Chonburi marked the 329th anniversary of the passing of Thailand’s greatest king of Ayutthaya with a garland-laying ceremony at the provincial hall.
Gov. Pakarathorn Thienchai presided over the July 11 ceremony, which saw a presentation of flowers to mark the date of King Narai Maharat’s – or King Ramathibodi III – death in 1688.
The date was set as an official holiday by the Cabinet in 2010.
Narai the Great was the king of Ayutthaya from 1656 to 1688 and arguably was the most famous Ayutthayan monarch. His reign marked the kingdom’s greatest era of prosperity but, more importantly, opened the then-Siam to the west by forming close relations with France and giving other foreigners significant influence at the royal court.
The period was also marked with turmoil, as England declared war against Siam after Narai ordered the slaughter of every English settler in the city of Mergui – now part of Myanmar – and invaded Burmese Lanna in 1662. The king’s willingness to give foreigners power at court also laid the foundation of the revolution of 1688.
Historians say the most-remarkable aspects of Narai’s reign were his diplomatic missions sent to France, England, and the Vatican, as well as Persia, India and China closer to home.