Myanmar Article

Myanmar summary

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Learn about Myanmar and its history of military rule

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Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Myanmar.

Myanmar, or Burma officially Republic of the Union of Myanmar, Country, Southeast Asia, on the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea. Area: 261,217 sq mi (676,553 sq km). Population: (2024 est.) 57,333,000. Capitals: official, Nay Pyi Taw (Naypyidaw), proclaimed 2006; historical, Yangon (Rangoon), 1948–2006. Inhabitants are chiefly Burman; others include Chin, Shan, and Karen. Languages: Myanmar (Burmese; official), many indigenous languages. Religions: Buddhism, traditional beliefs, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism. Currency: Myanmar kyat. Myanmar may be divided into five main regions: the northern mountains, the western ranges, the coastal plains, the central lowlands, and the Shan Plateau in the east. Major rivers are the Irrawaddy and the Salween. The tropical climate is greatly influenced by the monsoons of southern Asia. Only about one-sixth of this largely mountainous land is arable. It has a centrally planned, developing economy that is largely nationalized and based on agriculture and trade. Rice is the most important crop and principal export; teak is also important. Myanmar is ruled by a military regime. The area was long inhabited, with the Mon and Pyu states dominant from the 1st century bce to the 9th century ce. It was united in the 11th century under a Burmese dynasty that was overthrown by the Mongols in the 13th century. The Portuguese, Dutch, and English traded there in the 16th–17th century. The modern Myanmar (Burmese) state was founded in the 18th century by Alaungpaya. Conflict with the British over Assam resulted in a series of wars, and Myanmar fell to the British in 1885. Under British control, it became Burma, a province of India. It was occupied by Japan in World War II and became independent in 1948. The military took power in a coup in 1962 and nationalized major economic sectors. Civilian unrest in the 1980s led to antigovernment rioting that was suppressed by force. In 1990 opposition parties won in national elections, but the army remained in control, changing the name of the country to Myanmar. Trying to negotiate for a freer government amid the unrest, Aung San Suu Kyi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991. The military relinquished authority to a civilian government led by a former military officer in 2011. A president without any military ties was inaugurated in 2016. A coup in 2021 returned the country to military rule.