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Taksin
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King Taksin the Great (Thai: สมเด็จพระเจ้าตากสินมหาราช, RTGSSomdet Phra Chao Taksin Maharat,[c] listen) or the King of Thonburi (Thai: สมเด็จพระเจ้ากรุงธนบุรี, RTGSSomdet Phra Chao Krung Thon Buri;[d] simplified Chinese: 郑昭; traditional Chinese: 鄭昭; pinyin: Zhèng Zhāo; Teochew: Dên Chao;[6] 17 April 1734 – 7 April 1782) was the only king of the Thonburi Kingdom that ruled Thailand from 1767 to 1782. He had been an aristocrat in the Ayutthaya Kingdom and then was a major leader during the liberation of Siam from Burmese occupation after the Second Fall of Ayutthaya in 1767, and the subsequent unification of Siam after it fell under various warlords. He established the city of Thonburi as the new capital, as the city of Ayutthaya had been almost completely destroyed by the invaders. His reign was characterized by numerous wars; he fought to repel new Burmese invasions and to subjugate the northern Thai kingdom of Lanna, the Laotian principalities, and threatening Cambodia.

Key Information

Although warfare occupied most of Taksin's reign, he paid a great deal of attention to politics, administration, economy, and the welfare of the country. He promoted trade and fostered relations with foreign countries. He had roads built and canals dug. Apart from restoring and renovating temples, the king attempted to revive literature, and various branches of the arts such as drama, painting, architecture and handicrafts. He also issued regulations for the collection and arrangement of various texts to promote education and religious studies.

He was taken in a coup d'état and executed in 1782, and succeeded by his long-time friend Maha Ksatriyaseuk, who then assumed the throne, founding the Rattanakosin Kingdom and the Chakri dynasty, which has since ruled Thailand. In recognition for his deeds, he was later awarded the title of Maharaj (The Great).

Early life

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Ancestry

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A royal monument of King Taksin the Great

Taksin was born on 17 April 1734, in Ayutthaya.[clarification needed] Taksin had Chinese Teochew, Tai-Chinese and Mon ancestry. His father, Yong Saetae (Thai: หยง แซ่แต้; Chinese: 鄭鏞 Zhèng Yōng), who worked as a tax-collector,[7] was of ethnic Teochew descent from Chenghai District, Shantou, Guangdong, China.[5][8]

His mother, Nokiang (Thai: นกเอี้ยง), was of Mon-Tai descent[9] (and was later appointed to establish the royal title of the Princess Mother Thephamat).[10] Nokiang's mother was a Mon noblewoman who was a younger sister to Phraya Phetburi (personal name: Roeang) and Phraya Ram Chaturon (personal name: Chuan). Phraya Phetburi (Roeang) was governor of Phetburi, then the Mon population center and royal naval base in King Boromakot's reign. Phraya Ram Chaturon (Chuan) served as chief of Siam's Mon community during the reign of King Ekkathat. Nokiang's father was a Tai commoner.[9][11]

Childhood

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Impressed by the boy, Mut, the Chaophraya Chakri who was the Grand Chancellor of Civil Affairs (Thai: สมุหนายก, RTGSSamuhanayok) in King Boromakot's reign, adopted him and gave him the Thai name Sin (สิน) meaning money or treasure.[12] When he was seven, Sin was assigned to a monk named Thongdi to begin his education in a Buddhist monastery called Kosawat Temple (Thai: วัดโกษาวาส) (later, Choengtha Temple (Thai: วัดเชิงท่า)).[13] After seven years, he was sent by his stepfather to serve as a royal page. He studied Hokkien-Chinese, Filipino, and several Indian languages, and became fluent in them. It was the time he learnt Filipino, he took his name as "Jesse Aquinaldo". When Sin and his friend Thongduang who was also a descendant of Mon aristocratic family were Buddhist novices, they reportedly met a Chinese fortune-teller who told them that both had lucky lines in their hands and would both become kings. Neither took it seriously, but Thongduang would become the successor of King Taksin, called Rama I.[14]

Early career

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Portrait of King Taksin, said to be done by a French priest in King Ekkathat's funeral

After taking the vows of a Buddhist monk for about three years, Sin joined the service of King Ekkathat and was first deputy governor and later governor of Tak,[15] which gained him his name Phraya Tak, the governor of Tak.

In 1765, when the Burmese attacked Ayutthaya, Phraya Taksin defended the capital, for which he was given the title Phraya Wachiraprakan of Kamphaeng Phet. However, he did not have a chance to govern Kamphaeng Phet because the country was in a dire situation. For more than a year, Thai and Burmese soldiers fought fierce battles at the Siege of Ayutthaya. It was during this time that Phraya Vajiraprakarn experienced the setbacks which led him to doubt the value of his endeavors.[citation needed]

Resistance and independence

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King Taksin the Great Monument, the monument of King Taksin accompanied by his four trusted soldiers at Chantaburi

On 3 January 1767, 3 months before the fall of Ayutthaya,[16] Taksin made his way out of the city at the head of 500 followers to Rayong, on the east coast of the Gulf of Thailand.[17] This action was never adequately explained, as the royal compound and Ayutthaya proper was on an island. How Taksin and his followers escaped from the Burmese encirclement remains a mystery. He travelled first to Chonburi, a town on the Gulf of Thailand's eastern coast, and then to Rayong, where he raised a small army and his supporters began to address him as Prince Tak.[18] He planned to attack and capture Chanthaburi, according to a popular version of oral history, he said, "We are going to attack Chanthaburi tonight. Destroy all the food and utensils we have, for we will have our food in Chanthaburi tomorrow morning."[19]

On 7 April 1767, Ayutthaya fell to the Burmese. After the destruction of Ayutthaya and the death of the Thai king, the country was split into six parts, with Taksin controlling the east coast. Together with Thongduang, now Chao Phraya Chakri, he eventually managed to drive back the Burmese, defeat his rivals and reunify the country.[20]

With his soldiers he moved to Chanthaburi, and being rebuffed by the governor of the town, he made a surprise night attack on it and captured it on 15 June 1767, only two months after the sack of Ayutthaya.[21] His army was rapidly increasing in numbers, as men of Chanthaburi and Trat, which had not been plundered and depopulated by the Burmese,[22] naturally constituted a suitable base for him to make preparations for the liberation of his fatherland.[23]

