pilgrimage
centers
Amarnath
Amritsar
Ayodhya
Badrinath
Bodha
Gaya
jyothirlingas
kanyakumari
Khajuraho
konark temple
Madurai
Mathura
Pandharpur
Pashupatinath
Puri Jagannath
Rameswaram
Rishikesh
Sarnath
Satya sai baba
Shani Shingnapur
Srikalahasti
Shri
Lakshmi GoldenTemple
Tirupathi
Vaishno Devi
SadGurus
Akkalkot
Maharaj
Shripad
SriVallabh
Dwadasa
jyotirlingas
Somanath
Shrishailam
Omkareshwar
Vaidyanath
Maha
Kaleshwar
Kashi
vishwanath
Bhimashankar
kedarnath
Nageshwer
Trimbakeshwar
Grishneshwar
Shakti
peethas
Sightseeing
Agra
Ajanta caves
Delhi
Ellora caves
Goa
Jaipur
Kashmir
Manasarovar
Foreign Trips
Four hundred years ago, Bangkok and Thonburi, an area on the west
bank of the Chao Phraya, were just small villages. At that time
they served as ports for ships sailing up the river to Ayuthaya,
the former capital of what was then called Siam. As ships got
larger and the river got shallower, the villages grew in
importance.
The kingdom's capital was relocated to Thonburi when Ayuthaya fell
to Burmese armies in 1767. King Rama I moved the capital across the
river to Bangkok in 1782, because the main Burmese threat to the
Thai came from the west, on the Thonburi side of the
river.
Bangkok’s history of the past 200 years is much interwoven with the
Chakri dynasty which still reigns but no longer rules Thailand
today. After Chao Phaya Chakri was crowned under the royal title of
Rama I in 1782, one of his first major decisions concerned his
capital.
Bangkok was not really founded by Rama I. It had been a settled
area for several hundred years already and it had even been
well-known to European merchants who commonly stopped over at
Bangkok on their way to Ayutthaya.
Bangkok, as you could already read, is not the true name of the
city - it called by the Thais as Krung Thep. This name was bestowed
on the place in the year 1782 by King RamaI, the father of the
Chakri dynasty. The name means "City of Angels" Ayuthaya in the
year 1767 was conquered and almost completely destroyed by the
Burmese. Those parts of the Thai army that survived the attack fled
south to Thonburi on the banks of the Chao Phraya (Menam). There
they established a military headquarter and temporary capital of
Siam. From Thonburi, the Thai generals engaged in 15 years of war
with the attackers (the Burmese had in the meantime been joined by
the Laotians and the Vietnamese) and finally managed to drive them
out of the country. After the final victory, General Taksin assumed
the throne, but was later executed. He was replaced by General
Chakri, who as king took the name of Rama I. The king's plan was to
rebuild his people's confidence by building a city that could match
Ayuthaya's glory and splendor. He decided that Thonburi was no
longer suitable as a royal residence and decided to move the
capital to Bangkok on the other side of the
river.
GRAND PALACE "Bangkok" used to be "plum orchard", and although it
sounds quite unbelievable today, that is indeed what it once was -
a small, peaceful village surrounded by wild plum trees. At the
time Rama I. decided to move his capital, it had already grown into
a small duty port. The town was mainly inhabited by Chinese
merchants and customs inspectors, who were asked to vacate the area
and Rama I started building his new city, beginning with Wat Phra
Kaew (Emerald Buddha). Defensive moats were dug and canals built
and a city wall was erected from bricks from the old city wall of
Ayuthaya.
Work on the Grand Palace and the Temple of the Emerald Buddha (Wat
Phra Kaew) was by and large completed in 1785. The new capital, now
more or less just covering the area on the eastern side of the Chao
Phaya.
In the 1850s, the city really was a "Venice of the East" with lots
of canals and waterways and only a handful of dusty roads. A city
with a large network of water-roads in the place of streets, and
intersected with bridges. A large proportion of its inhabitants
lived in floating houses, which line both banks of the Menam (Chao
Phaya river)
King Mongkut (Rama IV.) and then his son King Chulalongkorn (Rama
V.) pursued the modernization of the country added roads and built
railways. The city continued to grow in all directions through the
19th and 20th centuries, eventually encompassing Thonburi. In the
20th century the city started growing both eastward and towards
north. The first bridge over the Chao Phraya river (Memorial
Bridge) was built in 1932. In the Second World War, the city was
occupied by the Japanese. The 1950s was a period of political
turmoil , with several coup d'etats. The 1960s saw, due to the
Vietnam war, the beginning of the economic rise of Thailand, which
has only now, in the 90s come to a halt. Bangkok's population
increased by about 1 million people between the 1980 and 1990
censuses alone. But still, the economic and social conditions are
far better than in many of the neighboring countries in Southeast
Asia.
Advertisement
I am a text block. Click on me to drag me around or click a corner handle to resize me. Click the settings icon (it's the left one, looks like a cog) to change this text. You can type new text into me or cut and paste text from somewhere else. Click outside of me when you're done and any changes will be saved.
Site designed and Maintained by Harish