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Bhumibol Adulyadej

Bhumibol Adulyadej (Thai: ภูมิพลอดุลยเดช; RTGSPhumiphon Adunyadet; pronounced [pʰūː.mí.pʰōn ʔā.dūn.jā.dèːt] (listen); (Sanskrit: bhūmi·bala atulya·teja - "might of the land, unparalleled brilliance");[1] 5 December 1927 – 13 October 2016), conferred with the title King Bhumibol the Great in 1987 (officially conferred by King Vajiralongkorn in 2019),[2][3][4][5] was the ninth monarch of Thailand from the Chakri dynasty, titled Rama IX. Reigning since 9 June 1946, he was the world's longest-reigning current head of state from the death of Emperor Hirohito of Japan in 1989 until his own death in 2016,[6] and is the third-longest verified reigning sovereign monarch in world history after King Louis XIV and Queen Elizabeth II, reigning for 70 years and 126 days.[7] During his reign, he was served by a total of 30 prime ministers beginning with Pridi Banomyong and ending with Prayut Chan-o-cha.[8]

Bhumibol Adulyadej
ภูมิพลอดุลยเดช
King Rama IX
Bhumibol in 1960
King of Thailand
Reign9 June 1946 – 13 October 2016
Coronation5 May 1950
PredecessorAnanda Mahidol (Rama VIII)
SuccessorMaha Vajiralongkorn (Rama X)
See list
BornPrince Bhumibol Adulyadej
(1927-12-05)5 December 1927
Mount Auburn Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
Died13 October 2016(2016-10-13) (aged 88)
Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand
Burial30 October 2017
Wat Bowonniwet Vihara, Wat Ratchabophit, Phra Nakhon, Bangkok (interment of ashes)
Spouse
(m. 1950)
Issue
Names
Bhumibol Adulyadej
Regnal name
Phrabat Somdet Phra Paraminthara Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej Mahitalathibet Ramathibodi Chakkrinaruebodin Sayamminthrathirat Borommanat Pobitra
Posthumous name
Phrabat Somdet Phra Boromchanakadhipeshra Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej Maharaj Borommanat Pobitra
HouseMahidol
DynastyChakri
FatherMahidol Adulyadej, Prince of Songkla
MotherSangwan Talapat
ReligionTheravada
Signature
Military career
AllegianceThailand
Service/branchRoyal Thai Armed Forces
Years of service1946–2016
RankField marshal
Admiral of the fleet
Marshal of the Royal Thai Air Force
Commands heldRoyal Thai Armed Forces

Forbes estimated Bhumibol's fortune – including property and investments managed by the Crown Property Bureau, a body that is neither private nor government-owned (assets managed by the Bureau were owned by the crown as an institution, not by the monarch as an individual)[9]– to be US$30 billion in 2010, and he headed the magazine's list of the "world's richest royals" from 2008 to 2013.[10][11][12] In May 2014, Bhumibol's wealth was again listed as US$30 billion.[13]

After a period of deteriorating health which left him hospitalized on several occasions, Bhumibol died on 13 October 2016 in Siriraj Hospital.[14] He was highly revered by the people in Thailand[15][16] – some saw him as close to divine.[17][18] Notable political activists and Thai citizens who criticized the king or the institution of monarchy were often forced into exile or to suffer frequent imprisonments,[19] yet many cases were dropped before being proceeded or were eventually given royal pardon.[20] His cremation was held on 26 October 2017 at the royal crematorium at Sanam Luang.[21] His son, Maha Vajiralongkorn, succeeded him as King.

Early life

 
Bhumibol (centre) with his mother and siblings Ananda Mahidol (left) and Galyani Vadhana (right)
 
Bhumibol in 1945

Bhumibol was born at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the United States, on 5 December 1927.[22] He was the youngest son of Prince Mahidol Adulyadej, the Prince of Songkla, and his commoner wife Mom Sangwan (later Princess Srinagarindra, the Princess Mother). His father was enrolled in the public health program at Harvard University, which is why Bhumibol was the only monarch to be born in the US.[23]: 46–47  Bhumibol had an older sister, Princess Galyani Vadhana, and an older brother, Prince Ananda Mahidol.