Having thoroughly looted Ayutthaya, the Burmese did not seem to show serious interest in holding the capital of Siam, since they left only a handful of troops under General Suki to control the shattered city. They turned their attention to the north of their own country which was soon threatened with Chinese invasion. On 6 November 1767, having amassed 5,000 troops and built 100 ships, Taksin sailed up the Chao Phraya River and seized Thonburi opposite present day Bangkok. He executed the puppet Thai governor, Thong-in, whom the Burmese had placed in charge.[24] The taking of Thonburi was quite easy due to the garrison being Thai.[25] He followed up his victory quickly by attacking the main Burmese camp numbering 3,000 men, led by General Suki (สุกี้) at the Battle of Pho Sam Ton (Thai: โพธิ์สามต้น) near Ayutthaya.[26] The Burmese were defeated, General Suki was killed in the fighting, and Taksin won back Ayutthaya from the enemy within seven months of its destruction.[23]

Establishment of the capital

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The village of Thonburi, on the right (west) bank of the Chao Phraya (here in the lower left corner of the map), facing the fortress of Bangkok, during the 1688 Siege of Bangkok[27]

King Taksin took important steps to show that he was a worthy successor to the throne. He ensured appropriate treatment to the remnants of the ex-royal family, arranged a grand cremation of the remains of the former ruler Ekkathat, and tackled the problem of establishing the capital.[28] Taksin likely realized that the city of Ayutthaya had suffered such destruction that to restore it to its former state would have strained his resources. The Burmese were quite familiar with Ayutthaya's vulnerabilities, and in the event of renewal of a Burmese attack on it, the troops under the liberator would be inadequate for effective defense of the city. With these considerations in mind, he established his capital at Thonburi, which was closer to the sea.[29] Not only would Thonburi be difficult to invade by land, it would also prevent an acquisition of weapons and military supplies by anyone ambitious enough to establish himself as an independent prince further up the Chao Phraya River.[21] As Thonburi was a small town, Taksin's available forces, both soldiers and sailors, could man its fortifications, and if he found it impossible to hold it against an enemy attack, he could embark the troops and retreat to Chanthaburi.[30]

His successes against competitors for power were due to Taksin's abilities as a warrior, his leadership, valor, and effective organization of his forces. Usually he put himself in the front rank in an encounter with the enemy, thus inspiring his men. Among the officials who cast their fate with him during the campaigns for independence and for the elimination of the self-appointed local nobles were two personalities who subsequently played important roles in Thai history. They were the sons of an official bearing the title of Phra Acksonsuntornsmiantra (Thai: พระอักษรสุนทรเสมียนตรา). The elder son was named Thongduang (Thai: ทองด้วง). He was born in 1737 in Ayutthaya and later was to be the founder of the Chakri Dynasty, while the younger one, Bunma (Thai: บุญมา), born six years later, served as his deputy.[31]

Thongduang, prior to the sacking of Ayutthaya, was ennobled as Luang Yokkrabat, taking charge of royal surveillance, serving the Governor of Ratchaburi, and Bunma had a court title conferred upon him as Nai Sudchinda. Luang Yokkrabat (Thongduang) was therefore not in Ayutthaya to witness the fall of the city, while Nai Sudchinda (Bunma) made his escape from Ayutthaya. However, while King Taksin was assembling his forces at Chanthaburi, Nai Sudchinda brought his retainers to join him, thus helping to increase his fighting strength. Due to his previous acquaintance with him, the liberator was so pleased that he promoted him to be Phra Mahamontri. Just after his coronation, Taksin secured the service of Luang Yokkrabut on the recommendation of Phra Mahamontri (Thai: พระมหามนตรี) and as he was equally familiar with him as with his brother, he raised him to be Phra Rajwarin. Having rendered service to the king during his campaigns or their own expeditions against the enemies, Phra Rajwarin (Thai: พระราชวรินทร์) and Phra Mahamontri rose so quickly in the noble ranks that a few years after, the former was created Chao Phraya Chakri, the rank of the chancellor, while the latter became Chao Phraya Surasi.[29]

Reign

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Accession to the throne

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Taksin's coronation as King of Siam at Thonburi Palace, 28 December 1767
Phra Racha Wang Derm (Thonburi Palace), the former royal palace of Taksin, now used as the Royal Thai Navy's HQ, view from Phra Prang of Wat Arun, Thonburi, Bangkok.
Thonburi during Taksin's reign

On 28 December 1767, Taksin was crowned King of Siam at Thonburi Palace in Thonburi ("Krung Thonburi Sri Maha Samut"), the new capital of Siam, yet had Siam official documents still used the official name of "Krung Pra Maha Nakhon Sri Ayutthaya".[32] He assumed the official name of "Borommaracha IV" and "Phra Sri Sanphet X", but is known to Thai history as King Taksin, a combination of his popular name, "Phraya Tak", and his first name, "Sin", or the King of Thonburi. At the time of his coronation, he was only 34 years of age. W. A. R. Wood (1924) observed that Taksin's father was Chinese or partly Chinese, and his mother Siamese, and he said, "He believed that even the forces of nature were under his control when he was destined to succeeded, and this faith led him to attempt and achieve tasks which to another man would seem impossible. Like Napoleon III, he was a man of destiny."[33] The king elected not return to Ayutthaya but instead to make his capital at Thonburi, which being only 20 kilometers from the sea, was much better suited to seaborne commerce. He never really had time to build it into a great city,[34] as he was occupied with suppression of internal and external enemies, as well as territorial expansion throughout his reign.[35]

Reunification of Siam

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The five states that emerged following the dissolution of the Ayutthaya Kingdom in 1767
Journey of Phraya Tak from Ayutthaya to Chanthaburi and his return to reconquer Ayutthaya in 1767, according to traditional Thai historiography.

After the sacking of Ayutthaya the country had fallen apart, due to the disappearance of central authority. In addition to Taksin, several local lords had established themselves as rulers in Phimai, Phitsanulok, Fang (Sawangkhaburi, near Uttaradit), and Nakhon Si Thammarat. From 1768 to 1771, Taksin launched campaigns to subjugate these rivals,[36] and Thonburi emerged as the new center of power within Siam.

Wars with Burma

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During Taksin's reign, Taksin is recorded to have waged 9 campaigns against Burma:

First campaign

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In 1767, Hsinbyushin sent an army of 2,000 men under the command of Maengki Manya (Thai: แมงกี้มารหญ้า), the governor of Tavoy to invade Siam after Taksin as established Thonburi as the capital. The Burmese army advanced to the district of Bang Kung in the province of Samut Songkram to the west of the new capital, but was routed by the Thai king in the Battle of Bang Kung in 1767, which is also the site of Wat Bang Kung. When more Chinese troops invaded Burma, Hsinbyushin was forced to recall most of his troops back to resist the Chinese.

