(Redirected from Ramai IV of Thailand): ''Sometimes, especially in Thai language documents, Mongkut might also refer to
Vajiravudh (Rama VI), reigning title Phra Mongkut Klao Chaoyuhua.''
'Mongkut' (Rama IV), (
October 18,
1804 –
October 1,
1868) was king of
Siam from
1851 to
1868. Historians have widely regarded him as one of the most remarkable kings of the
Chakri Dynasty. Prince Mongkut was the son of King
Rama II and his first wife Queen
Srisuriyendra, whose first son died at birth in
1801. Prince Mongkut was five years old when his father succeeded to the throne in
1809. According to the law of succession, he was the first in line to the throne; but when his father died, his influential half-brother,
Nangklao, was strongly supported by the nobility to assume the throne. Prince Mongkut decided to enter the
Buddhist priesthood and travelled in exile to many locations in Thailand, during which time he founded the
Thammayut Nikaya reform movement that later became one of the two denominations of
Buddhism in Thailand. Prince Mongkut spent the following twenty-seven years searching for
Western knowledge; he had studied
Latin,
English, and
astronomy with missionaries and sailors. Prince Mongkut would later be noted for his excellent command of English, although it is said that his younger brother,
Vice-King Pinklao, could speak even better English.
After his twenty-seven years of pilgrimage, King Mongkut succeeded to the throne in
1851. He took the name ''Phra Chom Klao'', although foreigners continued to call him Mongkut. His awareness of the threat from the
British and
French imperial powers, led him to many innovative activities. He ordered the nobility to wear shirts while attending his court; this was to show that Siam was no longer barbaric from the Western point of view.
King Mongkut periodically hired foreign instructors to teach his sons and daughters English. Among teachers in the list were a missionary named
Dan Beach Bradley, who was credited for introducing Western medicine to the country and printing the first non-government run newspaper; and, on recommendation by
Tan Kim Ching in Singapore, an English woman named
Anna Leonowens, whose influence was later the subject of great Thai controversy. It is still debated how much this affected the worldview of one of his sons, Prince
Chulalongkorn, who succeeded to the throne.
Anna claimed that her conversations with Prince Chulalongkorn about human freedom, and her relating to him the story of ''
Uncle Tom's Cabin'', became the inspiration for his abolition of
slavery almost 40 years later. It should be noted, however, that the slavery system in Siam was very different from that in the United States, where slavery was based on race. Slavery in Thailand was often voluntary and due to economic condition. One could be punished for torturing slaves in Siam and some 'slaves' could buy their freedom.
Leonowens' story would become the inspiration for the
Rodgers and Hammerstein musical ''
The King and I'', as well as the Hollywood movies of the same title, which, because of their incorrect historical references and supposedly disrespectful treatment of Mongkut's character, were for some time banned in Thailand as the Thai government and people considered them to be
lèse majesté. To correct the record, well-known Thai intellectuals
Seni and
Kukrit Pramoj in 1948 wrote ''The King of Siam Speaks'' ISBN 9748298124. The Pramoj brothers sent their manuscript to the American politician and diplomat
Abbot Low Moffat 1901-1996), who drew on it for his 1961 biography, ''Mongkut the King of Siam'' ISBN 0801490693. Moffat donated the Pramoj manuscript to the Library in 1961.
(Southeast Asian Collection, Asian Division, Library of Congress)
Contrary to the popular belief held by some Westerners, Mongkut never offered a herd of
war elephants to President
Abraham Lincoln during the
American Civil War for use against the
Confederacy. He did offer to send some domesticated elephants to President
James Buchanan, to use as beasts of burden and means of transportation. The royal letter, which was written even before the Civil War started, took some time to arrive in
Washington DC, and by the time it reached its destination President Buchanan was not in office any longer. In his replying letter Lincoln, who succeeded Buchanan as the US President, respectfully declined to accept Mongkut's proposal, explaining to the King that American steam engines could also be used for the same purposes.
As a monk and Buddhist scholar, Mongkut worked to establish the
Thammayut Nikaya, an order of Buddhist
monks that he believed would conform more closely to the orthodoxy of the
Theravada school. It was said that the newly-established order was tacitly supported by King Nangklao, despite oppositions to it by conservative congregations, including some princes and noblemen. Later, when Mongkut himself became King, he would strongly support his sect.
It was during his reign and under his guidance that Siam entered a treaty relationship with Great Britain. Sir
John Bowring, Governor of
Hong Kong, as representative of England, concluded the trade treaty (later commonly referred to as "the
Bowring Treaty") with the Siamese Government in 1855. The Bowring Treaty later served as a model for a series of trade treaties with many other western countries, and historians often give credit to King Mongkut (and Sir John Bowring) for opening the new era of Siam's international commerce. These treaties, however, were also later considered unequal treaties, and after Siam had been modernized, the Siamese government began negotiations to renounce the Bowring Treaty and other similar treaties in the reign of King Vajiravudh, Rama VI, grandson of Mongkut, a task that would not succeeded until well into the reign of Rama VII, another grandson of his.
One of King Mongkut's last official duties came in
1868, when he invited Sir
Harry Ord, the British Governor of Straits Settlements from
Singapore, as well as a party of French astronomers and scientists, to watch the total
solar eclipse, which Mongkut himself had calculated two years earlier, at (in the King's own words) "East Greenwich longitude 99 degrees 42' and latitude North 11 degrees 39'." The spot was at Wakor village in
Prachuap Khiri Khan province, south of Bangkok. Mongkut's calculations proved accurate, but during the expedition Mongkut and Prince Chulalongkorn were infected with
malaria. The king died several days later in the capital, and was succeeded by his son, who survived the malaria.
For his role in introducing Western science and scientific methodology to Siam, King Mongkut is still honoured to this day in modern Thailand as the country's "Father of Modern Science and Technology".
Reportedly, Mongkut once remarked to a
Christian missionary friend: ''"What you teach us to do is admirable, but what you teach us to believe is foolish"''.
External link
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An image of King Mongkut.