Bhumibol came to Thailand in 1928, after his father obtained a certificate from Harvard. His father died of kidney failure in September 1929, when Bhumibol was less than two years old.[23]: 62  He briefly attended Mater Dei school in Bangkok, but in 1933 his mother took her family to Switzerland, where he continued his education at the École nouvelle de la Suisse romande in Lausanne. In 1934 Bhumibol was given his first camera, which ignited his lifelong enthusiasm for photography.[23]: 67  When Bhumibol's childless uncle Prajadhipok abdicated in 1935, his nine-year-old brother Ananda Mahidol became King Rama VIII. However, the family remained in Switzerland and the affairs of the head of state were conducted by a regency council. They returned to Thailand for only two months in 1938. In 1942, Bhumibol became a jazz enthusiast, and started to play the saxophone, a passion that he kept throughout his life.[23]: 73–74  He received the baccalauréat des lettres (high-school diploma with a major in French literature, Latin, and Greek) from the Gymnase Classique Cantonal de Lausanne, and by 1945 had begun studying sciences at the University of Lausanne, when World War II ended and the family was able to return to Thailand.[22]

Succession and marriage

 
King Ananda Mahidol returned from Switzerland to Thailand, during an official ceremony in January 1946 in Bangkok, with Pridi Banomyong, Srinagarindra, and Prince Bhumibol.

Bhumibol ascended the throne following the death by gunshot wound of his brother, King Ananda Mahidol, on 9 June 1946, under circumstances that remain unclear. While a first government statement stated that Ananda had accidentally shot himself,[24]: 76–77  an investigation committee ruled this was virtually impossible.[24]: 87  Two palace aides were eventually convicted of regicide and executed. A third possibility, that Bhumibol accidentally shot his brother while the brothers played with their pistols, was never officially considered.[24]: 77–78 [25]

Bhumibol succeeded his brother, but returned to Switzerland before the end of the 100-day mourning period. Despite his interest in science and technology, he changed his major and enrolled in law and political science to prepare for his duties as head of state. His uncle, Rangsit, Prince of Chainat, was appointed Prince Regent. In Bhumibol's name, Prince Rangsit acknowledged a military coup that overthrew the government of Thamrongnawasawat in November 1947.[24]: 88  The regent also signed the 1949 constitution, which returned to the monarchy many of the powers it had lost by the 1932 Revolution.[24]: 91–93 

In December 1946, the Siamese government allocated several hundred thousand dollars for the ceremonial cremation of the remains of the late King Ananda, a necessary preliminary to the coronation of Bhumibol who was required by religious custom to light the funeral pyre. Unsettled conditions in 1947 following a coup d'état resulted in a postponement, and court astrologers determined that 2 March 1949 was the most auspicious date.[26]

While doing his degree in Switzerland, Bhumibol visited Paris frequently. It was in Paris that he first met Mom Rajawongse Sirikit Kitiyakara, daughter of the Thai ambassador to France (Nakkhatra Mangala) and a great-granddaughter of King Chulalongkorn and thus a cousin of Bhumibol. She was then 15 years old and training to be a concert pianist.[26][27]

On 4 October 1948, while Bhumibol was driving a Fiat Topolino on the Geneva-Lausanne road, he collided with the rear of a braking truck 10 km outside Lausanne. He injured his back, suffered paralysis in half of his face and incurred cuts on his face that cost him the sight of his right eye.[24]: 104 [28] Both the royal cremation and coronation had to be postponed once more.[26] While he was hospitalised in Lausanne, Sirikit visited him frequently. She met his mother, who asked her to continue her studies nearby so that Bhumibol could get to know her better. Bhumibol selected for her a boarding school in Lausanne, Riante Rive.[29] A quiet engagement in Lausanne followed on 19 July 1949, and they were married on 28 April 1950, just a week before his coronation. Their wedding was described by The New York Times as "the shortest, simplest royal wedding ever held in the land of gilded elephants and white umbrellas". The ceremony was performed by Bhumibol's ageing grandmother, Savang Vadhana.[26]

Bhumibol and Sirikit have four children:

Coronation and titles

 
Bhumibol at his coronation at the Grand Palace.
 
Bhumibol at his coronation, on a royal procession.