Second campaign

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In 1770, Thado Mindin, the governor of Chiang Mai, attacked Sawankhalok. Thado Mindin was repelled by Phraya Surasi.[37][25]

Third campaign

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Taksin launched campaigns to stabilize the northern frontier with Lanna, whose capital Chiang Mai, under Burmese rule, served as launching bases for Burmese incursions. A prerequisite for the maintenance of peace in that region would therefore be the complete expulsion of the Burmese from Chiang Mai.[38] In 1770, Taksin started his first expedition to capture Chiang Mai, but he was pushed back.[citation needed] In 1771, the Burmese governor of Chiang Mai launched an attack on the city of Phichai, beginning a series of campaigns over Siam's northern cities (Sukhothai[clarification needed], Phitsanulok).

Fourth campaign

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In 1772, after finishing his campaign in Luang Phrabang, Nemyo Thihapate attacked the city of Phichai, but was repelled.

Fifth campaign

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In 1773, Nemyo Thihapate attacked the city of Phichai again. During the siege, a commander named Phraya Phichai fought the Burmese until his sword broke. For that, he was given the epithet, "Phraya Phichai Dap Hak", which translates to "Phraya Phichai with the broken sword".[39]

Sixth campaign

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In 1774, Taksin led an army to attack Chiang Mai for the second time. The city was taken. Lanna, which had been under Burmese rule for over 200 years, had fallen to the Siamese.[40]

Seventh campaign

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Battle of Bangkaeo in Ratchaburi

In the same year, Hsinbyushin sent an army of 5,000 men to attack Siam. It was completely surrounded by the Thais at the Battle of Bangkaeo (Thai: ยุทธการที่บางแก้ว) in Ratchaburi. Due to starvation, the Burmese army capitulated to Taksin in 1775. Instead of killing all the men, Taksin paraded the prisoners around to boost the morale of his soldiers.[41][42]

Eighth campaign

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Maha Thiha Thura's Invasion of Siam in 1775–1776 was the largest war with the Burmese in the Thonburi Period,[43] when the Burmese invaded Siam in three directions.

Undaunted by this defeat, and aiming to retake Chiang Mai, Hsinbyushin tried again to conquer Siam, and in October 1775 the greatest Burmese invasion in the Thonburi period began under Maha Thiha Thura, known in Thai history as Azaewunky. He had distinguished himself as a first rate general in the wars with China and in the suppression of a recent Peguan rising.[44]

The war saw Burmese forces pushing into Siamese territory, capturing cities as south as Phitsanulok before the Siamese were able to push back, finally recapturing Chiang Mai in 1776. The war devastated Siam's northern cities, as well as Chiang Mai itself. Chiang Mai was abandoned, remaining deserted for the next fifteen years.[45] Its remaining inhabitants were transplanted to Lampang, where Kawila was established to rule over Lan Na as a Siamese vassal.

Ninth campaign

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In 1776, the new Burmese king, Singu Min, ordered 6,000 troops to attack Chiang Mai. Phraya Wichienprakarn considered that Chiang Mai did not have many troops to that can protect the city therefore allowing people to migrate down to the city of Sawankhalok. Taksin ordered Maha Sura Singhanat, the governor of Phitsanulok to meet up with Phraya Kawila, the ruler of Lampang to retake Chiang Mai. Chiang Mai was retaken, but due to constant wars, it was heavily devastated and remained abandoned for 15 years until it was rebuilt 15 years later.[46]

Relationship with Cambodia

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Sacking of Vientiane

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Closeup of Emerald Buddha in summer season attire

In 1777, the ruler of Champasak, which was at that time an independent principality bordering the eastern frontier of the Thonburi Kingdom, supported the Governor of Nangrong, who had rebelled against the King Taksin. The army under Chao Phraya Chakri was ordered to move against the rebel, who was caught and executed. Having received reinforcements under Chao Phraya Surasi, he advanced to Champasak, where the rulers, Chao O and his deputy, were captured and summarily beheaded. Champasak was conquered by Siam, and as a result of Chao Phraya Chakri's successful campaign Taksin promoted him to Somdej Chao Phraya Mahakasatsuek Piluekmahima Tuknakara Ra-adet (Thai:สมเด็จเจ้าพระยามหากษัตริย์ศึก พิลึกมหึมาทุกนคราระอาเดช) (meaning the supreme Chao Phraya, Great Warrior-King who was so remarkably powerful that every city was afraid of his might)[47]—the highest title of nobility that a commoner could achieve.

In Vientiane, a Minister of State, Pra Woh [de], had rebelled against the ruling prince and fled to the Champasak territory, where he set himself up at Donmotdang, near the present city of Ubon Ratchathani. He made a formal submission to the Thonburi Kingdom when he annexed Champasak, but after the withdrawal of Taksin army, he was attacked and killed by troops from Vientiane. This action was instantly regarded by King Taksin as a great insult to him, and at his command, Somdej Chao Phraya Mahakasatsuek invaded Vientiane with an army of 20,000 men in 1778. Laos had been separated into the two principalities of Luang Prabang and Vientiane since the beginning of the 18th century. The Prince of Luang Prabang, who was at odds with the Prince of Vientiane, submitted to Siam for his own safety, bringing his men to join Somdej Chao Phraya Mahakasatsuek in besieging Vientiane.[48][clarification needed]

After the siege of Vientiane which took about four months, Thaksin's took Vientiane, sacked the city, and carried off the images of Emerald Buddha and Phra Bang to Thonburi. The Prince of Vientiane managed to escape and went into exile. Thus Luang Prabang and Vientiane became tributary state of the Thonburi Kingdom.[49] Nothing definite is known about the origin of the celebrated Emerald Buddha. It is believed that this image was carved from green jasper by an artist or artists in northern India about two thousand years ago. It was taken to Ceylon and then to Chiang Rai of Lan Na kingdom where it was, in 1434, found intact in a chedi which had been struck by lightning. As an object of great veneration among Thai Buddhists, it had been deposited in monasteries in Chiang Rai, Chiang Mai, Luang Prabang, Vientiane, Thonburi, and later Bangkok.[50][51]

Economy, culture, and religion

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King Taksin portrait painting, 18th century

When King Taksin established Thonburi as his capital, people were living in abject poverty, and food and clothing were scarce. The King Taksin was well aware of the plight of his subjects, so in order to legitimize his claim for the kingdom, he made economic problems his priority. He paid high prices for rice from his own money to induce foreign traders to bring in adequate amounts of basic necessities to satisfy the need of the people. He then distributed rice and clothing to all his starving subjects. People who had been dispersed came back to their homes. Normalcy was restored. The economy of the country gradually recovered.[52] Taksin sent three diplomatic envoys to China in 1767. In the first year of his reign, Qing dynasty denied his envoys due to him not being an heir apparent from Ban Phlu Luang Dynasty and the two Princes, Chui and Sisang, were political Asylum seekers in Hà Tiên. Six years later, China recognized Taksin as the legitimate ruler of Siam in 1772.[53][clarification needed]

