The British, disturbed by Burmese control of…
October 1819 CE
The British, disturbed by Burmese control of Manipur and Assam, which threaten their own influence on the eastern borders of British India, support rebellions in the region.
By the medieval period, marriage alliances between royal families of the Manipur kingdom, Ahom (Assam) and Burma had become common.
Medieval era Manipur manuscripts discovered in the twentieth century, particularly the Puya, will provide evidence that Hindus from the Indian subcontinent were married to Manipur royalty at least by the fourteenth century.
In centuries thereafter, royal spouses have come also from what is now modern Assam, Bengal, and Uttar Pradesh, together with ancient Dravidian kingdoms and other regions.
Another manuscript suggests that Muslims arrived in Manipur in the seventeenth century, from what is now Bangladesh, during the reign of Meidingu Khagemba.
The socio-political turmoil and wars, particularly the persistent and devastating Manipur-Burma wars, affect the cultural and religious demography of Manipur.