After presiding over the long-delayed, ceremonial cremation of his brother Ananda Mahidol, Bhumibol was crowned King of Thailand on 5 May 1950 in the Phaisan Thaksin Throne Hall in the Grand Palace in Bangkok. It was the first coronation ceremony of a Thai sovereign to rule under the system of constitutional monarchy.[26] During the ceremony, he pledged that he would "reign with righteousness for the benefit and happiness of the Siamese people" ("เราจะครองแผ่นดินโดยธรรม เพื่อประโยชน์สุขแห่งมหาชนชาวสยาม").[32] Notable elements associated with the coronation included the Bahadrabith Throne [th] beneath the Great White Umbrella of State and royal regalia and utensils.[33]

In 1950 on Coronation Day, Bhumibol's consort was made queen (Somdej Phra Boromarajini). The date of his coronation is celebrated each 5 May in Thailand as Coronation Day, a public holiday. On 9 June 2006, Bhumibol celebrated his 60th anniversary as the King of Thailand, becoming the longest reigning monarch in Thai history.[citation needed]

The royal couple spent their honeymoon at Hua Hin before they returned to Switzerland, where the king completed his university studies. They returned to Thailand in 1951.[26]

Following the death of his grandmother Queen Savang Vadhana, Bhumibol entered a 15-day monkhood (22 October 1956 – 5 November 1956) at Wat Bowonniwet, as is customary for Buddhist males on the death of elder relatives. He was ordained by the Supreme Patriarch on 22 October 1956 at the Royal Chapel of the Emerald Buddha in the Grand Palace.[26][34] At this time, Sirikit was appointed his regent. She was later appointed Queen Regent (Somdej Phra Boromarajininat) in recognition of this.

Although Bhumibol was sometimes referred to as King Rama IX in English, Thais referred to him as Nai Luang or Phra Chao Yu Hua (ในหลวง or พระเจ้าอยู่หัว), which translated to "the King" and "Lord Upon our Heads", respectively. He was also called Chao Chiwit ("Lord of Life").[15] Formally, he was referred to as Phrabat Somdet Phra Chao Yu Hua (พระบาทสมเด็จพระเจ้าอยู่หัว) or, in legal documents, Phrabat Somdet Phra Paraminthara Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej (พระบาทสมเด็จพระปรมินทรมหาภูมิพลอดุลยเดช), and in English as "His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej". He signed his name as ภูมิพลอดุลยเดช ป.ร. (Bhumibol Adulyadej Por Ror, the Thai equivalent of "Bhumibol Adulyadej R[ex])".

Role in Thai politics

 
Queen Sirikit and King Bhumibol Adulyadej in 1960

In 1957, a military coup overthrew the government of Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram with allegations of lèse-majesté,[24]: 136–137 [35] corruption and manipulation of the election held earlier that year.[35]: 146–148  This began a new and long-lasting relationship between the monarch and military,[36] leading some to perceive that the king condones the Thammasat University massacre in defense of his throne, and support a series of military dictatorships.[24][37] However, during his interview given to the BBC in 1979, the king reiterated that the monarchy should remain impartial and be in peaceful co-existence with everybody.[23]: 139–141  Bhumibol invited public criticism in a 2005 speech,[38] but the lèse majesté laws have not been revoked by the Thai parliament yet.

Plaek Phibunsongkhram era

 
Marshal and Mrs. Phibunsongkhram with Eleanor Roosevelt

In the early years of his reign, during the government of military dictator Plaek Phibunsongkhram, Bhumibol had no real political power and was little more than a ceremonial figure under the military-dominated government. In August 1957, six months after parliamentary elections, General Sarit Thanarat accused the government of Field Marshal Phibunsongkhram of lèse-majesté due to its conduct of the 2,500th anniversary celebration of Buddhism.[24]: 129–130, 136–137 [35] On 16 September 1957, Phibunsongkhram went to Bhumibol to seek support for his government.[39] Bhumibol advised the field marshal to resign to avoid a coup. Phibunsongkhram refused. That evening, Sarit Thanarat seized power. Two hours later Bhumibol imposed martial law throughout the kingdom.[40] Bhumibol issued a proclamation appointing Sarit as "military defender of the capital" without anyone countersigning the proclamation. It included the following:[41]

Whereas it appears that the public administration by the government under the premiership of Field Marshal P. Phibunsongkhram is untrustworthy, and that the government could not maintain the public order; and whereas the military, led by Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat, has successfully taken over the public administration and now acts as the Military Defender of the Capital; now, therefore, I do hereby appoint Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat as the Military Defender of the Capital, and command that all the citizens shall remain calm whilst all the government officers shall serve the orders issued by Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat. This Proclamation shall come into force immediately. Done this 16th Day of September, Buddhist Era 2500 (1957).[citation needed]

Sarit later admitted in a rare interview with foreign correspondent that the king had no involvement and did not acknowledge anything about the coup until it had been done successfully.[42]

Sarit Thanarat era

 
Bhumibol visited Nakhon Si Thammarat, 1959
 
Bhumibol addresses a joint session of the United States Congress, 29 June 1960

During Sarit's dictatorship, the monarchy was revitalised. Bhumibol attended public ceremonies, toured the provinces and patronised development projects, he also visited the United States in June 1960, addressing Congress, and many countries in Europe, including a visit to Rome, hosted by PM Giovanni Gronchi, in September 1960.

