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Shan State
The Shan State is a plateau, averaging 3000 ft. above sea-level. The great Salween River runs along the whole length of the country, dividing Kengtung and Mongpan from the rest of the country. The plateau is made up of mountain ranges, in the north, east and west, running from north to south. In the east of the Salween the ranges have high, pointed peaks and are grouped together with very few valleys in between. To the north the heights of these ranges are considerable, some reaching 6000-7000 ft. but they are more spread out and the valleys between them are broader and more numerous. In the west of the plateau the country consists mainly of downs and broader plains.

The geographical make up of the Shan State therefore, provides the country with an interesting landscape: a grand scenery of mountains, hills and rolling downs, and beautiful broad and narrow valleys surrounded by ranges. The true Shan only live in the valleys, basing their livelihood on wet rice and bamboo.

The Shan State before the military occupation was made of 33 states or principalities, called the Federated Shan State, each state ruled by a Sawbwa or Sao Hpa (Prince). Kengtung was the largest state with Hsipaw coming second, followed by the rest of the 31 states.

The Federated Shan State was divide into two main administrative units, Northern Shan State and Southern Shan State. In Northern Shan State were Hsenwi, Hsipaw, Tawngpeng, (Namsan) Mongmit, South Hsenwi or Mongyai and the Wa State of Monglun and Shan/Chinese State

Kokang. Kokang was originally under Hsenwi but in 1948 became a a separate state.

In Southern Shan State were Kengtung, which occupied nearly all the eastern part beyond the Salween; Kesi Mansam, Mongkung, Laikha, Mongnawng and Mongsu in the north of Sothern Shan States while Mongnai, Mongpan and Mawkmai occupy the central region.

Mongpawn, Hopong, Namkok and Wanyain were a group of smaller states separated by bigger states, Yawnghwe and Mongpai.


In the extreme south-west bordering Burma Proper were another group of smaller states Panglaung, Samkha, Sakoi, Hsamongkham, Pwela, Pangtara or Pindaya, Yengan, Pangmi, and Kyone. Bordering this group were larger states, Lawksawk, Loilong and Maw.

Besides these mentioned states there were Hill Stations used during the British Regime as Administrative Centres. Taunggyi, the main administrative Centre was also the capital of the whole Shan States. The Taunggyi Centre was also responsible for places like Lawksawk and Yawnghwe. Loilem, was the Centre for the central region of Southern Shan State, Kalaw, for the centre and west, Loimwe for east of the Salween. Lashio was the centre for the Northern Shan State and Kutkai for the northern part of Hsenwi, near the Chinese border.

Maymyo was also adopted by the British as a hill station, but more importantly as a British Army Training Camp. At one time it was a town under Hsipaw.

 

Taunggyi, the capital of the Shan State

 

 

Taunggyi Market

 

Shan Festival in Taunggyi 

 

Geographically, Taunggyi, was in Yawnghwe State. It was built in 1896 as a British Hill station to replace Fort Steadman, which was too hot for the British. Taungyyi, means a great Mountain, at the top of which is the Craig shaped like the head of a lion. From the Craig you could see the view of almost the whole town and in the far distance and beyond the town were lovely forested hills.
Once a year there was a Durbar in Taunggyi, when the British Officers and the Sawbwas met to discuss Governmental affairs, followed by an evening of social gathering.

Being over 3750feet above sea-level the climate is pleasant the whole year round. The town used to have many colonial style buildings, and some Sawbwas who had a long way to get to the Capital also had their second home there. Taunggyi was noted for its beautiful flowering and evergreen trees, which adorned the streets and the gardens of many homes.

 Taunggyi had a museum that stored antiques, memorabilia, records and chronicles that helped to keep alive Shan culture and history, which the Military Regime tries its best to destroy.

 The Taunggyi Market was a place for all the colourful ethnic groups to come and sell fresh fruit and vegetables to the town folks. It also provided an opportunity for them to meet and make friends.

 Being a cosmpolitan city, apart from the Shans, Inthas and Pa-Os Indians, Chinese, Seiks and Persians(Iranese) also formed part of the population of Taunggyi.
 

Northern Shan State

Lashio- Administrative Town of Northern Shan State 

   
Lashio Open Market Market

 

Lashio- Indoor Market

 

Lashio, an administrative town for Northern Shan States, was one of the border towns with China and as such  the inhabitants were mostly Shans, Chinese and Shan/Chinese.

Like all Shan towns the Central Market was a meeting place for trade and social life of different ethnic communities, thus furthering good communication and understanding between them.

The Hsipaw Hot Spring was an attraction for visitors who wished to bathe in the hot water containing sulphur, to cure their aches and pains.

The Goteik Viaduct which was built in 1901 over the deep Gokteik gorge was said to be the second highest railway bridge in the world.

The Goteik Bridge

 

Tawngpeng

Pagodas in Tawngpeng

 Tawgpeng (Namsan)

Tawngpeng, the major tea-producing principality in the Federated Shan States, contained an area of 938 square miles.

