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Did
you know!
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That: Southern
Thailand has been inhabited since the early days of mankind by ancient tribes
who settled and or adapted their lifestyles to the local environment. Who
arrived first and who pushed out or assimilated who has kept archaeologists
occupied for a long time, and promises to keep them working for a good while
to come.
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Travelers Guide to Phuket
History
- Chakri Dynasty
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Chakri
Dynasty
On
the death of King Taksin the crown passed to General Pya Chakri,
founder of the present dynasty of Thai kings, who ruled
(1782-1809) as Rama I. King Rama I moved the capital to its
present location in Bangkok and fought another war with the
Burmese who were again trying to wrest control of Siam. During
this war in 1785 at the Battle at Thalang, Phuket forever
earned its place in the annals of modern Thai history. Burmese
invaders had attacked by land and sea and captured several cities
on the west coast of Thailand. While preparing to defend his
capital then located in the village of Thalang the governor died
leaving the forces defending Phuket leaderless, out-manned and
out-gunned (the same governor who had earlier conspired with
Captain Light). Realizing they were out numbered, Chan, the
governors widow and her sister Mook disguised the islands
women as men. The great number of soldiers defending the island
confused the Burmese, and cleverly devised attacks on their flanks
and rear weakened their resolve. Believing the island had been
reinforced from Bangkok and running short of food and provisions
the Burmese decamped and sailed away. A grateful king conferred
royal titles on the two brave and resourceful sisters. Today, the
Heroines Monument located south of the airport in the traffic
circle on the main highway honors their memory.
In 1809 Phuket was again attacked
by the Burmese (the famous sisters had both passed away by then),
who wrecked such destruction on the island that many of the
surviving residents fled to the mainland and settled around the
present day location of Phang Na. Reports filed by European
traders who witnessed the Burmese attacks on Phuket read more like
a black-comedy than a serious military campaign. One account has
the Burmese savagely attacking Phuket in an orgy of killing and
destruction then carrying off many survivors to be sold as slaves.
When the Burmese tried to sail away, the wind blew their ships
back upon the rocky coastline, smashing them, and the enraged
residents of the island took their revenge on the hapless Burmese
soldiers. One of the Burmese leaders was captured and sent to
Bangkok where he was beheaded. The king Rama II was so enraged
with the disruption of tin production, and the death and
destruction wrecked upon the island he ordered the governor of
Phuket be arrested and brought to Bangkok in chains and imprisoned
as a warning to others. The following year, during another attack
by the Burmese, the Thai navy was sailing to the rescue, but a
carelessly handled keg of gunpowder on one of the ships set off a
sympathetic explosion that blew most of the Thai fleet out of the
water. Meanwhile, the new governor had built stockades to defend
the island and was holding off the attacking Burmese. The Burmese
commander making little headway against these defenses devised a
clever strategy and loaded all his forces back onto their ships
and sailed away out of sight of the governor and his troops. The
governor, believing the attack was over, celebrated his victory
and let his people return to their homes. Several days later the
Burmese returned unnoticed and captured the capital and sacked the
island without organized resistance. The Burmese proved adept at
attacking Phuket but never managed to hold the island long enough
to gain either an economic or a strategic benefit.
The long period of bloody warfare
with the Burmese had depleted the population of Phuket and
virtually halted the production of tin. Production of tin fell
from over 500 tons in 1784 to less than 20 tons in 1820. The
Industrial Revolution in Europe and America had already sent the
demand for tin skyrocketing, when a patent taken by a British
inventor to use tinplated steel to manufacture containers to
preserve food (tin cans) led to a shortage that forced the price
of tin to record levels. The scramble to meet the worldwide demand
for tin put tremendous pressure on the King Rama II to bring tin
production back on line in Phuket and the surrounding provinces,
or risk losing them.
Shortly after Rama III (1824-51)
ascended the throne the British and Thai governments concluded a
commercial treaty that officially re-opened Thailand to world
commerce. One of the rights obtained in this agreement was
unrestricted British access to the tin trade on Phuket Island.
British influence in Thailand was increased; an indirect result of
this agreement being that throughout the remainder of the 19th
century the Burmese were too busy fending off the British to ever
pose a threat to Thailand again. With British warships making life
very short and very difficult for pirates operating in the Straits
of Malacca, and with the threat of foreign invasion under control
Phuket was ready to prosper.
New Thalang was established on
the north part of the island as the new capital city of Phuket
Island but its prominence was to be short-lived. When tin ore was
discovered in large quantities in the south part of the island, a
third town -- Phuket Town -- rose and within a few decades
dominated the islands economic and political life. Phuket,
faced with a severe manpower shortage to work the tin mines, was
forced to import workers. Thousands of Chinese miners came to
labor in the tin mines; some came from nearby Malaysia and some
from China itself. Diligent and hard-working, a lucky few would go
on and become wealthy mine-owners themselves and build the
splendid mansions that still grace the island. By the middle of
the century an estimated 30,000 Chinese were employed by mines
scattered in various locations all over the island. Malays also
came and established a strong Muslim presence on the island. Many
of the Muslim Malays came and settled in the Surin area where
their descendants continue to work the farms and fish to the
present day. Rama III, concerned that the opium smoking then
common among the miners from China would spread to the Thai
population, banned the drug. Then, as today, the ban was largely
ignored. In 1840 the King had a large quantity of opium seized
from traders in Phuket and shipped to Bangkok. Beginning a
tradition the exists periodically to this day, over 900 chests
full of opium were publicly burned to show that drugs would not be
tolerated. In what was undoubtedly a wise decision, it was also
the last reported incident of this ritual taking place on the
palace grounds. It was reported that a toxic but oddly pleasant
aroma surrounded the palace grounds for most of the day.
