Thandaung - Kayin State
A Peaceful Hill Resort in the Kayin State.
Thandaung was also developed as a hill resort
from Victorian times by the British. Thandaung is a
romantic place. It is in the Kayin State and is
inhabited mainly by the lovable and simple Bwe Kayin
(Karen) people who are mostly Christians. Like many
of the picturesque hill towns there is a romantic
legend, a Kayin folktale connected to this place and
the Dawparkho or Bwihikho mountain range which has
its highest peak nearby, at 4,824 feet above sea
level. The Union of Myanmar is encircled by hills
and high mountains on its eastern, northern and
western sides. There are some lovely towns on a
number of these hills, where visitors can find
peaceful repose. For example on the Shan Plateau
there are towns like Taunggyi, Kalaw, Lashio and
Thibaw (or Hsipaw). Myitkyina in the Kachin State,
Haka and Tiddim in the Chin State are also
well-known towns built on the hills. During the
colonial period a few of these towns on the hills
were developed as summer resorts, where the
Europeans went to escape from the heat and humidity
of the Central Plains. The most famous of these hill
resort towns are Maymyo or Pyin-Oo-Lwin, Kalaw and
Taunggyi. We often overlook another picturesque hill
town called Thandaung (meaning Iron Hill) which is
much closer to Yangon than the above mentioned
towns.Thandaung was also developed as a hill resort
from Victorian times by the British. It happens to
be the hill resort closest to Yangon as it is only
about 200 miles away and can be reached by car or
bus on a half day's journey. If visitors prefer
using the railway, they can ride the train from
Yangon to Taungoo in about six hours, and from
Taungoo to Thandaung it is only 27 miles up by car
passing through lush virgin forests, see cascading
mountain streams and climb gradually to over 4,000
feet, to reach Thandaung.
Romantic Legend
The legend is about a courageous prince named Saw
Thaw oh Khwa and a beautiful maiden called Naw Bu
Baw. Incidentally Saw is the honorific for men and
Naw for women in Kayin usuage. It happened many
years ago, and legend says that Naw Bu Baw was the
daughter of the king of the sea and she came to
these high hills to marry the local prince Saw Thaw
oh Khwa who was the son of King Kiku of these
highlands. Naw Bu Baw possessed a magical silver
comb which made her shine like the sun when she had
it in her hair and made her invisible when she put
it under her feet. She also had a magical cooking
pot, which enabled her to cook a full pot of rice
from only half a grain of rice and with a grain of
rice she could feed the whole household. The Prince
and the newly married Princess were very much in
love with each other and roamed these lovely hills
and mountains, streams and meadows together. But the
Kayin people did not accept Naw Bu Baw as she came
from far away and because of the powers she got from
her magical comb they thought that she was a witch.
One day her husband the Prince went to the
eastern mountains to repulse invading enemies. The
faithful wife gave him the magical comb to enable
him to disappear when his enemies attacked. In spite
of the courage and daring, and also the possession
of the comb, the Prince died in battle. The people
of the region blamed Naw Bu Baw and accusing her of
being a sorceress they took her to the highest peak
of Dawparkho Range and imprisoned her in a rock
cavern. Even today local people will show visitors
where she was kept tied and locked. She was
eventually eaten by evil spirits. So the loving
couple, both the Prince and his beautiful wife came
to tragic ends. But their spirits still wander
hand-in-hand through these beautiful forests, and an
air of romance surrounds this mist shrouded place.
Short History Soon after the end of the Second
Anglo-Burmese War in 1852, when Lower Myanmar was
annexed, the British using imported Indian labourers
first developed Thandaung as a hill station. In 1883
two years before the last Myanmar King in Mandalay
was deposed, Thandaung for about a year became a
military sanitorium for soldiers recovering from
wounds and diseases. A cantonment area was also
marked out. After only about a year this project was
abandoned and the town became a civil station.
Earlier a road had been built by the Public Works
Department running 22 miles north-north-east of
Taungoo to reach Thandaung.
Around 1911 there were in Thandaung, a police
station with 15 men, a small hotel, a circuit house
and a district bungalow for visiting government
officials, a post and telegraph office, and two
European boarding schools with 64 pupils, of whom 23
were girls. There were also a number of private
houses built in the colonial style. The population
was only 219 persons then.
The Taungoo District Gazetteer published in 1914
quaintly says that "There is a licensed shop for the
retail vend of foreign spirit and foreign fermented
liquor", probably meaning that whisky and wine were
easily available there for visitors.
As the population was mainly Christian a number
of churches were built. Visitors can still see an
old Baptist Church called Zion Hill Church, and
another Baptist Church and an Anglican Church on
another hill. You can also visit an old Roman
Catholic Church. On Dawparkho peak a prayer room in
a building shaped like a ship, and a huge cross were
built in April 1995. This clearly shows that there
is complete freedom of worship in Myanmar, where
although the majority of the population is Buddhist,
other religions have been permitted to flourish
since ancient times.
The administration of Thandaung began only in
1900. In 1915 the township office was moved to
Laitho, but was shifted back to Thandaung in 1935.
