Myanmar Standard Time


Myanmar Standard Time, formerly Burma Standard Time, is the standard time in Myanmar, 6.5 hours ahead of UTC. Myanmar Standard Time is calculated on the basis of 97°30′E longitude. MMT is used all year round, as Myanmar does not observe daylight saving time.

History

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. The day was divided into eight 3-hour segments called baho, or sixty 24-minute segments called nayi. 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 and a large bell were struck to mark every baho.
TypeTimeBurmese nameDescription
Day1 o'clockနံနက် တစ်ချက်တီးmidway between sunrise and midday
Day2 o'clockနေ့ နှစ်ချက်တီးnoon
Day3 o'clockနေ့ သုံးချက်တီးmidway between noon and sunset
Day4 o'clockနေ့ လေးချက်တီးsunset
Night1 o'clockည တစ်ချက်တီးmidway between sunset and midnight
Night2 o'clockည နှစ်ချက်တီးmidnight
Night3 o'clockည သုံးချက်တီးmidway between midnight and sunrise
Night4 o'clockနံနက် လေးချက်တီးsunrise

Colonial period

The use of a common time began in British Burma in the late 19th century. The first confirmed mention of Rangoon Mean Time at GMT+6:24:40 being in use was in 1892, a year before the country's first time ball observatory was opened in Rangoon on 1 October 1893. However, the use of RMT as the common time, at least in some sectors, most probably started earlier. On 1 July 1905, a new standard time called Burma Standard Time 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. Although the rest of the country came to adopt BST, RMT continued to be used in the city of Rangoon at least to 1927. By 1930, however, BST apparently had been adopted in Rangoon as well.
The standard time was changed to Japan Standard Time during the Japanese occupation of the country in World War II.

After independence

The standard time was reverted to GMT+6:30 after the war. 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 presumably since 1989 when the country's name in English was changed from Burma to Myanmar. The country does not observe a daylight saving time.

Timeline of common times

IANA time zone database

The IANA time zone database contains one time zone named Asia/Yangon for Myanmar
Country CodeCoordinatesTime ZoneCommentsUTC offsetUTC DST offset
MMAsia/YangonAsia/Rangoon-