The record dating from 1777 states: "Important goods from Thailand are amber, gold, colored rocks, gold nuggets, gold dust, semi-precious stones, and hard lead." During this time King Taksin actively encouraged the Chinese to settle in Siam, principally those from Chaoshan,[54] partly with the intention to revive the stagnating economy[55] and upgrading the local workforce.[56] He had to fight almost constantly for most of his reign to maintain the independence of his country. As the economic influence of the immigrant Chinese community grew with time, many aristocrats, whom he took in from the Ayutthaya nobility, began to turn against him for having allied with the Chinese merchants. The opposition was led mainly by the Bunnags, a merchant-aristocratic family of Persian origin, successors of Ayutthaya's minister of Ports and Finance, or Phra Klang[57]

Later, Thonburi ordered some guns from England. Royal letters were exchanged and in 1777 the Viceroy of British Raj Madras, George Stratton, sent a gold scabbard decorated with gems to King Taksin. Thai galleons travelled to Portuguese colony of Surat, in Goa, India. However, formal diplomatic relations were not formed. In 1776, Francis Light of the Kingdom of Great Britain sent 1,400 flintlocks along with other goods as gifts to King Taksin.[58][59][clarification needed]

In 1770, natives of Terengganu and Jakarta presented Taksin with 2,200 shotguns. At that time, the Dutch Republic controlled the Java Islands.[60]

Simultaneously Taksin was deeply engaged in restoring law and order in the kingdom and administering a public welfare programme. Abuses in the Buddhist establishment and among the public were duly rectified and food and clothing and other necessities were distributed to those in need.[29]

Taksin was interested in art, including dance and drama. There is evidence that when he went to suppress the Chao Nakhon Si Thammarat faction in 1769, he brought back Chao Nakhon's female dancers. Together with dancers that he had assembled from other places, they trained and set up a royal troupe in Thonburi on the Ayutthaya model. The king wrote four episodes from the Ramakian for the royal troupe to rehearse and perform.[61][62]

When he went north to suppress the Phra Fang faction, he could see that monks in the north were lax and undisciplined. He invited ecclesiastical dignitaries from the capital to teach those monks and brought them back in line with the main teachings of Buddhism. Even though Taksin had applied himself to reforming the Buddhist religion after its period of decline following the loss of Ayutthaya to Burma, gradually bringing it back to the normalcy it enjoyed during the Ayutthaya kingdom, since his reign was so brief he was not able to do very much.

The administration of the Sangha during the Thonburi period followed the model established in Ayutthaya,[63] and he allowed French missionaries to enter Thailand, and like a previous Thai king, helped them build a church in 1780.

Relationship with the Chinese Empire

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The Entrance of Taksin's tomb in Chenghai, Guangdong, China

When Ayutthaya fell to the Burmese in 1767, Thai and Chinese sources mentioned that Taksin, then the lord of Tak, broke the Burmese siege and led his troops to Chantaburi. During those years, Chinese Empire had border conflicts with Konbaung Burma. The Burmese invasion into Siam became the warning for Chinese Empire. Taksin, then, sent a tributary mission to require the royal seal, claiming that the throne of Ayutthaya Kingdom had come to an end. However, his attempt was hindered by Mạc Thiên Tứ (Mo Shilin), the governor of Hà Tiên, whom had thorough knowledge of Chinese diplomatic practices and alleged that Taksin was a usurper.[64][65] Tứ also offered shelter to Prince Chao Chui, an Ayutthaya prince.[66][6][67][65]

The Chinese Court could not help but seize the chance by asking Taksin, as a 'new vassal', to be her ally in the war against the Burmese. Eventually Chinese Court approved the royal status of Taksin as the new king of Siam.

A considerable contribution to his success came from the Teochew Chinese trading community of the region, on whom Taksin was able to call by virtue of his paternal relations; he was half-Teochew himself. In the short run, the Chinese trade provided the foodstuffs and goods needed for the warfare that enabled Taksin to build up his fledgling state. In the long run, it produced income that could be used "to defray the expenses of the state and for the upkeep of the individual royal, noble, and wealthy commercial families."[68]

As one contemporary observed, François Henri Turpin (1771), under the famine conditions of 1767–1768 :

"Taksin showed his generous spirit. The needy were destitute no longer. The public treasury was opened for the relief. In return for cash, foreigners supplied them with the products that the soil of the country had refused. The Usurper [Taksin] justified his claim [to be king] by his benevolence. Abuses were reformed, the safety of property and persons was restored, but the greatest severity was shown to malefactors. Legal enactments at which no one complained were substituted for the arbitrary power that sooner or later is the cause of rebellions. By the assurance of public peace he was able to consolidate his position and no one who shared in the general prosperity could lay claim to the throne."[69]

A tomb containing Taksin's clothes and a family shrine were found at Chenghai district in Guangdong province in China in 1921. It is believed that a descendant of Taksin must have sent his clothes to be buried there to conform to Chinese practice. This supports the claim that the place was his father's hometown.[70] Chinese people called it "Tomb of King Zhèng" (鄭王墓), or its official name "Cenotaph of Zhèng Xìn" (鄭信衣冠墓). It had been included in the list of Historical and Cultural Sites Protected at Chenghai District (澄海區文物保護單位) since 5 December 1984. Princess Sirindhorn had visited the tomb in 1998. Now the nearby area is opened to the public as Zheng Emperor Taksin Park (鄭皇達信公園).

Final years and death

[edit]
Stupa of Wat Intharam, Thonburi, which is said to contain the ashes of King Taksin

Thai historians indicate that the strain on him took its toll, and the king started to become a religious fanatic. In 1781 Taksin showed increasing signs of mental trouble. He believed himself to be a future Buddha, expecting to change the color of his blood from red to white. As he started practicing meditation, he even gave lectures to the monks. More seriously, he was provoking schism in Siamese Buddhism by requiring that the monkhood should recognize him as a sotāpanna or "stream-winner"—a person who has embarked on the first of the four stages of enlightenment.[71] Monks who refused to bow to Taksin and worship him as god were demoted in status, and hundreds who refused to worship him as such were flogged and sentenced to menial labor.[49]

Economic tension caused by war was serious. As famine spread, looting and crimes were widespread. Corrupt officials were reportedly abundant. According to some sources, many oppressions and abuses made by officials were reported. King Taksin punished them harshly, torturing and executing high officials. Discontent among officials could be expected.