Under Sarit, the practice of crawling in front of royalty during audiences, banned by King Chulalongkorn, was revived in certain situations and the royal-sponsored Thammayut Nikaya order was revitalised. For the first time since the absolute monarchy was overthrown, a king was conveyed up the Chao Phraya River in a Royal Barge Procession to offer robes at temples.[43][44]

Other disused ceremonies from the classical period of the Chakri Dynasty, such as the royally patronised ploughing ceremony (Thai: พิธีพืชมงคล), were also revived.[45] Bhumibol's birthday (5 December) was declared the national day, replacing the previous national day, the anniversary of the Siamese revolution of 1932 (24 June).[46] Upon Sarit's death on 8 December 1963, an unprecedented 21 days of mourning were declared in the palace. A royal five-tier umbrella shaded his body while it lay in state. Long-time royal adviser Phraya Srivisaravacha later noted that no Prime Minister ever had such an intimate relationship with Bhumibol as Sarit.[47]

Bhumibol biographer Paul Handley, in The King Never Smiles, writes that the dictator Sarit was Bhumibol's tool. Political scientist Thak Chaloemtiarana writes that Sarit used Bhumibol in order to build his own credibility.[48][49]

Thammasat University massacre

Following Sarit's death General Thanom Kittikachorn rose to power to lead Thailand's military dictatorship, ultimately challenged by the 1973 Thai popular uprising. Bhumibol initially asked student protestors to disband. When police attacked and killed dozens of students, sparking protest riots, Bhumibol announced general Thanom's resignation and departure from Thailand.[50] According to William Stevenson, the king had asked the three tyrants to avoid bloodshed, although the three tyrants had agreed, they later changed their minds. Eventually, it led to the incidents of October 1973.[51]

Bhumibol distanced himself from the Thai military after Thanom's fall. Political events in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos brought powerful guerrilla and communist movements into power or prominence, which threatened the Thai monarchy and political establishment. Fearing unrest, Bhumibol began to court the military in 1975, visiting camps throughout the country, and publicly warning of internal and external threats.[37]: 87  At this time, Bhumibol increasingly cultivated far-right militias and paramilitary forces, including the Red Gaurs and the Village Scouts, warning that students and political dissidents planned to bring communists to power in Thailand.[24]: 232–9  Finally, Bhumibol provoked outrage among students and legal groups by inviting general Thanom back into the country.

The ensuing chaos was used as a pretext for a military coup, which Bhumibol backed and described as a manifestation of the people's will.[37]: 90–1  The event that catalyzed the coup was the Thammasat University massacre, carried out in the name of defending Bhumibol's throne.[24]: 9  The victorious military junta submitted three names to the king as possible premiers: Deputy President of the king's Privy Council Prakob Hutasingh [th], right-wing Bangkok Governor Thamnoon Thien-ngern [th], and staunchly anti-communist Supreme Court judge Thanin Kraivichien.[37]: 90–1 [52] Thanin was a member of the Nawaphon monarchist paramilitary group, which had the backing of the CIA, and which Bhumibol was alleged to have sponsored.[37]: 84–5 [citation needed] Bhumibol chose Thanin as the most suitable premier, leading student protesters to flee to join the communists in the jungle. Thanin was overthrown in a military coup in October 1977 led by General Kriangsak Chamanan.

Prem Tinsulanonda era

Kriangsak was succeeded in 1980 by the popular Army Commander-in-Chief, General Prem Tinsulanonda, who later became the Privy Council President.

Bhumibol's refusal to endorse military coups in 1981 (the April Fool's Day coup) and 1985 (the Share Rebellion) ultimately led to the victory of forces loyal to the government, despite some violence – including, in 1981, the seizure of Bangkok by rebel forces. The coups led many to believe that Bhumibol had misjudged Thai society and that his credibility as an impartial mediator between various political and military factions had been compromised.[53][54][55]

Following the death of Emperor Hirohito of Japan in 1989, he overtook the distinction as the world's longest-reigning living monarch.[56]

Crisis of 1992

 
Royal intervention on the night of 20 May. Chamlong Srimuang (left) and Suchinda Kraprayoon (middle) submit to the King (seated).

