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THAI HISTORY
Welcome to a brief history on Thailand - scroll down to learn more. If you click onto underlined red highlighted words you will open up the Escarti history page where upon you may delve deeper into your studies
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The central area of Indochina from the Maekhong River valley to the Khorat Plateau was inhabited as far back as 10,000 years. Linguistic scholars can trace origins of ancient Chinese to an earlier Thai language. Archaeology gives us several pointers to early development of the human race in the area. For example, in the Ban Chieng area of north-east Thailand:
- Rice may have been cultivated as early as 4,000 BC (China was still largely growing and consuming millet, although evidence does suggest that rice was first cultivated in the Yangtze valley c. 6500 BC)
- Bronze metallurgy began c. 1700-1500 BC.
This pre-historic cultural development formed a nucleus of migrating people. A linguistic map of south China, north-west India and South-East Asia, as far as the islands of Indonesia, clearly shows the presence of these early Thai migrants. They settled in river valleys from the Red River (Hong River) in south China and Vietnam to the Brahmaputra River in Assam.
During the second half of the 13th century a growing pressure with the rise of the Mongol hordes under Kublai Khan forced the south China Thais to retrace their steps and return to their roots.
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| Dating from about 3,000 BC these artifacts from Ban Chieng in north-east Thailand. |
Ban Chieng bronze musical instruments show a high degree of design sophistication. |
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Ban Chieng artists and potters were equally accomplished. People dressed well and printed their own silk textiles.

Prehistoric tools from the Chiang Saen region of northern Thailand.
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The greatest concentration of these early Thais first appeared in the north of modern Thailand, around Chiang Saen and valleys to the south. They formed themselves into principalities, some of which later became independent kingdoms.
A union of Thai princes took Haripunchai from the Mons and formed Lan Na Thai (which means 'Million Thai Rice Fields'), today often referred to simply as Lanna, and drove the Khmers from Sukhothai (which means 'The Dawn of Happiness'). A mons Village Today
The Sukhothai kingdom declared independence in 1238. Sukhothai is considered to be the first true Thai kingdom. Today many Thais view the Sukhothai period as the golden era of Thai history, an ideal state, and a land of plenty, governed by just and paternal kings who ruled over peaceful, contented citizens. It developed a distinct style of its own. During this period the first Thai writing system was evolved, which became the basis for modern Thai, and the Thai form of Therava Buddhism was codified.
Within the walls of Sukhothai are the ruins of twenty wats (temples) and monuments, the greatest of which is Wat Mahathat. Still splendid in its current day setting.
These Sukhothai Wats show how the beauty of water was used to enhance their spiritual aspect.
The giant Buddha at Wat Mahathat, Sukhothai before and after restoration.
Take a look at the full pictures:
Giant Buddha, Wat Mahathat - 1907
Giant Buddha, Wat Mahathat - Now
Under the rule of king Ramkamhaeng (Rama the Brave) the Sukhothai kingdom flourished and expanded as far as Nakhon Si Thammarat in the south, to the upper Maekhong River valley in Laos, and to Bago in Burma.
In 1287 Ramkamhaeng formed an alliance with two northern Thai princes, Mengai of Chiang Rai and Ngam Muang of Phayao. Mengai founded Chiang Mai ('New Town') in 1296 which became the capital of Lanna.
The southern kingdom of Ayutthaya expanded rapidly by teaching the importance of religion over military might, and extended control over the Chao Phya River valley. With the rise of Ayutthaya the Sukhothai influence declined and in 1378 their seat of power moved to Phitsanulok. Sukhothai's population followed and by 1438 Sukhothai was a deserted city.
Ayutthaya began as an ancient settlement named after Rama's legendary kingdom in India.
Its importance in Thai history began when a cholera outbreak forced Phya U-Thong, the ruler of the principality of U-Thong (today known as Suphan Buri), to evacuated his people. He officially established his seat in Ayutthaya in 1350, after three years of preparation, when he assumed the title RamathidibodiI.
The Ayutthaya kings became very powerful moving east to take Lopburi a former Khmer stronghold and then, in 1431, on to Angkor the great capital city of the Khmer empire.
