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Tags: History, Lang:en
Summary
Little is known of the earliest inhabitants of what is now
Thailand, but 5,000-year-old archaeological sites in the
northeastern part of the country are believed to contain the
oldest evidence of rice cultivation and bronze casting in Asia
and perhaps in the world. In early historical times, a
succession of tribal groups controlled what is now Thailand.
The Mon and Khmer peoples established powerful kingdoms that
included large areas of the country. They absorbed from contact
with South Asian peoples religious, social, political, and
cultural ideas and institutions that later influenced the
development of Thailand's culture and national identity.
**
The Tai, a people who originally lived in southwestern China,
migrated into mainland Southeast Asia over a period of many
centuries. The first mention of their existence in the region
is a twelfth-century A.D. inscription at the Khmer temple
complex of Angkor Wat in Cambodia, which refers to syam, or
"dark brown" people (the origin of the term Siam) as vassals of
the Khmer monarch. In 1238 a Tai chieftain declared his
independence from the Khmer and established a kingdom at
Sukhothai in the broad valley of the Mae Nam (river) Chao
Phraya, at the center of modern Thailand. Sukhothai was
succeeded in the fourteenth century by the kingdom of
Ayutthaya. The Burmese invaded Ayutthaya and in 1767 destroyed
the capital, but two national heroes, Taksin and Chakkri, soon
expelled the invaders and reunified the country under the
Chakkri Dynasty.
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