Capital and chief port of Myanmar (Burma) on the Yangon River, 32 km/20 mi from the Indian Ocean; population (2001 est) 3,938,900. Yangon is a centre of communications by road, rail, and air, as well as by river transport, and is one of the greatest rice markets in the world. Over three-quarters of Myanmar's international trade goes through Yangon, with rice, teak, and metal ores being the leading exports. Major industries, all state-owned, in the city include soap, rubber, and aluminium manufacturing. There is also some shipbuilding, oil refining, and textile and pottery manufacture. The population includes many Indians and Chinese.
The city
Dagon was founded on the site in 746; it was given the name Rangoon (meaning end of conflict) by King Alaungpaya in 1755. The
British East India Company set up a factory here in 1790, and the city was captured by the British in 1852. It was occupied by Japan in World War II.
© RM 2009. Helicon Publishing is division of RM.