| t is difficult to
determine the type of culture which existed in Thailand
before the Christian era, since no written records or
chronologies exist but archeological excavations in the
area north of Nakorn Ratchasima indicate that there were
people living here over 4000 years ago.
However, by the 6th
century AD thriving agricultural communities were
established from as far north as Lamphun to Pattani in
Southern Thailand. Theravada Buddhism was flourishing,
and probably entered the region around the 2nd or 3rd
centuries BC when Indian missionaries were said to have
been sent to a land called "Suvarnabhumi". (An area
comprising Burma, Central Thailand and Cambodia).
The Dvaravati period, a
loose collection of city states, centred around the
Nakhon Pathom area, and lasted until the 11th century
when it quickly declined under the political domination
of invading Khmers.
During the 12th century
A.D. and is set on top of Phanom Rung Hill in Ta Pek in
the Chaloem Phra Khiat District of Buri Ram province
which is the location of a long extinct volcano. Phanom
Rung is the original name and is mentioned in stone
inscriptions excavated at the area. It is a religious
site dedicated to the God Shiva, the supreme Hindu
deity. It symbolises Mount Kailasa, the heavenly abode
of Shiva.
During the 13th century
several Thai principalities in the Mekong valley united
and took Haripunchai from the Mons and the Sukhothai
area from the Khmers. The Sukhothai kingdom declared its
independence in 1238 and quickly began to expand. At its
height the kingdom stretched from Nakhon Si Thammarat in
the south to Vientiane in Laos, and Pegu in Burma.
Sukhothai is considered by most Thai historians to be
the first true Thai kingdom. King Rham Khamhaeng, the
second king of the Sukhothai era, organised a system of
writing which became the basis for modern Thai. He also
codified the Thai form of Theravada Buddhism.
During the 14th and 15th
centuries the Thai kings of Ayuthaya became very
powerful and began to expand their kingdom eastward
until they took Angkor from the Khmers in 1431. By the
mid-16th century Ayuthaya and the independent kingdom of
Chiang Mai had came under the control of the Burmese,
but the Thais regained control of both areas by the end
of the century.
Burma again invaded
Ayuthaya in 1765 and fought a fierce battle with the
Thais for two years before gaining control of the
capital. During the process the Burmese destroyed large
numbers of manuscripts, religious sculptures, and many
temples.
The Burmese made no further inroads into Thailand and,
in 1769, a new Thai capital was established at Thonburi,
on the banks of the Chao Phraya river opposite Bangkok,
by general Phya Taksin. The Thais quickly regained
control of their country and began to further unite the
provinces in the north and south of the country.
The Monarchy
In 1782 king Rama I was
crowned. He moved the capital across the river to
Bangkok, and ruled as the first king of the Chakri
dynasty. In 1809 Rama II, son of Rama I, took the throne
and ruled until 1824. King Rama III (1824-1851) began to
develop trade with China and increase domestic
agricultural production.
When king Mongkut (Rama
IV) took the throne in 1851 he quickly established
diplomatic relations with European nations, while at the
same time astutely avoiding colonisation. He also began
a period of trade reform and modernisation of the Thai
education system. His son, King Chulalongkorn (Rama V
1868-1910), continued this tradition with the
modernisation of the legal and administrative systems,
and the construction of railways. During his 15 year
reign from 1910 to 1925 king Vajiravudha (Rama VI)
introduced compulsory education and other reforms.
In 1925 the brother of
king Vajiravudha, king Prajadhipok (Rama VII 1925-1935)
ascended the throne. Seven years later a group of Thai
students living in Paris mounted a successful bloodless
coup d'etat which led to the establishment of a
constitutional monarchy similar to that which existed in
Britain. A key military leader in the coup, Phibul
Songkhram, took power and maintained control until after
the end or WW II. Rama VIII, Ananda Mahidol, became king
in 1935 but was assassinated in rather mysterious
circumstances in 1946. He was succeeded by his younger
brother Bhumipol Aduldej who became Rama IX. His Majesty
King Bhumipol Adujdej remains on the throne today, and
he commands great respect in both Thailand and
throughout the rest of the world. |