Its Geographic features were characterised by hills ranging from five to seven thousand feet in height interspersed with valleys that averaged approximately ten miles in length, and from a few hundred yards to a few miles in width. Namhsan, the chief town of Tawngpeng lies on a very high mountain of six thousand feet above sea-level.

In the lower levels of the hillsides, Palaungs and Shans grew tea, the most important product of the area. Higher up the hills the Kachins and Lisus practised burn and shift cultivation.

 Tawngpeng was one of the richest states because of the revenue it obtained from lead and silver mine of Bawdwin

 

Hsipaw

Elephants at work in Hsipaw

Hsipaw Haw or Palace


 

Hsipaw was an ancient Shan town, of a State or principality of the same name which according to its chronicle went back to the year 58 BC. It was said to have been founded by Sao Hkum Hkam Saw, the fourth son of the Sao Hpa of Mong Mao. Sao Hkun Lai.

Rice was grown extensively in all the valleys and upland rice on the lower slopes of the mountains. The palaungs grew tea on the hills but not as extensively as in Tawngpeng.

Tung oil production, started by a Danish company was an important product of Hsipaw. The oranges of Hsipaw were of good qaulity, very large and sweet. They were exported to all parts of Burma. Hsipaw was one of the most productive towns as it was a trade route to places like China, Mandalay and other parts of Upper Burma.

The Hsipaw Haw or palace was the Residence of successive Sawbwas of Hsipaw. The last Sawbwa to have resided here was Sao Kya Seng with his Austrian wife Sao Thusanda alias Inge Sargent, the author of "Twilight Over Burma". Sao Kya Seng disappeared in 1962 and it was believed that he had been killed by the SLORC at Ba Htoo Myo, in Lawksawk.
 

 

SOUTHERN Shan State

 

Kengtung or Chaingtung

Sao Nam Tum, the son of King Mangrai. He was the founder and the first ruler of Kengtung 1253

 

The picture below is of Nawng Tung

Kengtung was the largest and most easterly state of the Federated Shan State. Kengtung, the principal town was situated in a valley encircled by ten villages with rice fields and orange groves. There were four other big valleys in which subsidiary towns Mongping, Monglin, Mongyang and Mongyawng were founded. There were also many small villages tucked along the ranges of the mountains where the Wa, Kaw, Lisu and Ens chose to make a living and build their homes.

The Tai Khuens formed the majority of the population, while the Tai Nuer or Tai Loi lived in higher regions and the Tai Lue nearer the Yunnan border. The Tai Yai lived in the westerly valleys of the state.

Kengtung was one of most progressive Shan principalities with beautiful scenic views, pagodas and buildings. Being a border state it had all the trade coming from China and Thailand.

It was quite a considerable distance away from the rest of the Southern Shan State , 300 miles from Taunggyi and the journey used to take two or three days along a very narrow and winding road. Since there were no bridges across the rivers, Nam Pang and Nam Khong ferries were used to get across. I believe this route is now unusable.
 

Kaw Village along the hillside of Kengtung

EN Village

 

Kalaw

Tea Plantation in Kalaw

Kalaw Market


KALAW : was a former popular British hill station on the western edge of the Shan plateau and was an administrative town for the western region of the Federated Shan States. It was a quiet town at 1320m above sea level and was the home of the Shans and different hill people such as Palaung, Pa-O, Taungyo and Danu. Before the Military regimes there were also many  Anglo-Indians.

 St Agnes' Convent was a Catholic boarding school ran by Italian nuns. Kalaw was noted for its colonial buildings and golf course surrounded by cherry trees and pine woods.
 

Pindaya

Pindaya Cave

Pindaya Lake


 

Pindaya - a small quiet town on the bank of the Botoloke Lake was famous for its limestone cave where 8094 Buddha images made from alabaster, teak, marble, brick, laquer and cement were installed since the 11th. Century AD The inhabitants of this area were
Shans, Danus and Paos .  
 

 Lawksawk

The name Lawksawk had been changed to Yak Sawk by the junta

Elephants, given a rest after a hard Day's work


The name Lawksawk means paddy fields enveloped by hills. Lawk came from the word Lawk nah, meaning paddy fields; and sawk meaning to envelope. Lawksawk State was larger but quieter and less densely populated than Yawnghwe.

Nonetheless, it has a charm of its own; across the large beautiful Lawksawk valley one could see the distant blue hills clumped with foliage of different shapes, sizes and colours  Lawksawk Town, was an old powerful city, the geographical features of which showed that it had once been important : fertile rice fields in  the valley , a great banyan tree, sentinel to the town; the Zawgyi River, and a narrow stream that coiled around the town, looked like a moat built to defend the town.

 The inhabitants of Lawksawk were a mixture of Danus in the south along the borders of Pindaya and Yawnghwe. The Taunglur or Taungyo lived in villages at the foot of the hills. The inhabitants in larger,  northern villages bordering Hsipaw, Maymyo, Laikha and Mongkhung were predominantly Shans.


