Burma or Myanmar and officially known as the Republic of the Union of Myanmar is a real-world country in Southeast Asia.
Description[]
Myanmar is a Southeast Asian nation along the Bay of Bengal.
Features[]
- Irrawaddy river: Officially known as the Ayeyarwady or Ayeyarwaddy River is a river which flows from North to South Burma. The river ends in Burma's Ayeyarwady Region where it forms a Delta and empties into the sea. The Irrawaddy is also one of the Rivers of Adventure connecting to the realm of Adventureland.
- Irrawaddy ruins: This was a series of ruins, oddly built by the Khmer Empire of Ancient Cambodia and which contained statues of animals alongside Khmer king, Jayavarman VII.
History[]
Background[]
Pagan Kingdom[]
British subjugation[]
Jungle Cruise appearances[]
Adventure Trading Company[]
The community posting section for The Daily Gnus had the messages, "Swim Lessons - Daily 5pm in the Irrawaddy River" and, "Witness the Wonder of Nature - Crocodile feeding demonstrations daily 5pm in the Irrawaddy River".
Jungle Cruise[]
Jungle Cruise (Disneyland)[]
Following a 2021 refurbishment, the Cambodian ruins were changed to depict ruins on the Irrawaddy River. The song Moon Over Burma by Dorothy Lamour plays on the Global Broadcasting Service in the queue, taken from the 1940 film of the same name. Also in the queue, a map detailing Dr. Albert Falls' victorian expedition to map the rivers of adventure identifies him as having explored the Irrawaddy ruins.
Jungle Cruise (Magic Kingdom)[]
In the Amazon River Base, a map advertising the Jungle Navigation Company's, "Lotus Tours" identifies Burma as one of its locations. Burma is also referenced on AWOL Airwaves by Albert Awol while promoting Lotus Tours. A crate also identifies Dr. Albert Falls as having had an address in the Bay of Bengal though where in the bay is unknown.
Skipper Canteen[]
Burma is also shown on a map by Jason Chandler and Captain Brieux titled, "Legendary Flying Beasts of the Mekong Legendary Flying Beasts of the Mekong river and the surrounding territories".
Trivia[]
- The Irrawaddy was popularized in colonial media by British colonial author Rudyard Kipling's 1890 poem Mandalay.