Thandaung is no longer in Taungoo District as the
Kayin State begins about 13 miles after crossing the
Sittaung river. Since 1954 Thandaung has been part
of Pha-an District of the Kayin State. In 1971 the
population had risen to 51,000.
Present-day Thandaung
Thandaung became a forgotten town for many years
due to the insurrections and troubled times that
erupted soon after Myanmar became Independent in
January 1948. Only in recent years after regaining
peace and stability, Thandaung is now being
developed as a Hill Resort both for visitors from
within the Union of Myanmar and foreign tourists.
In visiting Thandaung, the best way is to take a
car from Taungoo and drive up the 27 miles of
undulating road. After crossing the Sittaung River
you will first of all see Kayin and Bama villages
with rich fields of rice and various market
vegetables. Soon you will enter the lush tropical
monsoon and deciduous forests of the Kayin State,
where many precious teak, pyinkadoe, padauk, ingyin
and other hardwood trees can be seen in abundance.
Actually Thandaung is now divided into two towns,
the original town on the hill now known as Thandaung
Myo Haung (old town) and Thandaung Myo Thit (new
town) which was developed at Pathi Chaung, beside
the idyllic and charming Pathi mountain stream with
cool crystal clear waters rushing down in torrents
over rounded bouders and pebbles to join the
Sittaung river near Taungoo. A dam is being built
around there for the use of the local
agriculturalists.
The new town enlarged from the former
Pathi-Chaung Village is only about 13 miles from
Taungoo and is a favourite picinic spot for the
people of the plains, and in the last few years for
foreign visitors also. There are huge boulders at
the side and among the rushing waters, and these
rocks are favourite spots for taking photographs.
The area of the new town is 177 acres. The
population is still very sparse, and mainly engaged
in taungya, shifting cultivation on the gentle
slopes of the foothills. Around here and also on the
hills you see bamboo mats and baskets and also other
native utensils. The local people are good hunters
and fishermen and if you are interested you can
participate in their activities.
Thandaung Myo Thit (new town) became the township
headquarters in 1959, as the old township
headquarters at the old town on the hilltop was
difficult to reach at the time. This new town is
also known as New Thandaung. The original Thandaung
Myo Haung or old town is reached after about an
hour's drive going uphill through the winding slopes
with lush, green tropical vegetation all around.
There are breath-taking views from many places along
the way where you can stop the car and admire the
scenery and take photo mementos. You will pass
through some old Kayin villages, the largest of
which, Bawgaligyi, is at the foothills and is
especially famous for its sweet oranges; these
oranges have a green skin instead of the usual
colour.
Nearby Attractions
Thandaung Myohaung The old town on the hilltop
4,050 feet above sea level is now officially known
as Thandaungyi (meaning Great Thandaung) to
distinguish it from the new town which had usurped
the name and its township headquarters status. The
town is quite small, only 1.57 sq-miles (1,007
acres) and you can easily walk around the whole
area. The total population is only 3,766, but some
new people are arriving. The Kayin people mainly Bwe'
live there, but other Kayin races such as Sgaw, Paku,
Moebwa, Palaychie and other Myanmar people can also
be found living in complete harmony with each other.
They can be distinguished by their different
coloured dresses. The town is divided into six wards
and has 354 households.
The beauty of the town lies in its extensive
views to be seen from all parts of this small
attractive place. There are more hills and mountains
to the north, east and south, while the Sittaung
valley can be seen to the west with sweeping views
right to the Bago Yoma hills beyond.
Visitors who have been to Chiang Mai, the Doi
Suthep mountain and Mae Sa valley to the west and
north of the city will be able to visualize the type
of scenery to be found around Thandaung as the two
mountain ranges are in the same latitude, and are
only about a hundred miles apart.
In Thandaung, nature is entirely unspoilt; there
are few people and all is green, the environment
tranquil. Only the calls of the numerous birds and
wild animals can be heard.
The only man-made scenery around Thandaung really
adds rather than detracts to her beauty. They are
the pleasant groves of tea and coffee plantations on
some of the slopes around Thandaung. There are 640
acres of tea plantations; the high altitude, the
cool climate and abundant rainfall produce some of
the best tea leaves of Southeast Asia. There are
still many uncultivated hill slopes for investment
in tea cultivation.
The coffee grown here too is one of the best in
the region, although at present it is well known
only within our country. The time will soon come
when these plantations are expanded to produce ample
coffee and tea for export. Plans to expand tea
cultivation by 500 acres are already being carried
out.
Around Thandaung can be bought huge delicious red
or maroon bananas called Shwengapyaw or Golden
Bananas. Many other tasty fruits and vegetables can
also be obtained freshly and cheaply.
Visitors will appreciate the cool climate, with
annual average temperatures of about 65'F. The
copious rainfall averages 225 inches annually. The
winters are mild and like most areas in Myanmar the
months from October to the end of February is the
best time to visit Thandaung. Visitors to Myanmar
during the heat of March to mid-May would feel
pleasantly cool if they go to Thandaung. A new
modern hotel is being built for visitors.
The simple mountain folk, the various races of
local Kayin people as well as the Gurkhas who were
brought by the British and who now live around
Thandaung, will warmly welcome visitors from far and
wide.
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