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Ayutthaya Period
For 417 years the kingdom of
Ayutthaya was the dominant power in the fertile Menam or
Chao Phraya Basin. Its capital was Ayutthaya, an
island-city situated at the confluence of three rivers,
the Chao Phraya, the Pasak, and the Lopburi, which grew
into one of Asia's most renowned metropolises, inviting
comparison with great European cities such as Paris. The
city must indeed have looked majestic, filled as it was
with hundreds of monasteries and crisscrossed with several
canals and waterways which served as roads.
Ayutthaya, the capital of the
Thai Kingdom was found by U-Thong King in 1350.
Ayutthaya
as an island is formed by the gathering of three rivers,
the Chao Phraya, the Pasak, and the Lopburi and surrounded
by rice terraces. It is easy to see why the Ayutthaya area
was settled prior to this date since the site offered a
variety of geographical and economic advantages. Not only
is Ayutthaya at the confluence of three rivers, plus some
canals, but its proximity to the sea also gave its
inhabitants an irresistible stimulus to engage in maritime
trade. The rice fields in the immediate environs flooded
each year during the rainy season, rendering the city
virtually impregnable for several months annually. These
fields, of course, had an even more vital function, that
of feeding a relatively large population in the Ayutthaya
region. Rice grown in these plants yielded a surplus large
enough to be exported regularly to various countries in
Asia.
The Thai kings of Ayutthaya
became powerful in the 14th and 15th centuries, taking
over U-Thong, Lopburi, and Ayutthaya. Ayutthaya's first
king, Ramathibodi I, was both a warrior and a lawmaker.
Some old laws codified in 1805 by the first Bangkok king
date from this much earlier reign. King Ramathibodi I and
his immediate successors expanded Ayutthaya's territory,
especially northward towards Sukhothai and eastward
towards the Khmer capital of Angkor. By the 15th century,
Ayutthaya had established a firm hegemony over most of the
northern and central Thai states, though attempts to
conquer Lanna failed. Ayutthaya also captured Angkor on at
least one occasion but was unable to hold on to it for
long. The Ayutthaya kingdom thus changed, during the 15th
century, from being a small state primus inter pares
among similar states in central Thailand into an
increasingly centralized kingdom wielding tight control
over a core area of territory, as well as having looser
authority over a string of tributary states.
King U-Thong and his
immediate successors expanded Ayutthaya's territory,
especially northward towards Sukhothai and eastward
towards the Khmer capital of Angkor. The greater size of
Ayutthaya's territory, as compared with that of Sukhothai,
meant that the method of government could not remain the
same as during the days of King Ramkhamhaeng. The
paternalistic and benevolent Buddhist kingship of
Sukhothai would not have worked in Ayutthaya. The king of
the latter therefore created a complex administrative
system allied to a hierarchical social system. This
administ rative system dating from the reign of King
Trailok, or Borommatrailokanat(1448-1488), was to evolve
into the modern Thai bureaucracy. The Ayutthaya
bureaucracy contained a hierarchy of ranked and titled
officials, all of whom had varying amounts of "honor
marks" (sakdina).
Thai society during the
Ayutthaya period also became strictly hierarchical. There
were, roughly, three classes of people, with the king at
the very apex of the structure. At the bottom of the
social scale, and the most numerous, were the commoners
(freemen or phrai) and the slaves. Above the commoners
were the officials or "nobles" (khunnang),
while at the top of the scale were the princes (chao).
The one classless sector of Thai society was the Buddhist
monkhood, or sangha, into which all classes
of Thai men could be ordained. The monkhood was the
institution which could weld together all the different
social classes, the Buddhist monasteries being the center
of all Thai communities both urban and a gricultural.
The Ayutthaya kings were not
only Buddhist kings who ruled according to the dhamma
(dharma), but they were also
devaraja, god-kings whose sacred power was
associated with the Hindu, gods Indra and Vishnu. To many
Western observers, the kings of Ayutthaya were treated as
if they were gods. The French Abbe de Choisy, who came to
Ayutthaya in 1685, wrote that, "the king has absolute
power. He is truly the god of the Siamese: no-one dares to
utter his name." Another 17th century writer, the Dutchman
Van Vliet, remarked that the king of Siam was "honoured
and worshipped by his subjects more than a god.
The Ayutthaya period was early Thai history's great era of
international trade. Ayutthaya's role as a port made it
one of Southeast Asia's richest emporia. The port of
Ayutthaya was an entrepot, an international market place
where goods from the Far East could be bought or bartered
in exchange for merchandise from the Malay/Indonesian
Archipelago, India, or Persia, not to mention local wares
or produce from Ayutthaya's vast hinterland. The trading
world of the Indian Ocean was accessible to Ayutthaya
through its possession, for much of its 417-year history,
of the seaport of Mergui on the Bay of Bengal. This port
in Tenasserim province was linked to the capital by a wild
but ancient and frequently used overland trade route.
