Phuket History
Ayutthaya
After
the death of King Ramkhamhaeng the then vassal kingdom of Pegu (Burma)
rebelled and conquered Thailands west coast port cities of Mergui
and Tenesserim. King Loetai (King Ramkhamhaengs son) apparently
did not realize the strategic significance of these ports and made only
a half-hearted and unsuccessful attempt to retake them. This allowed the
young Thai Prince Bodi, who was the governor of the central Thailand district
of Supanburi, an opportunity to fill this void. He did so by raising an
army and capturing the ports back from the Burmese and adding them to
his district.
Sailing ships of that day had only limited ability to
sail against the wind. Because of the prevailing winds it could take a
ship six months or more to sail the three thousand miles from India to
Thailand. Pirates that plagued the Straits of Malacca, and the monsoons
that sweep across the Andaman Sea could be very dangerous for the merchant
ships so careful planning was required to transport goods on a regular
basis. Many Indian and Arab traders and the Europeans who followed chose
to land at Mergui and travel by barge upriver to Tenesserim, which took
them roughly half way across the peninsula. They would then portage their
goods the rest of the way over the mountains and through the jungle to
the Gulf of Thailand (see map back cover). This was not an easy journey,
as was attested to by an early Jesuit priest who reported seeing a traveling
companion ripped to pieces by a tiger. But it reduced the distance by
half and lessened the travel time from India to a little over one month.
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Control over this strategic trade route gave Prince Bodi
access to wealth and foreign technology. The prince then moved to annex
the central Thai port city of Ayutthaya. Ayutthaya is situated on an island,
the confluence of three rivers, the Chao Phya, the Lopburi, and the Pasak,
being at a distance of about 110 kilometers or 70 miles upriver from the
Gulf of Thailand. Controlling Ayutthaya effectively reduced the kings
control to the landlocked central and northern parts of Thailand. The
prince was soon too powerful to be controlled by the rulers of Sukothai
who were still preoccupied with internal problems. In 1350 Prince Bodi
promoted himself to King Ramatibodi established his capital in Ayutthaya
and ruled for nineteen years until his death in 1369.
Ayutthaya, who now controlled both the overland trade
routes and sea lanes between India and China, quickly developed into the
wealthiest and most important city in Southeast Asia. It was a thriving
seaport with ships from all over the world, a center of culture, religion
and commerce. Through an unbroken succession of thirty-four kings and
covering a period of over four hundred years, the Ayutthaya period was
the pinnacle of Thai power and influence. The kingdom extended across
the whole of northern Thailand to include the (Million Elephant)
kingdom known today as Laos, most of Cambodia, part of Burma, and Malaysia.
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Ayutthaya
was built on trade, and the king and his ministers acquired great wealth.
The king maintained a royal monopoly on the acquisition and trade of tin,
lead, elephants, salt, betel nuts, scented woods (like sappanwood), deerskins,
and pearls. Any merchant who wished to trade in these commodities or export
them to India was obliged to deal with the king at his terms -- under
pain of death. To facilitate trade with India the king built and operated
a royal fleet of ships based at Mergui. At first these ships were commanded
and manned by Indians and Arabs, who were later supplanted by Europeans.
One large and very profitable item of trade between Thailand and India
was elephants. There were always wars in India, and in warfare
of that day elephants had a tactical importance similar to that of tanks
today. Up to thirty elephants at a time were loaded onto what were presumably
very stout ships for the sixteen to twenty day journey to India. Trade
was not limited to India. Ships from Ayutthaya in the mid 16th century
annually shipped 2,000 tons of sappan wood a year to China, and 300,000
deerskins to Japan.
Trade with China increased dramatically after 1408 when
the Chinese explorer and trader Zheng He arrived on a trading
mission in Ayutthaya, with a large fleet of ships. In 1511, the Portuguese
were the first European power to arrive in Ayutthaya (via Cape Horn) and
established an embassy and built trading posts on Phuket and at Mergui.
The Thais quickly tired of overzealous attempts by the Portuguese to convert
them to Christianity. The Thais wanted to trade for weapons and manufactured
goods from the Portuguese but were not interested in adopting a new religion.
The Portuguese may have failed to convert Thailand to Christianity, but
they did have an almost spiritual impact on Thai food; the Portuguese
are credited with introducing chilies to Thailand.
The gate was open and the Portuguese were soon followed
by the other major European trading nations. Many of early European traders
were clearly in awe of the capital city of Ayutthaya and described it
as making the European cities of the day seem to be common villages in
comparison. One report suggested that London should adopt the idea of
erecting street lights on the roads at night as they did in Ayutthaya.
Many of the traders were astonished to discover that even the common people
of Ayutthaya lived in comfortable surroundings and were far better off
than the ragged starving peasantry of Europe.
Reports on the living conditions of the rural Thais in
places such as Phuket contrasted starkly with those about life in Ayutthaya
and the royal court. Thailand then used a system of corvee (state labor).
When males attained the height of 3 cubits (about 4 feet) they were obligated
to pay a tax or provide free labor to the king for a fixed period of time
each year.
