Myanmar Standard Time

Myanmar Standard Time ( Burmese: မြန်မာ စံတော်ချိန်, [mjəmà sàɰ̃dɔ̀dʑèiɰ̃]), formerly Burma Standard Time (BST), is the standard time in Myanmar, 6.5 hours ahead of UTC. Myanmar Standard Time (MMT) is calculated on the basis of 97°30′E longitude.[1] MMT is used all year round, as Myanmar does not observe daylight saving time.[2][3]

UTC+06:30
Time zone
Myanmar Standard Time
UTC offset
UTCUTC+6:30
Current time
11:09, 27 April 2024 MMT [refresh]
Central meridian
Date-time group

History

The Alanpya "Signal" Pagoda in Rangoon/Yangon in 1855. The time ball attached to the top of the pagoda by the British is visible.[4]

Pre-colonial period

Myanmar did not have a standard time before the British colonial period. Each region kept its own local mean time, according to the Burmese calendar rules: sunrise, noon, sunset and midnight.[note 1] The day was divided into eight 3-hour segments called baho (ဗဟို), or sixty 24-minute segments called nayi (နာရီ). Although the calendar consists of time units down to the millisecond level, the popular usage never extended beyond baho and at most nayi measurements; a gong was struck every nayi while a drum (စည်) and a large bell (ခေါင်းလောင်း) were struck to mark every baho.[5]

TypeTimeBurmese nameDescription
Day1 o'clockနံနက် တစ်ချက်တီးmidway between sunrise and midday
2 o'clockနေ့ နှစ်ချက်တီးnoon (midday)
3 o'clockနေ့ သုံးချက်တီးmidway between noon and sunset
4 o'clockနေ့ လေးချက်တီးsunset
Night1 o'clockည တစ်ချက်တီးmidway between sunset and midnight
2 o'clockည နှစ်ချက်တီးmidnight
3 o'clockည သုံးချက်တီးmidway between midnight and sunrise
4 o'clockနံနက် လေးချက်တီးsunrise

Colonial period

Burma at 6:30 ahead of the GMT on this 1928 world map of time zones

The use of a common time began in British Burma in the late 19th century. The first confirmed mention of Rangoon Mean Time (RMT) at GMT+6:24:40[note 2] being in use was in 1892,[6] a year before the country's first time ball observatory[note 3] was opened in Rangoon (Yangon) on 1 October 1893.[7][8] However, the use of RMT as the common time, at least in some sectors, most probably started earlier. (The country's first rail service, between Rangoon and Prome (Pyay), began on 2 May 1877,[9] and the non-authoritative IANA time zone database says RMT was introduced in 1880.[10]) On 1 July 1905,[11][12] a new standard time called Burma Standard Time (BST) at GMT+6:30—set to the longitude 97° 30' E, and 5 minutes and 20 seconds ahead of RMT—was first adopted by the Railways and Telegraph administrations.[11][13] Although the rest of the country came to adopt BST, RMT continued to be used in the city of Rangoon at least to 1927.[note 4] By 1930, however, BST apparently had been adopted in Rangoon as well.[note 5]

The standard time was changed to Japan Standard Time (JST) during the Japanese occupation of the country (1942–1945) in World War II.[14]

After independence

The standard time was reverted to GMT+6:30 after the war.[14] It has remained ever since, even after the country's independence in 1948. The only change has been its name in English; the official English name has been changed to Myanmar Standard Time[1] presumably since 1989 when the country's name in English was changed from Burma to Myanmar.[15] The country does not observe a daylight saving time.[2]

Timeline of common times

NamePeriodOffset from UTCNotes
Rangoon Mean Time2 May 1877? – 30 June 1905UTC+6:24:40Standard time for British Burma from at least 1892 to 30 June 1905. Continued to be used in Rangoon (Yangon) at least to 1927[16] perhaps until 1929.[17]
Burma Standard Time1 July 1905 – 30 April 1942UTC+6:30:00First adopted by Railways and Telegraph offices in 1905.[11][13] The October 2021 IANA database says it was introduced in 1920[14] but does not provide a source.
Japan Standard Time1 May 1942 – 2 May 1945UTC+09:00:00Standard time during the Japanese occupation
Burma/Myanmar Standard Time3 May 1945 – presentUTC+06:30:00

IANA time zone database

The IANA time zone database contains one time zone named Asia/Yangon[18] for Myanmar[14]

Country CodeCoordinatesTime ZoneCommentsUTC offsetUTC DST offset
MM16.79543 96.15051Asia/YangonAsia/Rangoon+06:30

Notes

References

Bibliography

  • BBC News (2 December 2011). "Who, What, Why: Should it be Burma or Myanmar?". BBC News.
  • Chailley-Bert, Joseph (1894). The Colonisation of Indo-China. Translated by Arthur Baring Brabant. London: A. Constable & Company.
  • Clancy, J.C. (January 1906). T. Lewis; H.P. Hollis (eds.). "The Burmese Calendar: A Monthly Review of Astronomy". The Observatory. XXIX (366).
  • Hydrographic Office, Admiralty (1895). "Bay of Bengal Pilot". London. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • IANA Time Zone Database (2021-10-21). "Time Zone Database, 2021e". Retrieved 2022-01-01.
  • Kinns, Roger (2020). "Time Signals for Mariners in India, Burma and Ceylon" (PDF). Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage. 23 (3). Chiang Mai: National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand: 523–552. Bibcode:2020JAHH...23..523K. doi:10.3724/SP.J.1440-2807.2020.03.05. S2CID 256563687.
  • Kinns, Roger (2021). "Time Signals for Mariners in Southeast Asia: Time Balls, Discs, Bells, Guns and Lights". In Wayne Orchiston; Mayank N. Vahia (eds.). Exploring the History of Southeast Asian Astronomy: A Review of Current Projects and Future Prospects and Possibilities. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. ISBN 978-3-030-62776-8.
  • The Railway Board of India (1906). Administration Report on the Railways in India for the Calendar Year 1905. Simla: Manager of Publications.
  • Union of Myanmar Ministry of Information (2002). Myanmar: Facts and Figures. Ministry of Information, Union of Myanmar.
  • United States National Bureau of Standards (1935). Standard Time Throughout the World. Washington: United States Department of Commerce.
  • United States Nautical Almanac Office (17 May 2013). The Nautical Almanac for the Year 2014. Government Printing Office. p. 262. ISBN 978-0-16-091756-1.
  • United States Naval Observatory (1906). Publications of the United States Naval Observatory. Vol. IV. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • United States Office of Naval Intelligence (1928). Port Directory of the Principal Foreign Ports. Washington: US Naval Department.