Several historians have suggested that the tale of his 'insanity' may have been reconstructed as an excuse for his overthrow. However, the letters of a French missionary who was in Thonburi at the time support the accounts of the monarch's peculiar behavior which reported that "He (Taksin) passed all his time in prayer, fasting, and meditation, in order by these means to be able to fly through the air." Again, the missionaries describe the situation:

"For some years, the King of Siam has tremendously vexed his subjects and the foreigners who dwelt in or came to trade in his kingdom. Last year (1781) the Chinese, who were accustomed to trade, found themselves obliged almost to give it up entirely . This past year the vexations caused by this King, more than half-mad, have become more frequent and more cruel than previously. He has had imprisoned, tortured, and flogged, according to his caprice, his wife, his sons faction— even the heir-presumptive, and his high officials. He wanted to make them confess to crimes of which they were innocent."[72]

Thus the terms 'insanity' or 'madness' possibly were the contemporary definition describing the monarch's actions: according to the following Rattanakosin era accounts, King Taksin was described as 'insane.' However, with the Burmese threat still prevalent a strong ruler was needed on the throne.

Finally a faction led by Phraya San (or Phraya San, Phraya Sankhaburi) seized the capital. A coup d'état removing Taksin from the throne consequently took place,[73] Phraya San attacked Thonburi and took control within one night. King Taksin surrendered to the rebels without resistance, and requested to be allowed to join the monkhood in Wat Chaeng (Wat Arun).[74] However, the disturbance in Thonburi spread widely, with killing and looting prevalent. When the coup occurred, General Chao Phraya Chakri was away fighting in Cambodia, but he quickly returned to the Thai capital after being informed of the coup. Upon reaching the capital, the general ended the coup through arrests, investigations and punishments. Peace was then restored in the capital.

According to the Royal Thai Chronicles, General Chao Phraya Chakri decided to put the deposed Taksin to death.[75] Chao Phraya Chakri thought that the king had acted improperly and unjustly, causing great pain for the kingdom; so, it was unavoidable that he be executed.[74] The Chronicles stated that, while being taken to the executing venue, Taksin asked for an audience with General Chao Phraya Chakri, but was turned down by the general. Taksin was beheaded in front of Wichai Prasit fortress on Wednesday, April 10, 1782, and his body was buried at Wat Bang Yi Ruea Tai.[clarification needed] The general then seized control of the capital and declared himself king and establishing the House of Chakri.[75]

An alternative account (by the Official Vietnamese Chronicles) states that Taksin was ordered to be executed in the traditional Siamese way by General Chao Phraya Chakri at Wat Chaeng: by being sealed in a velvet sack and beaten to death with a scented sandalwood club.[76] Another account claimed that Taksin was secretly sent to a palace located in the remote mountains of Nakhon Si Thammarat, where he lived until 1825, and that a substitute was beaten to death in his place.[77] King Taksin's ashes and those of his wife are located at Wat Intharam Worawihan, Thonburi. They have been placed in two lotus bud shaped stupas which stand before the old hall.[78]

Critics of the coup

[edit]

It was not clear what role General Chakri played in the coup. Vietnamese royal records reported that King Taksin had some kind of psychosis in his final years; he imprisoned Chakri and Surasi's family. Resentful, the brothers eventually befriended two Vietnamese generals, Nguyễn Hữu Thoại (阮有瑞) and Hồ Văn Lân (胡文璘), the four swearing to help with each other in need. Not long after the coup occurred, Chakri quickly returned to the capital, put down the rebellion, and had Taksin killed. Some Vietnamese sources stated that Taksin was assassinated by General Chakri,[79][80] others that Taksin was sentenced to death and executed in a public place.[81] The coup leader Phraya San also died during this incident.

Another contradicting view of the events is that General Chakri actually wanted to be king and had accused King Taksin of being Chinese. The late history was aimed at legitimizing the new monarch, Phraya Chakri or Rama I of Rattanakosin. According to Nidhi Eoseewong, a prominent Thai historian, writer, and political commentator, Taksin could be seen as the originator, new style of leader, promoting a 'decentralized' kingdom and new generation of the nobles, of Chinese merchant-origin, his major helpers in the wars.[82] On the other hand, Phraya Chakri and his supporters were of the 'old' generation of the Ayutthaya nobles, discontent with these changes.

However, this overlooks the fact that Chao Phraya Chakri was himself partly of Chinese origin, as well as being married to one of Taksin's daughters. No previous conflicts between them were mentioned in histories. Reports on the conflicts between the king and Chinese merchants were seen as being caused by the control of the price of rice during the time of famine.[83] However, prior to returning to Thonburi, Chao Phraya Chakri had Taksin's son summoned to Cambodia and executed.[84]

Another view of the events is that Thailand owed China millions of baht. In order to cancel the agreement between China and Thailand, King Taksin decided to pretend to be executed.[85]

Legacy

[edit]
The extent of Siam's sphere of influence in 1782 under King Taksin.
Statue of King Taksin the Great at Wongwian Yai
King Taksin the Great Shrines in Thailand
Taksin Shrine in Tak, Tak Province, Thailand
King Taksin the Great Shrine in Chanthaburi, Chanthaburi Province, Thailand

King Taksin was seen by modern historians as a king who differed from the kings of Ayutthaya, in his origins, his policies, and his leadership style, as a representative of a new class. During the Rattanakosin period right up until the Siamese Revolution of 1932, King Taksin was not as highly honored as other Siamese kings because the leaders in the Chakri Dynasty were still concerned about their own dynastic image. After 1932, when the absolute monarchy gave way to the democratic period, King Taksin become more honored than ever before, viewed as a national hero. This was because the leaders of that time such as Plaek Phibunsongkhram and even later military junta, on the other hand, wanted to glorify and publicize the stories of certain historical figures in order to support their own policy of nationalism, expansionism and patriotism.