A French official with the embassy in Ayutthaya mentioned
Phuket in a report. He noted that islanders were granted the privilege
of working their own tin mines, paying a royalty to the king. However,
allowing corrupt officials to control the weighing and smelting of tin
often rendered the mining of tin an unprofitable exercise for the miners
and production was only a fraction of potential.
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Another early French visitor filed the following report:
"The trade from this province (Phuket) is small, considering its
potential; however numerous taxes, slavery and never-ending forced labor
imposed on the people by the ruling class, coupled with the corruption
and dishonesty of the government officials engulf and ruin whole families
and render all work fruitless. Still despite the small size of the population,
exports to the royal court include substantial quantities of black pepper,
sugar, coffee, salted fish and sea slugs, turtle shells and elegant reed
mats that are often exported to China.".
Once
the strategic location and abundant wealth of Phuket were noted the race
was on among the various European countries to gain the upper hand and
control the trade with this vital island. Bringing guns, ironworks and
other manufactured goods from Europe (and later opium from India) to Phuket
and trading for tin, spices, ivory, pearls and ambergris (a greyish slime
that is spewed by sick sperm whales and collected by fisherman). Ambergris
was used in the production of perfume, and was so highly prized in Europe
that its value was set as ounce for ounce the same as gold. Blocks of
Phuket tin were used as currency and could be easily traded elsewhere
in Asia for silks, spices, gems, and other products.
The French were the next western power to temporarily
gain the upper hand in Thailand -- thanks in part to an enterprising Greek
named Constantine Phaulkon, who became a very high official in Siam under
King Narai from 1675 to 1688. Phaulkon was an exceptional linguist and
learned to speak Thai, Malay, and several European languages. Combining
good business sense with his language skills, Phaulkon rose through the
ranks of the Thai government to become the court minister responsible
for all the trade in the kingdom -- a position traditionally held by a
wealthy Indian or Arab merchant. Determined to make as much of his position
as possible, Phaulkon skillfully played one European power off the other
enraging everyone but enriching himself and the king of Thailand. He feared
the Dutch and English and used the French as a counterbalance. In 1681,
a French medical missionary Brother Rene Charbonneau was named the Governor
of Phuket.
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Being appointed governor of Phuket was considered both
very prestigious and very lucrative. The governor was allowed to keep
a percentage of the tin produced and traditionally received all the revenue
generated from the smelting of the tin ore on the island. In exchange
for these concessions the governor was held responsible for the production
of tin from the royal tin mines. Many of those promoted to governor would
find the position to be much more dangerous and less profitable than commonly
believed. Since most of the labor was conscripted in lieu of paying annual
taxes, the miners had little incentive to produce. If the governor pushed
the miners too hard they might rebel, as they had done against a South
Indian merchant who had been appointed governor in 1650. The governor
was killed by the miners along with a general massacre of most of the
Indian residents on the island. If tin production fell below an acceptable
level the Thai army may be sent to collect the shortfall. A European ship
captain who was in Phuket on a trading mission on one such occasion wrote
the following. "Elephants and cannon were employed to breach the
defenses. The governor who was seriously wounded but alive was clamped
in irons and the elephants were used to finish the destruction of the
compound and the adjoining village huts, killing several score of villagers".
A few years later in a controversial move Phaulkon appointed
an Englishman Samuel White to the lucrative position of Master of
the Port in Mergui. Although foreigners had in the past and would
again occupy positions of great influence in the Thai government, many
of the royal court were deeply offended and resentful of Phaulkon. The
fact that by most accounts Phaulkon exercised his authority prudently
and produced substantial revenue for the kingdom did not lessen their
displeasure. In 1688, when Phaulkon sanctioned the stationing of 600 French
troops in Thailand, the Thais fearing a takeover forcefully expelled the
French troops. Phaulkon was arrested and executed, and all of the European
residents were taken hostage. French forces in Pondicherry (French colony
in India) threatened to retaliate by occupying Phuket. General Desfarges
arrived at Phuket with 332 men. They did not occupy the island but apparently
looted a shipment of tin to compensate for losses suffered in the anti-foreign
uprising. The most lasting result of the rebellion was that Thailand closed
its borders, and it would be over a hundred years before another European
country would be able to open official relations.
In many Thai history books this uprising is described
as the restoring of Thai independence, but as many of the key ministerial
positions were again given to wealthy Indian and Arab merchants, the alleged
exploitation of Thailand by foreigners continued -- albeit by a different
group of foreigners
The Burmese launched a full-scale attack on Thailand,
and in 1767, following a 4-year siege, Ayutthaya was captured and destroyed.
Even though the Burmese had long considered themselves the true protectors
of the Buddhist faith, they destroyed precious manuscripts, religious
sculpture, and pulled Buddhist temples to the ground.
Exotic Thailand, rich in natural resources located at
the crossroads between Asia and the West envied not only by its neighbors
but by traders from Europe, China and Japan. During the next two centuries
only by the wisdom, statesmanship, and some adroit maneuvers by the Kings
of Siam, was Thailand spared the fate of colonization that befell its
neighbors.
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