Buddha's father: Śuddhodana (Sanskrit: शुद्धोदन; Pali: Suddhōdana). He was a leader of the Shakya clan, who lived at Kapilavastu. The Shakyas were of ‘mixed origin’ (saṃkīrṇa-yonayaḥ) of Indo-Aryan and Munda descent, with the former group forming a minority. The Shakyas were closely related to their eastern neighbours, the Koliya tribe, with whom they intermarried. Shakya (Pāḷi: Sakya; Sanskrit: शाक्य, romanized: Śākya) was an ancient eastern sub-Himalayan ethnicity and clan of north-eastern region of the Indian subcontinent, whose existence is attested during the Iron Age. Buddha's mother: The princess Māyā (Maha Maya), who was the daughter of a Koliya noble. Koliya (Pāli: Koliya) was an ancient Indo-Aryan clan of north-eastern South Asia whose existence is attested during the Iron Age. The capital of the Koliyas was Devadaha. Devdaha (Deva Daha, देवदह) is a municipality in Rupandehi District of Nepal, the ancient capital of Koliya Kingdom, located 7 km east of Lumbini, Nepal. Scholars generally agree that most Buddhist literature holds that Maya died seven days after the birth of Buddha. King Śuddhodana and Queen Māyā are believed to have lived at Kapilavastu, as did their son Prince Siddartha Gautama (Gautama Buddha) until he left the palace at the age of 29. Kapilavastu was an ancient city in the north of the Indian subcontinent which was the capital of the clan gaṇasaṅgha or "republic" of the Shakyas in the late Iron Age, around the 6th and 5th centuries BC. There are now two sites near the border between Nepal and India which are claimed as Kapilavastu - one in each country. Piprahwa in Uttar Pradesh is more widely accepted by historians than Tilaurkot in Nepal. Finds at the Piprahwa (including a reliquary found inside a mud stupa) indicate Buddhist activity dating to the 5th-4th century BCE, around the time of the death of the Buddha. Myanmar/Burmese: 1st migration group to Burma/Myanmar (((According to Hmannan Yazawin, the origins of the Burmese monarchy trace back to the 9th century BCE India, more than three centuries before the Buddha was born. Abhiyaza (Abhiraja) was a prince of an ancient kingdom of Kosala (ကောသလ) in present-day northern India. Indeed, Prince Abhiyaza was lord of the Kapilavastu (ကပိလဝတ်) region of Kosala-the very birthplace of the historical Buddha three centuries later. Around the mid-9th century BCE, Kosala went to war with the neighboring kingdom of Panchala (ပဉ္စာလရာဇ်). The cause of war was that the king of Panchala had asked the king of Kosala for his daughter's hand in marriage, and was rudely refused. The Panchala king conquered the Kosala kingdom, and the ruling clan of Kosala dispersed in three directions. One of them was Abhiyaza who with a group of his loyal followers trekked a long mountainous route all the way to present-day northern Burma, and founded a kingdom at Tagaung in 850 BCE. Hmannan does not claim that he had arrived in an empty land, only that he was the first king. Abhiyaza had two sons. When he died, the elder son Kanyaza Gyi (ကံရာဇာကြီး) ventured south, and founded his own kingdom at Arakan in 825 BCE. 2nd migration group to Burma/Myanmar (The Pyu city states (Burmese: ပျူ မြို့ပြ နိုင်ငံများ) were a group of city-states that existed from about the 2nd century BCE to the mid-11th century in present-day Upper Burma (Myanmar). The city-states were founded as part of the southward migration by the Tibeto-Burman-speaking Pyu people. The city-states were mainly populated by the Tibeto-Burman-speaking Pyu people, who like their cousins Burmans are believed to have migrated from the present Qinghai and Gansu provinces in north-central China, via Yunnan. 3rd. migration group to Burma/Myanmar (It was a long-lasting civilization that lasted nearly a millennium to the early 9th century until a new group of "swift horsemen" from the north, the (Mranma) (Burmans) of the Nanzhao Kingdom (Yunnan, Kunming of China) entered the upper Irrawaddy valley through a series of raids. According to the Tang Dynasty chronicles, the Nanzhao began their raids of Upper Burma starting as early as 754 or 760 AD. CONCLUSION: Buddha's father is "Indo-Aryan and Munda descent" and mother is "ancient Indo-Aryan". Nowadays Burmese/Myanmar are mixed race of Indian (Buddha's ancestor according to Hmannan Yazawin)+Pyu (Tibet)+Mranma (Nanzhao of Yunnan/Kunming of China). Because of Hmannan Yazawin, Buddha's ancestor were in Burma/Myanmar and therefore Buddha is Burmese/Myanmar????????????????????????????????? According to historians, "Scholars view the Abhiyaza story as an attempt by the chroniclers of Hmannan to move away from then prevailing pre-Buddhist origin narrative of the monarchy."