The image shows the temple complex of Angkor. The large bluish-black rectangle is the Western Baray (reservoir), part of Angkor's famous irrigation system. The large square to its east is Angkor Thom, a fortified city. The brown spot at the centre of the square is the Bayon, a monumental structure. To its south is the fabled temple of Angkor Wat, surrounded by a wide moat. Other temples and the Eastern Baray are located round the complex. The road running south from Angkor Wat goes to the nearby town of Siem Reap. The wide bluish strip to the south is the flooded lake of Tonlé Sap.
Although the Thais were responsible for the decline and eventual collapse of Angkor, the Ayutthaya kings adopted Khmer court customs, language and culture. Unlike the paternal rulers of Sukhothai, Ayutthaya's kings were absolute monarchs and assumed the title devaraja or God King.
Ayutthaya became one of the greatest and wealthiest cities in Asia, rivalling London in its influence. From the early 16th century the Portuguese established trade and supplied mercenaries to fight in continuing campaigns against the rival kingdom in Chiang Mai. They taught the Thais cannon foundry and musketry.
Ayutthaya is situated on an island in the Chao Phraya River, at the junction of the Lop Buri River and the Nam Pasak River, about 80 km north of Bangkok. To appreciate the city as a 17th century visitor might have done, travel up the Chao Phraya River from Bangkok.
Weakened by the wars with Chiang Mai, Ayutthaya was attacked by King Tabinshweti of Burma in 1549. Aided by the Portuguese, the attack was repelled, but in 1569 Ayutthaya eventually fell to Tabinshweti's brother in law, King Bayinnaung. The invading Burmese forces ransacked and plundered the city, forcibly transporting most of its population to Burma.
Weakened by the wars with Chiang Mai, Ayutthaya was attacked by King Tabinshweti of Burma in 1549. Aided by the Portuguese, the attack was repelled, but in 1569 Ayutthaya eventually fell to Tabinshweti's brother in law, King Bayinnaung. The invading Burmese forces ransacked and plundered the city, forcibly transporting most of its population to Burma.
Naresuen, the eldest son of the defeated king's leading deputy, was held captive in Burma until he reached the age of 15. As soon as he returned he immediately began to gather armed followers, which he trained in guerrilla warfare. He took the opportunity to declare Ayutthaya's freedom in 1584, whilst the Burmese rulers were weakened by revolts in their own provinces.
Although the Burmese made numerous attempts to retake Ayutthaya, Naresuen was able to assume full kingship upon his father's death in 1590. He rebuilt his kingdom and turned the tables on the Burmese with repeated attacks until the Burmese Empire itself disintegrated. He finally subdued the Khmers on his eastern border. He became known as 'Naresuen the Great' and under his rule Ayutthaya prospered, becoming the great and thriving metropolis described by 17th century European visitors.
A long period of peace and tranquil prosperity was ended when a village headman united the Burmese Empire which attacked Ayutthaya in 1760. The Burmese army was repelled but in 1767 a second Burmese invasion succeeded in capturing Ayutthaya, after a siege of 14 months. The withdrawing Burmese army sacked the city, burning and looting and melting down the gold from Buddha images. They took their booty back to Burma, together with members of the royal family and 90,000 captives.
 
2,000 Spires clad in gold
At one time Ayutthaya had a population of a million. Europeans wrote accounts of the fabulous wealth of the courts and the '2,000 spires clad in gold'.
The 1767 Burmese invasion left the city largely destroyed.
During the siege, a Thai general named Phya Taksin broke through the encircling Burmese and took a small band of followers to Chantaburi on the southern coast. There he assembled an army and navy. Seven months after the fall of Ayutthaya the general and his forces sailed back to the capital and expelled the Burmese occupying garrison.
He immediately moved his capital to the west bank of Bangkok, known as Thonburi, and was proclaimed king. During his reign he liberated Chiang Mai and the rest of northern Thailand from the Burmese and his generals brought Cambodia and most of the present day Laos under Thai control. When a revolt broke out in 1782, Taksin was forced to abdicate.
Upon his return from the Cambodian campaign general Chakri was offered the throne. He became known as Rama I. He moved his headquarters to the more spacious Bangkok on the opposite bank of the river.
He set about restoring the confidence of his war-shattered people. Buddha images were transported from Sukhothai and Ayutthaya. Bricks from the old capital were floated down the river to build the new city walls. Master craftsmen designed and built the first permanent building in the new capital, Wat Phra Kaew, or Temple of the Emerald Buddha.