In 1992, Bhumibol played a key role in Thailand's transition to a democratic system. The 1991 Thai coup d'état on 23 February returned Thailand to military dictatorship. After a general election in 1992, the majority parties invited General Suchinda Kraprayoon, a leader of the coup group, to be prime minister. This caused much dissent, which escalated into demonstrations called Black May that led to a large number of deaths when the military was brought in to control protesters. The situation became increasingly critical as police and military forces clashed with protesters. Violence and riots spread to many areas of the capital with rumours of a rift among the armed forces.[57]

Amidst the fear of civil war, Bhumibol intervened. He summoned Suchinda and the leader of the pro-democracy movement, retired Major General Chamlong Srimuang, to a televised audience, and urged them to find a peaceful resolution. At the height of the crisis, the sight of both men appearing together on their knees (in accordance with royal protocol) made a strong impression on the nation. Bhumibol then signed Suchinda's amnesty decree that applied to both side of a conflict, with the reason to protect security and unity of the country.[58] Suchinda resigned soon afterwards.

It was one of the few occasions in which Bhumibol directly and publicly intervened in a political conflict. A general election was held shortly afterward, leading to a civilian government.[59]

 
With President Vladimir Putin in Bangkok on 22 October 2003

Crisis of 2005–2006 and the September 2006 coup

Background to the coup

Weeks before the April 2006 legislative election, the Democrat Party-led opposition and the People's Alliance for Democracy petitioned Bhumibol to appoint a replacement prime minister and cabinet. Demands for royal intervention were met with much criticism from the public. Bhumibol, in a speech on 26 April 2006, responded, "Asking for a Royally-appointed prime minister is undemocratic. It is, pardon me, a mess. It is irrational".[60]

After publicly claiming victory in the boycotted April parliamentary elections, Thaksin Shinawatra had a private audience with the king. A few hours later, Thaksin appeared on national television to announce that he would be taking a break from politics. Due to the election result, Bhumibol took the unprecedented step of calling the elections undemocratic.[61]

In May 2006, the Sondhi Limthongkul-owned Manager Daily newspaper published a series of articles describing the "Finland Plot", alleging that Thaksin and former members of the Communist Party of Thailand planned to overthrow the king and seize control of the nation. No evidence was ever produced to verify the existence of such a plot, and Thaksin and his Thai Rak Thai party vehemently denied the accusations and sued the accusers.

In a rare, televised speech to senior judges, Bhumibol requested the judiciary to take action to resolve the political crisis.[60] On 8 May 2006, the Constitutional Court invalidated the results of the April elections and ordered new elections scheduled for 15 October 2006.[62] The Criminal Court later jailed the Election Commissioners.[63][64]

On 14 July 2006, Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda addressed graduating cadets of the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy, telling them that the Thai military must serve the nation and the king—not the government.[65]

On 20 July, Bhumibol signed a royal decree endorsing new House elections for 15 October 2006. In an unprecedented act, the King wrote a note on the royal decree calling for a clean and fair election. That very day, Bhumibol underwent spinal surgery.[66]

The coup

On the evening of 19 September, the Thai military overthrew the Thaksin government and seized control of Bangkok in a bloodless coup. The junta, led by the Sonthi Boonyaratglin, Commander of the Army, called itself the Council for Democratic Reform under the Constitutional Monarchy. It accused the deposed prime minister and his regime of crimes, including lèse majesté, and pledged its loyalty to Bhumibol. Martial law was declared, the constitution repealed and the October elections cancelled. Protests and political meetings were banned.[67]

The king's role in the coup was the subject of much speculation among Thai analysts and the international media, although publication of such speculation was banned in Thailand. The king had an audience with Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda at the same time that special forces troops were mobilised.[68] Anti-coup protesters claimed that Prem was the mastermind of the coup, although the military claimed otherwise and banned any discussion of the topic. In a BBC interview, Thitinan Pongsudhirak of Chulalongkorn University noted, "This coup was nothing short of Thaksin versus the King... He [the king] is widely seen as having implicitly endorsed the coup." In the same interview, social critic Sulak Sivaraksa claimed, "Without his [the king's] involvement, the coup would have been impossible." Sulak added that the king is "very skillful. He never becomes obviously involved. If this coup goes wrong, Sonthi will get the blame, but whatever happens, the King will only get praise."[69] On Saturday, 23 September 2006, the junta warned it would "urgently retaliate against foreign reporters whose coverage has been deemed insulting to the monarchy."[70] Prem did help secure the appointment of Surayud Chulanont, another member of the King's Privy Council, as Premier, and allegedly had a say in the appointment of Surayud's Cabinet. Critics claimed the cabinet was full of "Prem's boys".[71][72][73]

On 20 April 2009, Thaksin claimed in an interview with the Financial Times that Bhumibol had been briefed by Privy Councillors Prem Tinsulanonda and Surayud Chulanont about their plans to stage the 2006 coup. He claimed that General Panlop Pinmanee, a leader of the People's Alliance for Democracy, had told him of the briefing.[74][75] The Thai embassy in London denied Thaksin's claims.

