-
believed to be a
corruption of the Mon name.
Moulmein was also
spelled as
Maulmain or
Moulmain or
Maulmein in some
records of the 19th century. The people...
- 1825.
After acquiring the
Burmese language, he
entered upon his
labors at
Maulmain in May 1827, and
founded a
mission which became the
central point of all...
- Gladstone). In late
January 1872, he
engaged in a
State visit to
Rangoon and
Maulmain in Burma,
where he was
received with
great splendour. On 30
January he...
-
forced Elder Savage to
depart Rangoon (Yangon) for
Maulmain, Burma.
While Elder Savage was in
Maulmain,
Elder Luddington departed Rangoon for Bangkok.[citation...
- on the Fauna, Flora, Minerals, and
Nations of
British Burmah and Pegu.
Maulmain:
American Mission Press. p. 213. "Transboundary
River Basin Overview –...
- of 180 in its 2024 ranking. In 1836, the country's
first newspaper, The
Maulmain Chronicle, was
published followed by The
Rangoon Chronicle in 1853, later...
- on
April 25, 1853, and then went on to Rangoon, Burma. He then went to
Maulmain, Burma,
situated 300 km
southeast of
Yangon and 70 km
south of Thaton,...
-
Christian church. She
spent the
period of the
rains from May to
September at
Maulmain, and on her
return to the jungle,
found the
church and the
schools prospering...
-
cargo ship Ava, ran
aground and was
wrecked 9
nautical miles (17 km) off
Maulmain in Burma. Henderson's
quickly replaced the ship with a new Ava
built the...
-
translated in 1848, into
Burmese by
Lucretia Brownson Stilson, a
missionary in
Maulmain, Burma, and were
subsequently reissued at
least twice. They
would also...