Bangkok began as a city of canals and elephant paths on the east bank of the Chao Phraya River, just a few kilometres from the sea. The first of the new structures ordered by King Ramathibodi, later known as Rama I, was the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, which was later surrounded by the grounds and buildings of the Grand Palace. It was built in the style of the Royal Temple of the Grand Palace of Ayutthaya.
Modern Thailand is indebted to Rama I for his cultural revival programme. He and his successors up to the present King Bhumibol , Rama IX, have transformed their country from a war-torn Asian land to a modern nation.
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Genealogical Table Of The Present Chakri Dynasty
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3600 BC |
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Bronze age culture at Ban Chiang, near Udon. This is possibly the oldest Bronze Age culture on Earth.
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600 B.C. |
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Chinese T'ai migration recorded
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300 B.C. |
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Indian migration recorded
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01 AD - 1000 AD |
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By the 1st century AD Indian traders to the Indochina peninsula had brought the Hindu religion to Thailand. By the tenth century the Mons, from what is today Burma, had established themselves in Central Thailand and had established small Buddhist kingdoms in an area from Nakhon Pathon ( on the Korat Plateau ) to Chiang Mai.
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1150 |
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Suriyavarman II built Angkor Wat, just south and east of Thailand in today's Cambodia.
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1238 |
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First Thai Kingdom without Khmer domination, "Dawn of Happiness", Sukhothai, in the North Central region of present Thailand.
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1283 |
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Thai Alphabet, using as a basis the Mon, Khmer and Indian scripts.
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1350 - 1767 |
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Ayutthaya Period. Capital, 55 kms north of present day Bangkok.
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1498 |
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Vasco de Gama sailed round the Cape of Good Hope and across the Indian Ocean
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1516 |
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Portuguese envoy to Thai Court
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1529 - 1569 |
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Ayutthaya became involved continual war with Burma, with the result that Ayutthaya fell to the Burmese
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1571 |
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The Spaniards had made Manila as their Far Eastern capital in 1571. Spain spread out to economically dominate & christianize the neighboring countries.
The European colonial imperialist were busily dividing Asia,
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1584 |
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Thai King declares independence from Burma & suppresses several attacks from Burma.
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1593 |
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After the Burmese made several unsuccessful attempts to reclaim Ayutthaya a resolution was determined by a duel on elephants in which Naresuan slew the Burmese Crown Prince at Nong Sa Rai near Suphan Buri in January, 1593.
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1594 |
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Naresuan was victorious in a war with Cambodia.
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1598 |
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Spain signed a treaty of friendship and commerce with Siam. This was the second treaty which Siam made with a European country. The terms of the treaty were similar to those in the Portuguese treaty of 1516.
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1601 - 1605 |
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In 1601 the Dutch (Netherlands) received permission to build a trading station in southern Thailand. Three years later, in 1604, they proceeded to Ayutthaya where their arrival was marked by an audience which King Naresuan granted to their chief negotiator.
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1607 |
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First Thai Ambassador to Europe, the Netherlands. 7 month ocean voyage.
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1611 |
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British factory established in Thailand.
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1617 |
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First treaty with the Netherlands. No exclusive trading privileges.
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1610-1628 |
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Both Kong Ekatotsarot and King Songtham exchanged ambassadors with Japan, the Shogun of Tokugawa
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1661 - 1664 |
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The Dutch adopted a war like policy towards the Thais. In typical imperialist fashion, they were not satisfied with the fair trade treaties they negotiated, in good faith, with King Naresuan.
First they pirated a Thai merchant vessel, and then some Dutch warships blockaded the mouth of the Chao Phraya river, thus forcing Siam to sign another treaty, whereby the Dutch obtained a monopoly on the export of deer and cow hides.
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1662 - 1687 |
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The French appeared on the scene of Thai history in the reign of King Narai(1657-1688) Siam and France exchanged embassies.
In 1685, Louis XIV dispatched Chevalier de Chaumont as the first French ambassador to Ayutthaya, to be followed b y a second ambassador accompanied by 1400 French soldiers and 300 skilled workmen in 1687.
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1687 |
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King Narai declared war against the British East India Company. The British goal of using the Indian opium in Thailand like the British did in China was unacceptable.
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1688. |
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King Narai turned to the French in order to counterbalance the Dutch. He succeeded in signing a new treaty with the Dutch that contained the same terms as those found in the treaty of 1617.
