Quoted by Heritage Dili; In addition to the financial and financial injuries, these shakes created deep gaps and cracks on the ground that revealed hidden monumes and ancie ruins.
According to local reports from Tada-W, a city in ceral Myanmar, about 2 kilometers from the provincial capital, Mandali, has emerged that archaeologists believe that the remnas of the water palace may be from the Konbong dynasty.
The Konbong dynasty, known as the last Burma Empire, ruled Burma from 1 to 2 uil it was attached to the British Empire during the Anglo-Berma wars.
The palace was probably built for the royal city of Rartn Pawra Ava, the former capital of various Burmese kingdoms from the fourteeh to the nineteeh ceury. The city was located in Ineva, 1.5 miles north of Tada-W, and has been attacked and rebuilt several times throughout history. The capital was eveually abandoned after being destroyed in the March 5 earthquakes.
According to experts, the discovered ruins include fundameal structures, staircases and artifacts, which are very similar to images recorded in ancie manuscripts on the palm leaf.
This rare discovery is an opportunity to look at Myanmar’s magnifice past.




