Ayutthaya:
Capital of a Kingdom, Part 7
King Prasart Thong (1629-1656)

When a vacuum is created,
sometimes the unexpected rushes in to fill the space and
this can be especially so with a power vacuum. King
Naresuen, The Great, had returned independence, power and
respect for Ayutthaya. Next in succession was his brother,
King Egatosrot who, through diplomacy, business and
trading acumen, had restored wealth to the nation. When
King Egatosrot died in 1620, the Kingdom of Ayutthaya was
both powerful and wealthy and this was a prize some could
not resist trying for even if the price was deceit,
betrayal and murder.
King Egatosrot was succeeded by
his son, King Zongtham but he was not a strong monarch and
died after 8 years on the throne. He was survived by two
sons and a brother but had not named his successor. There
was also a high ranking court official, Phya Sriworawongse
(Chao Phya Galahom in charge of the military), who was
hovering in the wings and he was a master of ambition.
King Songtham's eldest son was eventually nominated as the
rightful heir and he took the throne as King Jeta but he
was only 14 years of age. The Boy King allowed himself to
be persuaded, by none other than Chao Phya Galahom, that
his uncle (the late King's brother) was planning a revolt
so he had his uncle arrested and taken to Petchburi where
he was imprisoned and died from starvation. Having
cunningly removed his one adult rival, Chao Phya Galahom
and his followers subsequently attacked the Royal Palace,
captured young King Jeta and had him executed. King Jeta's
younger brother, Prince Atitaya, was next in line of
succession but Chao Phya Galahom appointed himself as
Regent (Prince Atitaya was 10 years old) and, one month
later, had the rightful heir to the Kingdom of Ayutthaya
taken out and beaten to death with a sandalwood club. In
1630, Chao Phya Galahom seized the Siamese throne and
crowned himself as the new king. He took the title of King
Prasart Thong, meaning "King of the Golden Palace"
These were tough times in the
world; 10 years earlier the pilgrim fathers, fleeing from
religious persecution, had founded New Plymouth after
their Atlantic voyage on the Mayflower. In England, just
the preceding year, King Charles I had begun his eleven
year rule without the benefit of Parliament a decision
which was to cost him his head. So the usurping of the
Siamese monarchy, by King Prasart Thong, has to be viewed
in the light of those violent and intolerant times.
King
Prasart Thong's reign was not a huge success; after years
of peace, there were problems at every turn. The Japanese
refused to support the usurper king as they had given a
promise to the late King Zongtham that they would only
recognize his bloodline heirs. This was particularly true
of Yamada, a powerful and loyal Japanese servant to the
rightful Court of Ayutthaya. Some reports say King Prasart
Thong had Yamada poisoned while others say he was sent to
quell a rebellion in Nakhon Srithamarart in any event, the
once powerful Yamada disappeared from Ayutthaya.
Rebellions blossomed like
bush-fires; in Pattani, a vassal city of Ayutthaya, the
anticipated tributes of gold and silver were withheld and
the ruler declared Pattani an independent state. King
Prasart Thong led his army to subdue Pattani and, after an
initial reversal, the king eventually succeeded in
subduing Pattani. A hostile Cambodia was also causing
difficulties; during the reigns of King Naresuen, The
Great and King Egatosrot, Cambodia was under Siamese
control but, with the passing of those great kings, had
now declared itself independent. King Prasart Thong
dispatched an army to remind Cambodia where its loyalties
lay and one result of this was the increase of Cambodian
architecture to be seen in Siamese palaces and temples.
The northern province and city of Chiangmai had been under
Burmese domination but, in 1630, had wrested itself free
and declared independence. But not for long; King Prasart
Thong sent an army to retake Chiangmai for the Kingdom of
Ayutthaya Ayutthaya. In his campaign against Chiangmai and
in order to terrorize the populace, King Prasart Thong
promised that he would put to death the first four women
he met. And this he did smearing their blood on the
woodwork of his boat as it lay moored in the River Ping.
Although
King Prasart Thong's reign had its domestic upheavals, he
did manage to retain European contacts especially with the
Dutch whose interests lay with the progress of their East
Indies Company. The Dutch referred the kingdom, "Siam was
a country rich in natural resources and a land of plenty.
A long list of its animals and natural products ends with
the words, 'All in all, well supplied with all manner of
livestock and animals. Sugar, salt, plants yielding oil
seed, green vegetables, fruit and a thousand other
products of the soil abound, sufficing for man's
subsistence milk and honey are plentiful so that in times
of necessity he can supply his needs, indeed lavishly so,
without the aid of other countries'." The Dutch goods for
which there was a market in Ayutthaya were prints of ships
which the King required in large numbers as gifts for his
nobility and surpluses from the trading post at Pattani
(mainly textiles and glassware). This trade cannot have
attained particularly large proportions, for until 1617
the Dutch East India Company merchants constantly
complained that the Company was failing to supply them
with goods and capital. However, sometimes even these were
tenuous. Prince Frederick Henry had sent cordial messages
to King Prasart Thong on the King's foreign policy but, in
1639, the Dutch East Indies Company took exception to the
way King Prasart Thong was handling trade affairs and
threatened to attack Ayutthaya. The Siamese army was
called out, the Dutch declared "persona non grata", some
Dutch were arrested and tempers flared. Dutch vessels
never did appear to attack Ayutthaya and, in 1641, King
Prasart Thong received a courteous letter from the Prince
of Orange plus a further letter, and gifts, from the
Governor General of the Dutch East Indies Company. Such
was the commercial value of European trading in South East
Asia!
King Prasart Thong died in 1655
another monarch in that great span of Siamese history. In
Ayutthaya capital of a Kingdom who will next succeed to
the Throne of Siam? Read more in our next issue.
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