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Sunday 09 March 2025 11:18:19 GMT
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Burmese Water festival spreaded from Myanmar to ancient Burmese controlled areas such as part of Bangladesh - Northeast India - Yunnan (China) - Langchan (Laos) and Lanna (Thailand) 🇧🇩🇮🇳🇨🇳🇱🇦🇹🇭 But the difference is that they don't celebrate Water festival in a big way like Burmese people. Maybe it's because their place is cold. Since almost the 21st century, Thingyan festival has become popular in Siam (Central Thailand) and Cambodia 🇹🇭🇰🇭 --- Thingyan has been celebrated since the Tagaung period(1-10 AD) of Myanmar and became famous during the Bagan period (12 AD). This is not a Buddhist festival.  The reason is that it cannot be found in Buddhist countries such as Nepal, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka. The Thingyan Festival is a water festival based on the Burmese calendar. (Kaw Zar Thakarit : ကောဇာသက္ကရာဇ်) Not the Hindu, Buddhist, etc calendar. Myanmar - Thailand - Cambodia - Laos is using same “The Burmese Calendar” to caculate the time of New Year. Arakan, Lan Na, Xishuangbanna, Lan Xang, Siam, and Cambodia used the Burmese calendar until the late 19th century. The calendar fell out of use throughout the region in the second half of the 19th century with the advent of European colonialism.  The only remaining independent state Siam too dropped the calendar on 1 April 1889 per King Chulalongkorn (Rama V)'s decree 🇹🇭 It was replaced by Rattanakosin Era.  Today, the calendar is used purely for cultural and religious festivals in Myanmar.  Thailand has moved on to its own version of Buddhist calendar since 1941 although the Chula Sakarat era dates remain the most commonly used and preferred form of entry by the academia for Thai history studies. --- The name Thingyan is from the Sanskrit language. (Just name) ❗ But Burmese people changed from S to Th. This is because Burmese protect the influence of other languages ​​on their own language and value their mother language. Credit : British Movietone https://youtu.be/oBfteBdcQ9g #WaterFestivalisOriginallyfromMyanmar  #WaterFestivalMyanmar #WaterFestival #ProudtobeBurmese #Myanmar #Burma #Thingyan #BurmeseSoftPower #AboutThingyan #AboutWaterfestival @unesconewdelhi
Burmese Water festival spreaded from Myanmar to ancient Burmese controlled areas such as part of Bangladesh - Northeast India - Yunnan (China) - Langchan (Laos) and Lanna (Thailand) 🇧🇩🇮🇳🇨🇳🇱🇦🇹🇭 But the difference is that they don't celebrate Water festival in a big way like Burmese people. Maybe it's because their place is cold. Since almost the 21st century, Thingyan festival has become popular in Siam (Central Thailand) and Cambodia 🇹🇭🇰🇭 --- Thingyan has been celebrated since the Tagaung period(1-10 AD) of Myanmar and became famous during the Bagan period (12 AD). This is not a Buddhist festival. The reason is that it cannot be found in Buddhist countries such as Nepal, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka. The Thingyan Festival is a water festival based on the Burmese calendar. (Kaw Zar Thakarit : ကောဇာသက္ကရာဇ်) Not the Hindu, Buddhist, etc calendar. Myanmar - Thailand - Cambodia - Laos is using same “The Burmese Calendar” to caculate the time of New Year. Arakan, Lan Na, Xishuangbanna, Lan Xang, Siam, and Cambodia used the Burmese calendar until the late 19th century. The calendar fell out of use throughout the region in the second half of the 19th century with the advent of European colonialism. The only remaining independent state Siam too dropped the calendar on 1 April 1889 per King Chulalongkorn (Rama V)'s decree 🇹🇭 It was replaced by Rattanakosin Era. Today, the calendar is used purely for cultural and religious festivals in Myanmar. Thailand has moved on to its own version of Buddhist calendar since 1941 although the Chula Sakarat era dates remain the most commonly used and preferred form of entry by the academia for Thai history studies. --- The name Thingyan is from the Sanskrit language. (Just name) ❗ But Burmese people changed from S to Th. This is because Burmese protect the influence of other languages ​​on their own language and value their mother language. Credit : British Movietone https://youtu.be/oBfteBdcQ9g #WaterFestivalisOriginallyfromMyanmar #WaterFestivalMyanmar #WaterFestival #ProudtobeBurmese #Myanmar #Burma #Thingyan #BurmeseSoftPower #AboutThingyan #AboutWaterfestival @unesconewdelhi

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