Studies of the Independence and Parliamentary periods
Websites/Multiple Documents
Source/publisher:
Wikipedia (Burmese)
Date of entry/update:
2013-12-18
Grouping:
Websites/Multiple Documents
Language:
Burmese
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Description:
Links to several hundred documents in English and Burmese
Source/publisher:
University of Washington
Date of entry/update:
2014-10-11
Grouping:
Websites/Multiple Documents
Language:
English, Burmese/ မြန်မာဘာသာ
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Individual Documents
Sub-title:
Pictures and Portraits
Description:
"...Table Contents: The Japanese Invasion (1942, February to April), Japanese military rule (1942, May to July), The Ba Maw government (1942, August to 1943, April), Preparations for Independence (1943, May to July), Free! Free! Burma is free! (1943, August)
Source/publisher:
Kham Koo Website
Date of publication:
1954-00-00
Date of entry/update:
2020-01-19
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Language:
Format :
PDF
Size:
11.32 MB
Local URL:
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Description:
"The Split Story, an account of the rise
and fall of Burma?s strongest national
Front, the Anti-Fascist Peoples Freedom
League (AFPFL), was originally serialized
in the Guardian Daily in January—February
1959; and it was not intended to be printed
in a book form. But owing to popular
demand by the Guardian readers, who insisted
that the serial should be printed in
a book form so that this historical account
acquires a more permanent nature, the
serial has been revised and presented in
this book form.
The whole work is an objective study
of the post-independent political development
in Burma, with special emphasis on
the AFPFL in the country; and the account
is based mainly on records and on personal
observations of the writer after interviews
on the subject with a number of leaders
from both sides of the two political camps
after the split in the AFPFL..."
Sein Win
Source/publisher:
"The Guardian" (Rangoon)
Date of publication:
1959-03-23
Date of entry/update:
2012-07-23
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Language:
English
Format :
pdf
Size:
1.85 MB
Local URL:
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Description:
(New Evidence from Yugoslav, Chinese, Indian, and U.S. Archives)..."...This paper will show the events surrounding the initiation of Yugoslavia?s arms
shipments to Burma in the early 1950s and how these actions shifted the power equation inside
the Burmese society and in its immediate neighborhood. Using recently declassified documents
from the major Yugoslav archives (President Tito?s personal archive, Foreign Ministry Archives
of Serbia , the Defense Ministry Archives of Serbia, and the Archive of Yugoslavia, which
retains the records of the Yugoslav state and communist party), Chinese archives (Chinese
Foreign Ministry Archives), Indian archives (National Archives of India, Ministry of External
Affairs), and U.S. archives (National Archives and Records Administration) as well as private
collections such as the ones at the National Security Archive, this paper will look at the impact
that these arms transfers had on the overall development of the bilateral strategic partnership
between Belgrade and Rangoon and how these arrangements between two distant countries were
perceived by the government circles in the U.S., China, and India. The paper will argue that
Yugoslav-Burmese military cooperation substantially altered some of the strategic plans of the
great powers with regards to this region..."
Jovan Čavoški
Source/publisher:
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars: Cold War International History Project (Working Paper #61)
Date of publication:
2010-04-00
Date of entry/update:
2010-04-19
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Language:
English
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