The State was reasonably productive in timber, rice, oranges, ground nut, tea and surface ores. The British Steel Brothers discovered lead and silver ores but due to lack of fund they discontinued the project.To establish a goodwill between the Burmese army and the Shan, the Sawbwa of Lawksawk willingly granted permission to the Army in 1956 -1957 to build in Lawksawk State one of the biggest military training camp, Ba Htoo Myo which exists until today.

But the goodwill was betrayed when in 1962 all the Sawbwas were put in prison without any crime or reason and the army under Ne Win occupied all the Shan States by force.
 

Yawnghwe and the Inle Lake

 Houses built on stilts

Inle Lake Village

Yawnghwe Town, the capital of the state lies at the northern end of the of the Inle Lake. Between the town and the lake were nearby villages and interesting walks along the country lanes.

The late Sawbwa, Sao Shwe Thaike, was the first President of the Union of Burma. When Ne Win staged a coup, like all the other Sawbwas, he was imprisoned, and later died in jail under suspicious circumstances. Some believed that he was killed by the military because he refused to sign certain documents.

The Yawnghwe Haw (Palace) was donated to the state to be used as a Museum to store a collection of photos and Shan regalia.
It is one of very few Shan Haws left since Kengtung Haw was demolished in 1991.

The municipal market near the town was busiest in the morning when traders congregated to sell mountains of fresh fruit and vegetables as well as pottery and textiles. The population of Yawnghwe was composed of Inthas, Pa-Os, Shans Taungyo (or Taunglur)and Danus.

The most fascinating and unique feature in Yawnghwe State was the Inle lake area, which was 22km long and 11 km wide, 1328metres above sea-level. It had calm waters dotted with groups of floating vegetation and busy fishing boats. The lake was surrounded by hills, and along the shores and the floating islands were village houses built on stilts. The inhabitants were mostly Inthas, who made a living by growing fruit and vegetables the whole year round, and by fishing with coned shaped nets. The men also produce silver and brass as well as pottery and lacquer wares. The women worked at their spinning and weaving silk into sarongs or skirts when they are not working outdoors.

 Heho Market

 

Heho was also part of Yawnghwe State and became one of the first air terminals in the Shan State. It also served as a cross road for all the surrounding states.
 

CENTRAL SHAN STATE

Mongkung

Nam Taeng, one of many tributaries of   the Salween (Monkung)

Water from the well for drinking; water from the lake for other uses  (Mongkung)

Shan Village Children at Play

Mongkung, contains a large productive valley made by the Teang River, on which the capital town stood. The town consists of groups of houses, pagodas, monasteries and clumps of bamboo surrounded by smaller villages.

The Teang valley was one of the characteristics of Shan valleys, containing paddy fields, enclosed by hills on which pine and oak grew. On a sunny afternoon when looking across the paddy fields one could see puddles of water glistening in the sun, Shan men tilting the land with their wooden ploughs drawn by buffalos or women transplanting rice seedlings. Such is a scene of a typical Shan settlement in the river valleys.

Mongkung produced plenty of good rice, very sweet oranges and juicy and delicious pineapples. Monkung, Lai Kha, Mong Nawg, Kesi Mansam and Mong Su together formed the important Rice Bowl of the Shan State.

This was also the area which the SLORC and SPDC targeted to destroy, followed by the intense relocation of Shan people in 1997 and 1998. Thousands of Shan became homeless and stateless that they had to flee to Thailand or into the jungle and becoming internally displaced. Although the situation is not as bad as in 1997 and 1998 the confiscation of land and relocation of Shan citizens are still going on until today.
 

Maymyo

The Purcell Tower

 

Maymyo Botanical Garden

 

A stupa on an islet of a pond

 

A coach drawn by horses serve as a local transport

Maymyo (City of May), was named after a British Army officer called Captain May. It was another Hill Station as well as an army training post during the British rule.

The Botanical Garden was inaugurated as the Maymyo Botanical Garden on a 30 acres plot of land in 1915 by an Englishman named Mr Alex Rodger. It was modeled on the Kew Gardens of England with the professional help of a botanist, Lady Cuffe, who worked at Kew. It had well kept lawns, flower beds, a rose garden and 49 acres of forest with walking trails. A small pagoda was also built on an islet of a pond. Maymyo and its environments were later declared a protected area by the British Government.

The Purcell clock tower, near the town entrance was a present from Queen Victoria who gave an identical one to Cape town in S. Africa. The chime was an imitation of the chime of the Big Ben in London.

Small coaches drawn by horses served as a cheap means of local transport and could be seen daily on every street of Maymyo.

Like Taunggyi, Maymyo was a cosmopolitan town, with Indians and Chinese forming part of the population. Before the Burmese military regimes there were also many Anglo- Indians and Anglo-Burmese families. Several Shan villages were found on the outskirt of the town, who made a living by growing strawberries and other temperate fruit and vegetables.

 

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