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'Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke' or 'Phutthayotfa' (
1737 –
1802), posthumously titled 'Rama I the Great', was
King of Siam (now called Thailand) from 1782 to 1809, and the founder of the
Chakri dynasty which rules Thailand to this day.
The future king was born on March 20, 1737 in
Ayutthaya, his birth name was Thong Duang. He was born the son of
Phra Aksorn Sundara Smiantra, an ethnic
Mon[1] noble of the kingdom of Ayutthaya, who following the fall of Ayutthaya became Chao Phya Chakri at Pitsanuloke and his part-Chinese wife
[2][3][4]. After receiving his education in a Buddhist temple, his father sent him to become a squire for king
Uthumphon, and it was at this moment that he met his friend Tak Sin, who would become King
Taksin, Rama's future predecessor. After the fall of Ayutthaya, he rejoined the ranks of king Taksin under the name Chao Phraya Chakri. He was given the name Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke posthumously by king
Rama III,
Nangklao. Chao Phraya Chakri and
Phraya Pichai were considered Taksin's most valuable generals.
While serving as Taksin's general, Rama conquered
Vientiane in 1778-79, putting the country under vassalage, and removing its
Emerald Buddha and Phra Bang to
Thonburi. In
april 4 1782, when Taksin was declared mad after a
coup d'etat and was later executed, Rama assumed power, establishing the Chakri dynasty. He was crowned on April 6 as Rama I; the date is now
Chakri Memorial Day, a
public holiday in Thailand.

Statue of Rama I at the Phra Buddha Yodfa Memorial Bridge, Bangkok (1932)
In
1785, the last of the
Nguyen Lords,
Nguyen Anh convinced King Chulaloke to give him forces to attack Vietnam (which was under the control of the
Tay Son brothers). However, the joint Nguyen-Siam fleet was destroyed in the
Battle of Rach Gam–Xoai Mut in the
Mekong delta region. Seven years later, Nguyen Anh with more help from the Siamese, staged a series of attacks on
Saigon.
King Rama I continued Taksin's task of saving the newly reunited country from attack by
Burma, and repulsed several Burmese invasions. Culturally, Rama I also reestablished the traditions of the country by salvaging Buddhist texts lost in the chaos after the sacking of Ayutthaya by the Burmese in 1767. He also moved the capital from Taksin's capital of Thonburi and built the new capital
Bangkok. In his palace, the
Wat Phra Kaew, to house the
Emerald Buddha, and created a new code of laws, the ''Book of three seals''. He appointed the first
Supreme Patriarch of
Thai Buddhism. As literature was his passion, he also wrote a
Thai version of the
Ramayana epos called
Ramakian.
On his death, he was succeeded by his son prince Isarasundorn, who assumed the throne name of King
Buddha Loetla Nabhalai (now posthumously titled Rama II).
Sources
★
Dutton's Tay Son Timeline
1. A History of Thailand, Chris Baker, Pasuk Phongpaichit, , , Cambridge University Press, ,
2. Britannica encyclopedia
3. Down Sampeng Lane: The Story of Bangkok's China Town
4. Thailand, doing business in