Along the fertile valleys of the Irrawaddy River, a remarkable urban civilization was taking shape. The Pyu people — Tibeto-Burman speakers who had settled in what is now Upper Myanmar — were building walled cities with sophisticated water management, long-distance trade networks, and a rich religious culture that would influence the region for centuries. Around 150 B.C.E., these settlements had grown into something genuinely new: early city-states that placed Myanmar at the center of one of Southeast Asia’s most important civilizational corridors.
What the evidence shows
- Pyu city-states: Archaeological evidence places the earliest well-documented Pyu urban centers — including Beikthano, Sri Ksetra, and Halin — in the Irrawaddy valley from roughly 200–100 B.C.E. onward, making them among the oldest cities in Southeast Asia.
- Urban planning: The Pyu built large, circular or rectangular walled cities with elaborate systems for storing and redirecting water, indicating a level of civic organization well beyond village-scale society.
- Trade networks: Pyu settlements sat on the overland trade routes connecting India and China, and archaeological finds of Roman coins, Indian religious iconography, and Chinese goods confirm that these were internationally connected urban centers, not isolated communities.
Who were the Pyu?
The Pyu are often overshadowed in popular histories by the later Bamar-led Pagan Kingdom, which rose in the 9th century C.E. and whose legacy is more widely recognized today. But the Pyu were there first — and in many ways, they laid the foundations that Pagan would later build on.
They spoke a Tibeto-Burman language and practiced a form of Buddhism that showed clear Indian influence, likely arriving through trade and pilgrimage routes connecting the Indian subcontinent to mainland Southeast Asia. Pyu inscriptions survive in Pali and Sanskrit, and their cities contained Buddhist monasteries and stupas that reflected a deeply organized religious life. In 2014 C.E., UNESCO designated the Pyu Ancient Cities — Halin, Beikthano, and Sri Ksetra — as a World Heritage Site, formally recognizing their global significance.
At their peak, the Pyu city-states were home to tens of thousands of people. Contemporary Chinese Tang dynasty records from the 8th and 9th centuries C.E. describe the Pyu as a prosperous and cultured people with a love of music, describing performances that reportedly moved the imperial court.
A crossroads civilization
The rise of the Pyu city-states cannot be understood in isolation. These cities emerged at a moment when long-distance exchange across Asia was accelerating. Indian merchants and missionaries were moving east; Chinese influence was pressing south; maritime routes through the Bay of Bengal were growing in importance. The Pyu were not passive recipients of these currents — they were active participants, adapting and synthesizing influences from multiple directions.
This position at the crossroads gave Pyu culture a distinctive character. Their coinage drew on Indian models. Their religious architecture blended local and South Asian forms. Their urban design — with its attention to water storage and defensive walls — suggests indigenous engineering solutions to the specific geography of the Irrawaddy basin. The Pyu city-states were, in this sense, a genuinely original contribution to Southeast Asian civilization, not simply an outpost of Indian or Chinese influence.
Other early urban civilizations were developing independently across Southeast Asia during the same broad period — including the Funan polity in the Mekong delta region and early Mon settlements in Lower Myanmar itself. The Pyu were one strand of a much wider human story of urban emergence across the region.
Lasting impact
The Pyu city-states did not survive intact. By the 9th century C.E., a combination of pressure from the Nanzhao Kingdom to the north and the southward migration of the Bamar people had fundamentally changed the political landscape. The Pyu as a distinct political force faded, absorbed into the cultural and demographic mix that would eventually produce the Pagan Kingdom.
But the Pyu left lasting marks. Their Buddhist traditions, architectural forms, and agricultural systems were inherited and adapted by the Bamar. The Pagan Kingdom, often credited with establishing Burmese civilization, was in significant ways built on a Pyu foundation. The urban knowledge, religious institutions, and trade relationships the Pyu had cultivated over centuries did not disappear — they were absorbed and transmitted.
More broadly, the Pyu city-states demonstrate that urban civilization in Southeast Asia was not a derivative of Indian or Chinese development. It had its own roots, its own logic, and its own timeline. Understanding that changes how we think about the deep history of the entire region.
Blindspots and limits
The Pyu left no fully deciphered literary tradition, so much of what we know about their daily lives, governance structures, and internal politics comes from archaeology and fragmentary external accounts. The voices of ordinary Pyu people — farmers, craftspeople, women, and those at the margins of urban society — remain almost entirely silent in the record. Ongoing instability in Myanmar has also made sustained archaeological work difficult, meaning significant discoveries almost certainly remain buried.
The precise founding date of the Pyu city-states is also genuinely uncertain. Scholarly estimates for the earliest urban settlements range across several centuries, and the figure of ~150 B.C.E. represents a plausible midpoint rather than a settled consensus. Dating methods continue to refine the picture, and future excavations may shift the timeline in either direction.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Myanmar
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
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