After the coup

The junta appointed a constitutional tribunal to rule on alleged polling fraud involving the Thai Rak Thai and Democrat political parties. Guilty rulings would have dissolved both parties, Thailand's largest and oldest, respectively, and banned the parties' leadership from politics for five years. The weeks leading up to the verdicts saw rising political tensions. On 24 May 2007, about a week before the scheduled verdict, Bhumibol gave a rare speech to the Supreme Administrative Court (the president of which is also a member of the constitutional tribunal). "You have the responsibility to prevent the country from collapsing", he warned them in the speech, which was shown on all national television channels simultaneously during the evening. "The nation needs political parties... In my mind, I have a judgment but I cannot say", he said. "Either way the ruling goes, it will be bad for the country, there will be mistakes".[76][77][78] The tribunal later acquitted the Democrat Party, but dissolved the Thai Rak Thai Party and banned 111 of its executives from politics for five years.

The junta-appointed Constitution Drafting Assembly later tried to use the King in a propaganda campaign to increase public support for its widely criticised draft constitution. The CDA placed billboards saying "Love the King. Care about the King. Vote in the referendum" throughout northeast Thailand, where opposition to the junta was greatest.[79]

2008 crisis

The military's constitution passed the referendum, and a general election was held in December 2007. The People's Power Party (PPP), consisting of many former Thai Rak Thai Party MPs and supporters, won the majority and formed a government.[80] The People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) refused to accept the election results and started protests, eventually laying siege to Government House, Don Mueang Airport, and Suvarnabhumi Airport. Although the PAD claimed they were defending the monarchy, Bhumibol remained silent. However, after a PAD supporter died in a clash with police, Queen Sirikit presided over her cremation. Princess Sirindhorn, when asked at a US press conference whether PAD was acting on behalf of the monarchy, replied, "I don't think so. They do things for themselves."[81] Questioning and criticism over Bhumibol's role in the crisis increased, particularly from the international press.[82][83][84][85][86][87][88] "It is more and more difficult for them to hold the illusion that the monarchy is universally adored", says a Thai academic.[89]

In April 2008, Bhumibol appointed alleged coup plotter General Surayud Chulanont to the Privy Council of Thailand. In the weeks leading up to the 2011 general election, Bhumibol appointed Air Chief Marshal Chalit Pukbhasuk, a leader of the 2006 military coup, to his privy council.[90]

2013–2014 crisis

After Prayut Chan-o-cha, Commander of the Royal Thai Army launched a coup d'état, the 12th since the country's first coup in 1932,[91] against the caretaker government, following six months of political crisis. On 24 May 2014, the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) said Bhumibol had acknowledged the coup, but stopped short of describing the response as an endorsement.[92] However, on 26 May 2014 Bhumibol formally appointed General Prayut to run the country. In Thailand the monarchy is highly respected and royal endorsement was seen as legitimation of the takeover.[93]

Paul Chambers said that the military is the only institution that can sustain the power of Bhumibol monarch, and Bhumibol gave legitimacy to the military and blessing each of the coups. Past two coups showed relationship between the military and the monarch.[94] Serhat Uenaldi said that Bhumibol helped kill off democracy since last 2006 coup by endorsed a military coup against the popular Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.[95]

Declining health

Bhumibol suffered from lumbar spinal stenosis, and received a microsurgical decompression for the condition in July 2006.[96][97] He was admitted to the hospital in October 2007 and diagnosed with a blood shortage to his brain.[98] He received treatment for various ailments including heart problems and was released after three weeks.[99]