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1688. |
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Expelled the French soldiers from the country, after the Dutch renegotiated.
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1767 |
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Ayutthaya destroyed by Burmese army.
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1767 |
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Capitol moved to Thon Buri on the opposite side of the Chao Phraya River from today's Bangkok. Well preserved examples of Ayutthayan architectural art is less than an hour by taxi from downtown Bangkok.
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1800 |
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Bangkok is now the capitol.
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1833 - 1847 |
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Rama III sent an army into Cambodia with a mission to clear it of the Annamese (Vietnam) troops, thus causing a Thai-Vietnam war to break out in. The war dragged on for fourteen years and eventually both sides made peace.
Cambodia had in the meantime become submissive to Siam again, due to the installation of a pro-Thai prince on the Cambodian (Khmer) throne. Nevertheless the Cambodian King continued to present tribute to the Annamese (Vietnam) Emperor, and this was to complicate the relationship between Siam and Cambodia when France embarked on an imperialist policy in Vietnam in the middle of the nineteenth century.
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1833 |
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First American envoy to the Thai Court.
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1850 |
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American & British are angered & threaten Thailand "with drastic measures" when the Thai King, Rama III, refuses to be bullied by the western powers.
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1855 - 1868 |
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King Ram IV began a new era of diplomacy some Thailand had treaties with most of the World Powers. The British & the United States of America by 1856. Treaties of the same Bowring pattern were signed with France, Denmark, Portugal, Netherlands in 1860, Germany, Sweden-Norway (1868), Belgium (1868), Italy (1868) and Japan 1898.
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1886 - 1907 |
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In order to maintain her independence, Siam during the reign of King Rama V had to cede to France considerable territory to satisfy the French King's desire to dominate Indo China. On 4 separate occasions France demanded & received territory from Thailand.
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1905 |
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The king abolished slavery.
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1909 |
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Great Britain demanded territory in order for Siam to remain independent. Britian got Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan and Trengganu from Siam, which England turned into protectorates.
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1897 - 1907 |
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King Rama V, Chulalongkorn, was the first Thai monarch to visit Europe, for the first time in 1897 and again in 1907. The visits were primarily intended to promote friendly relations with the European countries and stop the European imperial colonization of Indo China.
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1917 |
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Thailand joined the Allies in the First World War on July 22,1917 making the country better known abroad, in hopes of befriending the land hungry, aggressive Farang Imperialist.
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1932 |
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On June 24,1932, a revolution broke out, ushering in a new era of constitutional government and overthrowing the obsolete monarchy which had prevailed in Thailand since Sukhothai.
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1933 - 1935 |
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Civil unrest and turmoil. King advocates from Europe in 1935.
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1940 - 1941 |
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In 1940Thailand makes a demand for the return of some territories from French Indo-China.
The French authorities rejected it and fighting broke out. Finally the dispute between Thailand and French Indo-China was settled with the assistance of Japan, which acted as mediator. In May 1941, the Tokyo Convention was signed, returning to Thailand some territories, namely, Battambong, Siamrap, Champasak and Lanchang.
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1941 |
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The outbreak of the Second World War and was followed by the conclusion of Thailand's alliance with Japan and declaration of war against the U.S.A. and Great Britain on January 25,1942.
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1941 - 1945 |
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Thailand declared war on the Allies under the Government of Phibul Songkhram, he sent Seni Pramoj to hand the declaration to Hull. Seni went to the office and said that he had something to give Mr Hull from his Government that he didn't want to give, Mr. Hull said then don't give it. Therefore it is considered by some that Thailand was neutral during the war.
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1946 |
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Thailand then sought admission to the United Nations Organization and became its 55th member on December 16, 1946.
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1951 - 1957 |
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Focus of American foreign policy in Southeast Asia. Financial aid helped Thailand achieve great financial success.
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1975 |
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Communist victories in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia led to another political coup. This time an extreme conservative, anti communist, government prevailed.
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1988 |
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First elected Prime Minister since 1977. First non military leader since the conservative take over.
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1990's |
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Thailand had become one of the leaders of industrialized Asia. Joining Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong among the economic successful stories of the post World Cold War era.
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1997 |
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Crash of the Thai Baht preceded the economic Asian Flu.
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2000 |
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Bangkok Sky Rail opened.
Much of the construction boom of the early 1990s remains vacant & unfinished.
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