King Mongkut (Rama IV reigned
1851-68) was the first of two successive outstanding rulers whose
willingness to modernize and to establish friendly relations with
the Western powers enabled their country to escape colonial
conquest. Before succeeding his brother on the throne, Mongkut
served 27 years as a Buddhist monk learned to speak English and
studied Western history and science. As king, Rama IV introduced
European-style education established the first printing press, and
hired foreign experts to modernize Siam's government and economy.
The most controversial act during the reign of Rama IV was the
signing of the Bowring Treaty under duress from Great
Britain. This treaty granted extra-territoriality rights and other
privileges to British citizens. In effect under this treaty the
British were free to do as they pleased in Thailand. They could
import previously banned items like opium and gold bullion, all
royal monopolies were canceled, import and export duties were
taxed at a flat rate of 3%, and no British citizen could be
arrested and or tried in a Thai court. The treaty was much to the
benefit of Britain and could never be canceled without her
permission. Virtually every European power and America rushed to
sign a similar treaty. The treaty was more economical than making
Thailand a colony because all the benefits of a colony were
obtained without any obligation to build roads, schools, establish
postal services, build railroads, etc. Rama IV was a model for the
king in Margaret Landon's book Anna and the King of Siam',
which was based on the experiences of an English governess at the
Siamese court, and from which the musical comedy The King and
I was adapted.
Phuket became a boom town with
all the attendant problems. For a few it offered a continuous wave
of prosperity, but for most who labored under the control of the
strict Chinese overlords it was a life of relentless toil.
Dissatisfaction with working conditions and rivalry between two
Chinese secret societies resulted in a miners rebellion in which
pitched battles were fought between police and the miners.
Eventually the emperor of China dispatched emissaries to broker a
peace agreement and keep the mines in operation. After working for
3 to 5 years to pay off the debt incurred from their
transportation from mainland China, a miner could earn the
privilege of mining for themselves. The miner lost 25% of his ore
after smelting to the royal tax, 12-15% as a fee for smelting
controlled by the Chinese overlords, and owed an additional tax if
he attempted to export the tin off the island. The only other
option was to sell the tin to a Chinese trading company who had
purchased export rights from the Thai Royal Court. A select few
would prosper and became wealthy beyond imagination but it was the
rare exception. Statues at Wat Chalong pay homage to two
famous monks who healed broken bones on both sides as they worked
to resolve the crisis and quell the rebellion.
King Chulalongkorn (Rama V
reigned 1868-1910) ruled during the height of the onslaught of
European colonization. Rama V is generally regarded as Thailand's
greatest ruler. He was the son of Rama IV, Siam's first great
modernizing monarch. Besides abolishing slavery and the ancient
practice of prostration before the monarch, Chulalongkorn
continued the policies of his father and introduced major
economic, administrative, educational, and
transportation-communications reforms. He continued the vigorous
modernization efforts of his father and managed to maintain the
country's independence, albeit at considerable cost in territorial
concessions. In 1893 Thailand became embroiled in a boundary
dispute with France, which was then the dominant power in Cochin
China (Viet Nam), and Cambodia. The French dispatched warships to
Bangkok and forced the Thais to yield Cambodia and all of Laos
east of the Mekong River. Additional Thai territory, situated west
of the Mekong, was acquired by France in 1904 and 1907. Thailand
gave up control over four states in the Malay Peninsula to Great
Britain in 1909.
The beginning of the 20th century
was a period of positive growth for Phuket. Tin mining boomed, and
the very capable and benevolent governor Rasada Korsimbi helped
diversify the islands economy and the capital city of Phuket
began its modern expansion. The town of Phuket grew rapidly, its
streets lined with handsome buildings in the Sino-Portuguese style
inspired by those of Malacca, and ships from all over the world
called at its bustling port. Rama V was the first Thai king to
visit Phuket dramatizing the islands importance to the central
government.
In 1903 a missionary John
Carrington wrote that Phuket is a place where wild elephants,
rhinoceros, tiger, water buffalo, cattle, monkeys, multicolored
birds and reptiles abound.
That was; however, about to
change. Two significant developments were about to bring major
economic and environmental changes to the island. In 1903 the
first rubber trees were planted, beginning a major new industry
that would transform Phukets agriculture and greatly add to its
prosperity. Over forty percent of the islands remaining
rainforest was cut down and planted in rubber. The introduction of
the first tin dredger in 1907 by Australian Captain Edward Miles
dramatically transformed its coastline.
In 1912 a group of Thai Military
officers unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow the monarchy.
Military takeovers of the government and attempted takeovers have
been a feature of Thai political life ever since. As a show of
support for the Allies in World War I, Rama VI sent a small
contingent of troops to France in 1918.
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