 
King Bhumibol Adulyadej in 2010

Bhumibol was again admitted to Siriraj Hospital in September 2009, apparently suffering from flu and pneumonia. In 2011, it was revealed as part of WikiLeaks' leak of United States diplomatic cables that he had suffered from Parkinson's disease and depression.[100] He was diagnosed with diverticulitis in hospital in November 2011, and was treated for the condition in January 2012.[101] Bhumibol suffered minute subdural bleeding in the left frontal area of his brain for which he was treated in July 2012.[102] Bhumibol left the hospital in July 2013,[103] and travelled to Klai Kangwon Palace at Hua Hin on 2 August 2013,[104] but returned intermittently in the following years, most recently on 1 June 2015.[105] Bhumibol was too ill to appear for the public celebration of his birthday on 5 December 2015,[106] but made a televised appearance on 14 December, his first in several months.[107] The King temporarily left hospital to visit Chitralada Royal Villa on 11 January 2016 but returned later that day.[108]

On 1 October 2016, the palace released a bulletin stating that after recovering from a fever, King Bhumibol underwent tests that revealed a blood infection and an X-ray found inflammation on his left lung, along with water in his lungs.[109] He had been in kidney failure for some time and received dialysis.[110][111] By 9 October, he had been placed on a ventilator and doctors pronounced him "not yet stable".[112] Crowds of well-wishers, many dressed in pink symbolizing good health and luck, gathered outside Siriraj Hospital and the Grand Palace to offer prayers and support.[113]

By 12 October, the royal children had arrived at Siriraj Hospital and Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn had met with the prime minister.[114][115] There were some internal concerns about the succession of the crown prince, in that he was not perceived to be as well-respected as his father and it was speculated that some palace elites, responding to the people's admiration for Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, might try to position her to take the throne.[116][117]

Death

 
Funeral pyre of King Bhumibol Adulyadej
 
Bureau of the Royal Household announcement of King Bhumibol Adulyadej's death, 13 October 2016

King Bhumibol Adulyadej died in Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand on 13 October 2016, at 15:52 local time, at the age of 88, as announced by the royal palace later that day.[6] The following day, his body was taken by motorcade to the Grand Palace for the customary bathing rite.[118] Thousands of the bereaved public lined the route, demonstrating their affection for their "king of kings". The royal procession arrived at the Grand Palace through Viset Chaisri Gate at 17:00. His only son and the next in line to rule the kingdom, Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn, presided over the bathing ritual at Phiman Rattaya Throne Hall.[119]

A royal cremation ceremony took place over five days at the end of October 2017. The actual cremation, which was not broadcast on television, was held in the late evening of 26 October 2017.[120][121] Following cremation his ashes were taken to the Grand Palace and were enshrined at the Chakri Maha Phasat Throne Hall (royal remains), the Royal Cemetery at Wat Ratchabophit and the Wat Bowonniwet Vihara Royal Temple (royal ashes).[citation needed] Following burial, the mourning period officially ended on midnight of 30 October 2017, after which Thais resumed wearing regular colours while they awaited the future coronation of King Vajiralongkorn, which was hosted between 4–6 May 2019.[122][123]

Royal powers

Constitutional powers

 
Bhumibol in a meeting with US president Barack Obama, 2012

Bhumibol retained enormous powers, partly because of his immense popularity and partly because his powers – although clearly defined in the Thai constitution – were often subject to conflicting interpretations. This was highlighted by the controversy surrounding the appointment of Jaruvan Maintaka as Auditor-General. Jaruvan had been appointed by The State Audit Commission, but in July 2004, the Constitutional Court ruled that her appointment was unconstitutional. Jaruvan refused to vacate her office without an explicit order from Bhumibol, on the grounds that she had previously been royally approved. When the Senate elected a replacement for Jaruvan, Bhumibol refused to approve him.[124] The Senate declined to vote to override Bhumibol's veto.[125] Finally in February 2006 the Audit Commission reinstated Jaruvan when it became clear from a memo from the Office of the King's Principal Private Secretary that King Bhumibol supported her appointment. Bhumibol only vetoed legislation on rare occasions. In 1976, when the Parliament voted 149–19 to extend democratic elections down to district levels, Bhumibol refused to sign the law.[24]: 233  The Parliament refused to vote to overturn the King's veto. In 1954, Bhumibol vetoed parliamentary-approved land reform legislation twice before consenting to sign it.[24]: 126  The law limited the maximum land an individual could hold to 50 rai (80,000 square metres (860,000 sq ft)), at a time when the Crown Property Bureau was the kingdom's largest land-owner. The law was not enforced as General Sarit soon overthrew the elected government in a coup and repealed the law.

Bhumibol had the constitutional prerogative to pardon criminals, although there are several criteria for receiving a pardon, including age and remaining sentence. The 2006 pardoning of several convicted child rapists, including an Australian rapist and child pornographer, caused controversy.[126][127][128] However, under the Thai constitution, the king has the prerogative to grant pardons and all laws, royal rescripts, and royal commands relating to state affairs must be countersigned by a minister unless otherwise provided for in the constitution.

