$0/moFreeHiddenPatron count not public
$3/moAhmudan ServicemanHiddenIn ancient Burma, every male was considered a soldier and was liable for military service. While the bulk of a wartime Burmese royal army was made up of conscripts, there were several standing regular regiments. These men were sworn to be loyal to the Golden Throne and form the nucleus for any Burmese army.
$5/moBloodsworn KnightHiddenWhile the Burmese do not have a strict military caste, the kings, nobility, and warriors are classified under the Khattiya class, the Burmanised version of the Hindu Kshatriya. However, oaths of loyalty and comradeship are sworn through the blood oath or Thwethaut. The term began to refer to the formation of brotherhoods of companions and warriors to kings and lords. Myinsi Thwethaut or Bloodsworn Knights (Or Blood Riders) were elite cavalrymen that served the Throne.
$10/moRoyal GuardHiddenThe Royal Guards Division consisted of four brigades, each of which resided in barracks outside the palace, and designated by the location in relation to the place: Front, Rear, Left and Right. The captain of each brigade was called winhmu. The men generally were gentry, and selected for their trustworthiness taken primarily from the Servicemen in the Capital Regiments and trusted hereditary ahmudan village usually located near the capital or the king's ancestral/appanage region. They were the true standing regular army in the old Burmese royal military and were some of the best warriors the Burma had.