Throughout its long history,
Ayutthaya had a thriving commerce in "forest produce",
principally sapanwood (a wood which produces reddish dye),
eaglewood (an aromatic wood), benzoin (a type of incense),
gumlac (used as wax), and deerhides (much in d emand in
Japan). Elephant teeth and rhinoceros horns were also
highly valued exports, but the former was a strict royal
monopoly and the latter relatively rare, especially
compared with deerhides. Ayutthaya also sold provisions
such as rice and dried fish to other Southeast Asian
states. The range of minerals found in the kingdom was
limit ed, but tin from Phuket ("Junkceylon") and Nakhon Si
Thammarat ("Ligor") was much sought after by both Asian
and European traders.
The Chinese, with their large
and versatile junks, were the traders who had the most
regular and sustained contact with Ayutthaya. The
Ayutthaya kings, in order to conduct a steady and
profitable trade with Ming and Manchu China, from the 14th
to t he 18th centuries, entered willingly into a tributary
relationship with the Chinese emperors. The Thais
recognized Chinese suzerainty and China's preeminent
position in Asia in return for Chinese political sanction
and, even more desirable, Chinese luxury goods. Muslim
merchants came from India and further West to sell their
highly-prized clothes both to Thais and to other foreign
traders. So dominant were Chinese and Muslim merchants in
Ayutthaya that an old Thai law dating back to the 15th
century divides the Thai king's foreign trade department
into two: a Chinese section and a Muslim section. Chinese,
Indians, and later on Japanese and Persians all settled in
Ayutthaya, the Thai kings welcoming their presence and
granting them complete freedom of worship. Several of
these foreigners became important cour t officials.
Containing merchandise from
all corners of Asia, the thriving markets of Ayutthaya
attracted traders from Europe. The Portuguese were the
first to arrive, in 1511, at the time when Albuquerque was
attempting to conquer Melaka (Malacca). They conclu ded
their first treaty with Ayutthaya in 1516, receiving
permission to settle in Ayutthaya and other Thai ports in
return for supplying guns and ammunition to the Thai king.
Portugal's powerful neighbor Spain was the next European
nation to arrive in Ayutthaya, towards the end of the 16th
century. The early 17th century saw the arrival of two
northern European East India Companies: The Du tch (V.O.C)
and the British. The Dutch East India Company played a
vital role in Ayutthaya's foreign trade from 1605 until
1765, succeeding in obtaining from the Thai kings a
deerhide export monopoly as well as one of all the tin
sold at Nakhon Si Thammarat. The Dutch sold Thai sapanwood
and deerhides for good profits in Japan during Japan's
exclusion period, after 1635.
The French first arrived in
1662, during the reign of Ayutthaya's most outward-looking
and cosmopolitan ruler, King Narai (1656-1688). French
missionaries and merchants came to the capital, and during
the 1680's splendid embassies were exchanged between King
Narai and King Louis XIV. The French tried to convert King
Narai to Christianity and also attempted to gain a
foothold in the Thai kingdom when, in 1687, they sent
troops to garrison Bangkok and Mergui. When a succession
conflict broke out in 1688 an anti-French official seized
power, drove out the French garrisons, and executed King
Narai's Greek favorite Constantine Phaulkon, who had bee
championing the French cause. After 1688, Ayutthaya had
less cont act with Western nations, but there was no
policy of national exclusion. Indeed, there was increased
trading contact with China after 1683,and there was
continued trade with the Dutch, the Indians, and various
neighbouring countries.
Ayutthaya's relations with
its neighbours were not always cordial. Wars were fought
against Cambodia, Lanna, Lanchang (Laos), Pattani, and
above all, Burma, Ayutthaya's powerful neighbour to the
west. Burmese power waxed an d waned in cycles according
to their administrative efficiency in the control of
manpower. Whenever Burma was in an expansionist phase,
Ayutthaya suffered. In 1569, King Bayinnaung captured
Ayutthaya, thus initiating over a decade's subjection to
the Burmese. One of the greatest Thai military leaders,
Prince (later King) Naresuan, then emerged to declare
Ayutthaya's independence and to defeat the Burmese in
several battles and skirmishes, culminating in the victory
of Nong Sarai, when he killed the Burmese Crown Prince in
combat on elephant back.
During
the 18th century Burma again adopted an expansionist
policy. The kings of the Alaunghphaya Dynasty were intent
on subduing the Ayutthaya kingdom, then in cultural and
artistic prime. The Burmese invaded Ayutthaya in 1765.
This time Burmese caused much fear to Thais. Burmese
soldiers destroyed everything, including temples,
manuscripts, and religious sculpture. After the capital
fell in their hands for two years, the Burmese
effectiveness could not further hold the kingdom. Phaya
Taksin, a Thai general, promoted himself to be the king in
1769. He ruled the new capital of Thonburi on the bank of
Chao Phraya River, opposite Bangkok. Thais regained
control of their country and thus scattered themselves to
the provinces in the north and central part of Thailand.
Taksin eventually turn himself to be the next Buddha and
was dismissed and executed by his ministers who did not
approve his religious values.
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