A statue of King Taksin was unveiled in the middle of Wongwian Yai (the Big Traffic Circle) in Thonburi, at the intersection of Prajadhipok/Inthara Phithak/Lat Ya/Somdet Phra Chao Taksin Roads. The king is portrayed with his right hand holding a sword, measuring approximately 9 meters in height from his horse's feet to the spire of his hat, rests on a reinforced concrete pedestal of 8.90 × 1.80 × 3.90 meters. There are four frames of stucco relief on the two sides of the pedestal. The opening ceremony of this monument was held on April 17, 1954, and the royal homage-paying fair takes place annually on December 28. The king today officially comes to pay respect to King Taksin statue.[86]

The monument featuring King Taksin riding on a horseback surrounded by his four trusted soldiers: Pra Chiang-ngen (later Phraya Sukhothai), Luang Pichai-asa (later Phraya Phichai), Luang Prom-sena, Luang Raj-saneha. It is located in Tungnachaey public park on Leap Mueang Road, just opposite the City Hall, Chanthaburi.[87]

In 1981 the Thai cabinet passed a resolution to bestow on King Taksin the honorary title of "the Great". With the intention of glorifying Thai monarchs in history who have been revered and honored with the title "the Great", the Bank of Thailand issued the 12th series of banknotes, called The Great Series, in three denominations: 10, 20 and 100 baht. The monument of King Taksin the Great in Chanthaburi's Tungnachaey recreational park appears on the back of the 20-baht note issued on 28 December 1981.[88] The date of his coronation, December 28, is the official day of homage to King Taksin, although it is not designated as a public holiday. The Maw Sukha Association on January 31, 1999, cast the King Taksin Savior of the Nation Amulet, which sought to honor the contributions of King Taksin to Siam during his reign.[89]

The Na Nagara (also spelled Na Nakorn)[90] family is descended in the direct male line from King Taksin.[91]

King Taksin the Great Shrine is located on Tha Luang Road in front of Camp Taksin. It is an important place of Chantaburi in order to demonstrate binding of People in Chanthaburi to King Taksin. It is a nine-sided building. The roof is a pointed helmet. Inside of this place enshrined the statue of King Taksin.[citation needed]

In addition, Royal Thai Navy has used his name to HTMS Taksin, a modified version of the Chinese-made Type 053 frigate, for glorifying him.

Two hospitals are named after him: Taksin Hospital in Bangkok and Somdejphrajaotaksin Maharaj Hospital in Tak Province.

Titles

[edit]

Taksin's Thai full title was Phra Sri Sanphet Somdet Borromthammikkarat Ramathibodi Boromchakraphat Bawornrajabodintr Hariharinthadathibodi Sriwibool Khunruejitr Rittirames Boromthammikkaraja Dechochai Phrommathepadithep Triphuwanathibet Lokachetwisut Makutprathetkata Maha Phutthangkul Boromnartbophit Phra Buddha Chao Yu Hua Na Krung Thep Maha Nakhon Baworn Thavarawadi Sri Ayutthaya Maha Dilokphop Noppharat Ratchathaniburirom Udom Praratchaniwet Maha Sathan (Thai: พระศรีสรรเพชร สมเด็จบรมธรรมิกราชาธิราชรามาธิบดี บรมจักรพรรดิศร บวรราชาบดินทร์ หริหรินทร์ธาดาธิบดี ศรีสุวิบูลย์ คุณรุจิตร ฤทธิราเมศวร บรมธรรมิกราชเดโชชัย พรหมเทพาดิเทพ ตรีภูวนาธิเบศร์ โลกเชษฏวิสุทธิ์ มกุฏประเทศคตา มหาพุทธังกูร บรมนาถบพิตร พระพุทธเจ้าอยู่หัว ณ กรุงเทพมหานคร บวรทวาราวดีศรีอยุธยา มหาดิลกนพรัฐ ราชธานีบุรีรมย์อุดมพระราชนิเวศมหาสถาน)

Issue

[edit]

King Taksin had 21 sons and 9 daughters:[4]

  • Prince Chui, the Prince Inthra Phithak (Front Palace)
  • Prince Noi
  • Prince Amphawan (Later Mr. Wan)
  • Prince Thatsaphong (Later Lord Phong Narin)
  • Prince Narenthra Ratchakuman (Later Lord Narenthra Racha)
  • Prince Thatsaphai (Later Lord Inthra Aphai)
  • Prince Suphanthuwong (Later Mr. Men)
  • Princess Pancha Papi
  • Prince Sila
  • Princess Komon
  • Princess Buppha
  • Prince Singhara
  • Prince Lek
  • Princess Samli Wan (Later Chao Chom Manda Samli)
  • Prince Onnika (Later Mr. Nu Dam)
  • Princess Praphai Phak
  • Princess Sumali
  • Prince Thamrong
  • Prince Lamang (Later Lord Sombatban)
  • Princess Sangwan
  • Prince Khanthawong
  • Prince Mekhin
  • Prince Isinthon
  • Prince Bua
  • Prince (Unnamed)
  • Prince Nu Daeng
  • Princess Sut Chatri
  • Prince Noi (Later Lord of Nakhon Si Thammarat)
  • Prince Thong In (Later Lord of Nakhon Ratchasima)
  • Princess Chamchuree

Battle record

[edit]
  • Siege of Ayutthaya (1766–1767): Defeat
  • Battle of Pho Sam Ton (1767): Victory
  • Battle of Bang Kung (1767): Victory
  • Invasion of the State of Phitsanulok (1768): Defeat
  • Invasion of the State of Phimai (1768): Victory
  • Invasion of the State of Nakhon Si Thammarat (1769): Victory
  • Invasion of the State of Sawangburi (1770): Victory
  • Siege of Chiang Mai (1770): Defeat
  • Invasion of Hà Tiên (Banteay Mas) (1771): Victory[92]
  • Battle of Phichai (1771): Victory
  • Siege of Chiang Mai (1771): Defeat
  • Battle of Phichai (1773): Victory
  • Siege of Chiang Mai (1774): Victory
  • Battle of Bangkaeo (1774): Victory
  • Siege of Phitsanulok (1775–1776): Defeat

Expansion map

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
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  41. ^ Damrong Rajanubhab, p. 462
  42. ^ พระราชพงศาวดารกรุงธนบุรี ฉบับหมอบลัดเล, หน้า
  43. ^ Damrong Rajanubhab, Prince (1918). พงษาวดารเรื่องเรารบพม่า ครั้งกรุงธน ฯ แลกรุงเทพ ฯ. Bangkok.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Taksin the Great (1734–1782) was a Thai king of partial Chinese descent who founded and ruled the Thonburi Kingdom as its only monarch from 1767 to 1782 after the Burmese destruction of Ayutthaya. Born Sin to a Teochew Chinese father and Thai mother in Ayutthaya, he rose from provincial governor and military commander to lead resistance against Burmese invaders following the 1767 fall of the capital. His forces recaptured key areas like Chanthaburi and Thonburi, culminating in a decisive victory at Pho Sam Ton that expelled the Burmese and restored Siamese independence within months. Taksin then unified the fractured kingdom through extensive campaigns against local warlords, bandits, and rival factions, reestablishing central authority and promoting economic recovery via trade, infrastructure like canals and roads, and alliances including with Chinese communities. He shifted the capital to Thonburi for strategic reasons and pursued foreign relations, such as tribute missions to China acknowledging his heritage. Late in his reign, internal troubles led to his deposition and execution in 1782 by former allies under Chao Phraya Chakri, who ascended as Rama I and established the Chakri Dynasty in Bangkok. Posthumously honored as "the Great" in 1954, Taksin remains revered for liberating and reunifying Siam amid devastation.

