Online Encyclopedia

YATSAUK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 908 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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YATSAUK  , called by the

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Shans LAWKSAWK, a state in the central division of the
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southern Shan States of
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Burma .
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Area, 2197 sq. m . Pop . (1901), 24,839, of whom less than one-
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half are Shans; revenue, £2000 . The crops grown are rice, segamum, cotton, ground-nuts and oranges . As a whole the state is mountainous, with ranges
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running N. and S . The main range has a general height of 5000 ft., with peaks, such as Loi Sampa, rising to 7846 ft . The
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middle and S., however, consist of open
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rolling country, with an
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average height of 3500 ft . To the N. the country falls away to the Nam Tu (Myitnge), where there are
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fine
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teak forests, as well as along the Nam Lang and Nam Et, which with the Zawgyi form the chief rivers of the state . Most of them disappear underground at intervals, which makes the extraction of
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timber impossible except for
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local use . Lawksawk, the capital, stands on the N.
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bank of the Zawgyi, near a small weedy lake . The old brick walls and the
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moat are falling into decay .

The chief at the

time of annexation had been at war with the Burmese, but refused to submit to the
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British, and fled to Keng Hung, where he died some years afterwards . The sawbwa chosen in 1887 belonged to another Shan ruling house . He died in 1900, and was succeeded by his son .

End of Article: YATSAUK
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