Jubilee Hall, Rangoon

Jubilee Hall (Burmese: ဂျူဗလီဟော) was a colonial-era landmark in Rangoon, Burma of historical significance, and considered "one of the best appointed theatres in the Orient" during the early part of the 20th century.

[2] With the onset of World War II and Japanese occupation, the Ba Maw government renamed the building the "Great Burmese Royal Hall" (မဟာဗမာရုံတော်ကြီး).

[3] In 1947, the building hosted the Anti-Fascist People’s Freedom League convention, during which Aung San drafted the Burma's first constitution.

[3] The following year, in 1948, the remains of Aung San and other government officials were laid in state at the hall for 6 months following their assassination at the Secretariat on 19 July, which is now observed as a national holiday, Burmese Martyrs' Day.

[4] The project has been the subject of significant controversy, over lack of civilian oversight and financial transparency on a US$300 million (equivalent to $2.57 million in 2023) lease agreement between the Burmese military and the Yangon Technical and Trading Company, a subsidiary of Zaw Win Shein's Ayeyar Hinthar, which is a proxy of the Burmese military.