Early Life and Background

Birth and Ancestry

Taksin was born on April 17, 1734, in Ayutthaya to a father of Teochew Chinese descent and a Thai mother. His father, known variably as Hai Hong or Yong Saetae (Chinese: Zhèng Yōng), had immigrated from Chenghai in Guangdong Province and worked as a tax collector or merchant. The family's socioeconomic status as merchants afforded initial networks within Ayutthaya's trading communities, blending Chinese entrepreneurial traditions with local Siamese practices. Taksin's early childhood was shaped by this mixed Sino-Siamese heritage, incorporating Teochew customs from his paternal side alongside Mon-Siamese influences from his maternal lineage and the surrounding cultural milieu.

Early Military Career

Taksin entered military service in the Ayutthaya Kingdom during the reign of King Borommakot, starting as a court page where he acquired foundational knowledge in law, government procedures, and military tactics, along with proficiency in multiple languages including Chinese, Vietnamese, and Khmer. Under King Ekathat, he was assigned judicial duties in the northern provinces, demonstrating competence that led to further advancement; he was appointed Luang Yokkrabat to assist Phraya Tak before rising to the governorship of Tak province. His merit earned rapid promotions, culminating in the title Phraya Wachiraprakan as governor of Kamphaeng Phet, reflecting his growing expertise in provincial administration and defense roles prior to major crises.

Fall of Ayutthaya

Defense Against Burmese Invasion

In 1766, as the Burmese forces encircled Ayutthaya, Phraya Tak (later King Taksin), serving as a royal official, was promoted to Phraya Wachiraprakarn for his military expertise and tasked with defending the capital, forgoing an appointment as governor of Kamphaeng Phet to reinforce the city's defenses. He commanded a naval force and positioned troops at Wat Pa Kaeo (now Wat Yai Chai Mongkhon) to obstruct Burmese advances, while coordinating irregular sorties and harassing raids by Siamese and foreign volunteers against enemy encampments such as Suan Phlu and Pa Phai to disrupt the siege. Phraya Wachiraprakarn led relief offensives, including a major assault near Phukhao Thong Stupa with 50,000 troops, 1,000 cannons, and 400 war elephants alongside Phraya Tan, where Siamese artillery and elephant charges initially broke Burmese lines under Mang Maha Noratha before a counterattack forced retreat. He captured the Burmese camp at Wat Prod Sat but withdrew due to insufficient reinforcements from Ayutthaya, allowing its recapture, and during a naval engagement near Wat Sangkhawat, advised caution against premature attacks, retreating to Wat Phichai after allied forces suffered losses. Three months prior to the fall, facing ammunition shortages, he independently ordered cannon fire on approaching Burmese from the east, repelling assaults despite reprimand for acting without orders. These efforts contributed to repelling multiple Burmese attempts to breach Ayutthaya's walls, but weakening defenses, low morale, and supply issues proved insurmountable, culminating in the city's sack on April 7, 1767.

Escape and Resistance

In January 1767, Taksin led remnants of his troops southward, escaping Ayutthaya before its capture by the Burmese in April. Accompanied by around 500 Thai and Chinese fighters, he fought through enemy lines to reach the eastern seaboard. In mid-1767, Taksin captured Chanthaburi on 14 June, securing it as a strategic base in eastern Siam despite local opposition. This position allowed him to reorganize, drawing on the area's Chinese merchant networks and local warlords who had fragmented amid the invasion's chaos. From Chanthaburi, Taksin initiated guerrilla-style raids with his growing forces, targeting Burmese outposts and logistics to hinder occupation efforts in the region. These early operations disrupted enemy control over eastern territories, laying groundwork for broader resistance without committing to open battle.

Founding of Thonburi Kingdom

Coronation and Capital Relocation

Following the expulsion of Burmese forces from the Bangkok area, Taksin held his coronation ceremony on December 28, 1767, at the site that would become the Thonburi Palace, adopting the title King Taksin and asserting legitimacy through rituals invoking the Ayutthaya royal lineage. He selected Thonburi, on the west bank of the Chao Phraya River opposite the emerging Bangkok settlement, as the new capital due to its strategic defensibility provided by the river barrier and its proximity to maritime trade routes facilitating economic recovery. In the immediate aftermath, Taksin organized the early court by appointing trusted nobles to key positions, including military leaders from his Chantaburi resistance base, to stabilize administration amid the fragmented post-Ayutthaya landscape.

Initial Consolidation of Power

Following his coronation, Taksin moved swiftly to suppress immediate rivals in central and northeastern Siam, targeting the Phimai faction led by Chao Phimai at Nakhon Ratchasima. In 1768, after the rainy season, he personally led forces to quell the uprising, commanding key generals like Phra Ratchawarin (Thongduang) and Phra Maha Montri (Bunma) in a three-day battle that secured victory and eliminated the threat. To consolidate loyalty, Taksin forged alliances with local lords through strategic appointments, rewarding victors with governorships to bind regions to Thonburi's authority. For instance, after the Phimai campaign, he elevated Khun Chana to Phraya Kamhaeng Songkhram and installed him as governor of Nakhon Ratchasima, while tasking Thongduang with co-administering the area alongside his brother Boonma, ensuring stable control as Taksin's troops returned to the capital. These efforts extended to broader resource mobilization for reconstruction and defense, including drafts of labor and imposition of taxes to rebuild Thonburi and sustain military campaigns against lingering factions. Taksin also pursued diplomatic overtures to stabilize borders, though early initiatives focused more on securing submission from fragmented lords than formal ties with distant powers like Vietnam.

