Lumpli plain.
February 1549: The Burmese continued their advance and captured the ancient town of Uthong as well as the villages of Don Rakhang and Nong Sarai and closing in on Suphanburi.
March 1549: After a treaty that ended the Burmese-Siamese War (1547-1549), the Burmese king left all the militarly occupied regions and retreated to Pegu.
January 1543: Prome Kingdom fell to Toungoo.
January 1551: The kingdom of Pegu was briefly revived in 1550 after Tabinshwehti was assassinated. But the "kingdom" did not extend much outside the city of Bago.
March 1552: Bayinnaung quickly defeated the rebellion in the Hanthawaddy Kingdom.
January 1555: In January 1555, King Bayinnaung of Taungoo, a powerful ruler in Southeast Asia, conquered Ava, which was the capital of the Kingdom of Ava. This marked the end of Ava's status as the capital of Upper Burma for almost 200 years.
Disestablishment
January 1555: In January 1555, King Bayinnaung of Taungoo, a powerful ruler in Southeast Asia, conquered Ava, which was the capital of the Kingdom of Ava. This marked the end of Ava's status as the capital of Upper Burma for almost 200 years.