Military Campaigns

Western Front Against Burma

Following his coronation in 1767, Taksin launched offensives on the western front to reclaim territories from Burmese control and secure border regions, extending Siamese influence as far as Mergui and Tenasserim along the coast leading to the Indian Ocean. These efforts between 1768 and 1770 focused on expelling remaining Burmese garrisons and disrupting their hold on western outposts, contributing to the broader expulsion of invaders from Siamese lands. Taksin waged multiple campaigns against Burmese forces, engaging in eight major battles overall during his reign, with consistent victories that bolstered defenses in the west. He strategically exploited Burmese vulnerabilities in naval warfare by assembling fleets of war boats in eastern bases like Chantaburi, enabling rapid troop movements via rivers and estuaries to outmaneuver land-focused Burmese armies. Alliances and coordinated forces, including mergers with northern elements such as those from Phitsanulok, supported these western pushes by dividing Burmese reinforcements and preventing unified counteroffensives. This approach, combining naval superiority with targeted land assaults, effectively neutralized Burmese threats in the region by 1770.

Internal Unification Efforts

Following the establishment of the Thonburi Kingdom, Taksin launched military campaigns from 1770 to 1776 aimed at subduing fragmented northern states that had declared autonomy after the fall of Ayutthaya. In 1770, he suppressed the forces of Ruang in Phitsanulok and Uttaradit provinces, restoring central control over these key northern territories. Taksin also targeted remnants of rival dynasties and warlords in the Chao Phraya basin and eastern provinces, systematically subjugating holdouts who resisted unification under Thonburi authority. By prioritizing rapid mobilization and decisive engagements, these operations unified disparate Siamese powers, with Taksin appointing subordinate governors to enforce loyalty and administer subdued areas. Resources accrued from prior western campaigns facilitated the logistics of these northern and eastern expeditions, enabling sustained pressure on internal dissenters.

Administration and Policies

Economic and Fiscal Reforms

Taksin prioritized economic recovery to sustain his military campaigns, importing rice from Chinese trading junks at premium prices to provision the army and alleviate famine, funded by seized Burmese treasures and personal assets. This initiative stabilized food supplies in Thonburi, enabling the revival of the rice trade as local cultivation expanded through converted garden lands into paddy fields and resettlement of captives for farming. To generate revenue for ongoing wars, Taksin promoted international commerce by dispatching royal junks to export timber, tin, and ivory while encouraging foreign vessels to dock at Thonburi, yielding port revenues and reducing dependence on internal taxes. He rewarded victorious officers with land grants to support their descendants, fostering loyalty and agricultural development among military veterans. These measures indirectly curbed banditry by restoring economic stability and reducing desperation-driven disorder, though corvée labor persisted in mobilizing troops for peacetime rice production.

Religious and Social Initiatives

Taksin demonstrated profound devotion to Buddhism, personally studying its doctrines and extending royal patronage beyond traditional customs to revive the faith after the devastation of Ayutthaya. He initiated major temple restorations as early as 1768, overseeing the construction of 120 new monk quarters, renovation of Buddha statues and stupas, and enhancement of ordination halls across damaged sites. In 1773, he reorganized the monastic order and established a standardized daily routine for monks, aiming to purify and restore Buddhism's institutional integrity amid post-invasion decline. To foster social cohesion in a fragmented society, Taksin promoted integration between his ethnic Chinese heritage and Siamese traditions through appointments that favored capable Chinese officials, thereby encouraging intergroup alliances and elevating Sino-Siamese contributions to governance. These merit-oriented selections from his military campaigns helped legitimize his rule by rewarding loyalty and competence over entrenched nobility, while embedding Buddhist ethical principles to guide administrative conduct and curb excesses among elites.

Decline and Overthrow

Internal Conflicts and Paranoia

In the later stages of his reign, following the successful unification campaigns, Taksin increasingly exhibited signs of paranoia, suspecting treason among his officials and leading to purges that destabilized his administration. This atmosphere of distrust eroded loyalty within the court, as former allies faced execution or demotion on flimsy pretexts of disloyalty. Taksin's erratic behavior further alienated key figures, including religious leaders, when he proclaimed a divine status for himself around 1781 and demanded worship akin to a deity. Priests who refused these honors were subjected to beatings, highlighting a shift from pragmatic governance to self-aggrandizing zealotry that isolated him from traditional power structures. Such actions intensified internal fractures, fostering resentment among the nobility and military elite who had previously supported his rise. Amid these tensions, the growing autonomy of generals commanding distant campaigns subtly undermined Taksin's central authority, as their independent successes contrasted with the capital's growing instability. This dynamic of suspicion and division set the stage for broader political discord within the Thonburi court.

Execution and Transition to Chakri Dynasty

In early 1782, Phraya San led a coup that seized control of Thonburi, confining Taksin to a monastery. Taksin was subsequently executed in April 1782. Chao Phraya Chakri, who had been campaigning in Cambodia, returned to the capital and assumed the throne as Rama I on 6 April 1782, founding the Chakri Dynasty. Rama I promptly relocated the royal capital across the Chao Phraya River to Bangkok, establishing it as the new seat of power to consolidate his rule. Official accounts under the new dynasty often framed the transition as a necessary restoration of order, attributing Taksin's deposition to unrest while emphasizing continuity through Rama I's leadership.

Legacy

Role in Thai History

Taksin is credited with averting the complete annexation of Siam by Burmese forces following the 1767 sack of Ayutthaya, through his leadership in expelling occupiers and restoring central authority via military unification campaigns. His efforts reestablished Siamese sovereignty, transforming fragmented resistance pockets into a cohesive kingdom centered at Thonburi, which served as a transitional base for the subsequent Rattanakosin period under the Chakri Dynasty. Historiographical assessments highlight debates over Taksin's authoritarian governance, characterized by harsh suppression of rivals during unification, weighed against his achievements in national restoration and territorial consolidation. While his decisive actions preserved Siamese independence, critics note the internal strains from his centralized control and purges, which contributed to his eventual overthrow yet ensured state continuity. Taksin's partial Chinese heritage, particularly his Teochew roots, influenced Thonburi-era trade policies by fostering stronger economic ties with Chinese merchant networks, leveraging diaspora connections to revive commerce disrupted by war. This integration bolstered fiscal recovery, positioning Siam as a regional trade hub and reflecting a pragmatic blend of ethnic influences in state-building.

Modern Commemoration

Taksin is commemorated through prominent statues across Thailand, including the equestrian statue at Wongwian Yai Circle in Bangkok, depicting him holding a sword, and shrines dedicated to him found nationwide, such as in Tak Province, honoring his role in liberating Siam from Burmese occupation. December 28 marks King Taksin Memorial Day, commemorating his coronation, with annual ceremonies at monuments and shrines, including royal attendance and merit-making activities, though it is not a public holiday. His legacy as a unification and liberation hero appears in cultural portrayals, such as theatrical performances of his coronation at Bangkok's National Theatre and epic films like The Taksin King, which highlight his military triumphs.

References

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