Network monarchy and extraconstitutional powers

 
City decoration in observance of King Bhumibol's birthday in Phitsanulok, Thailand

Several academics outside Thailand, including Duncan McCargo and Federico Ferrara, noted the active but indirect political involvement of Bhumibol through a "network monarchy", whose most significant proxy is Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda. McCargo claimed that Bhumibol's conservative network worked behind the scenes to establish political influence in the 1990s, but was threatened by the landslide election victories of Thaksin Shinawatra in 2001 and 2005.[129] Ferrara claimed, shortly before the Thai Supreme Court delivered its verdict to seize Thaksin Shinawatra's assets, that the judiciary was a well-established part of Bhumibol's network and represented his main avenue to exercise extra-constitutional prerogatives despite having the appearance of being constitutional. He also noted how, in comparison to the Constitutional Court's 2001 acquittal of Thaksin, the judiciary was a much more important part of the "network" than it was in the past.[130]

The network's ability to exercise power is based partly on Bhumibol's popularity and strict control of Bhumibol's popular image. According to Jost Pachaly of the Heinrich Böll Foundation, Bhumibol "plays an important role behind the scenes. But the role is difficult to assess because nothing is reported about it and no one really knows anything specific", due to lese majeste laws forbidding discussion about Bhumibol's political activities.[131] Bhumibol's popularity was demonstrated following the 2003 Phnom Penh riots in Cambodia, when hundreds of Thai protesters, enraged by rumors that Cambodian rioters had stomped on photographs of Bhumibol, gathered outside the Cambodian embassy in Bangkok. Photographs of the stomping were not published in Thailand, but were available on the internet. The situation was resolved peacefully only when Police General Sant Sarutanonda told the crowd that he had received a call from royal secretary Arsa Sarasin conveying Bhumibol's request for calm. The crowd dispersed.[132]

Royal projects

History

The development of the country must be fostered in stages. It must start with the construction of infrastructure, that is, the provision of food and basic necessities for the people by methods which are economic, cautious and conforming with principles. Once the foundation is firmly established, progress can be continually, carefully and economically promoted. This approach will prevent incurring mistakes and failures, and lead to the certain and complete achievement of the objectives.

— Bhumibol's speech at Kasetsart University Commencement Ceremony, 19 July 1974.[133]

Bhumibol was involved in many social and economic development projects. The nature of his involvement varied by political regime.[134]

The government of Plaek Phibunsongkhram (1951–1957) limited Bhumibol to a ceremonial role. During that period Bhumibol produced some films and operated a radio station from Chitlada Palace using personal funds.

In the military governments of Sarit Thanarat and his successors (1958–1980), Bhumibol was portrayed as the "development King" and the inspiration for the economic and political goals of the regime. Royally ordered projects were implemented under the financial and political support of the government, including projects in rural areas and communities under the influence of the Communist Party of Thailand. Bhumibol's visits to these projects were heavily promoted by the Sarit government and broadcast in state-controlled media.

During the governments of General Prem Tinsulanonda (1981–1987), the relationship between the Thai state and the monarch was at its closest. Prem, later to become President of Bhumibol's Privy Council, officially allocated government budgets and manpower to support royal projects. Most activities in this period involved the development of large-scale irrigation projects in rural areas.

During the modern period (post-1988), the structured development of the royal projects reached its apex. Bhumibol's Chaipattana Foundation was established, promoting his "sufficiency economy" theory, an alternative to the export-oriented policies adopted by the period's elected governments. Following the 2006 coup, establishment of a "sufficiency economy" was enshrined in the constitution as being a primary goal of the government, and government financial support for royal projects was boosted.

Project samplings

 
Bhumibol on agricultural practice in Chitralada Royal Villa

60th anniversary celebrations

Also called the Diamond Jubilee, the 60th anniversary celebrations of the king's accession to the throne were a series of events marking Bhumibol's reign in June 2006. Events included a royal barge procession on the Chao Phraya River, fireworks displays, art exhibitions, and the pardoning of 25,000 prisoners,[143] concerts, and dance performances.

Tied in with the anniversary, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan presented Bhumibol with the United Nations Development Programme's first Human Development Lifetime Achievement Award on 26 May 2006. National holidays were observed on 9 June and 12–13 June 2006. On 9 June, the king and queen appeared on the balcony of Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall before hundreds of thousands of people. The official royal barge procession on 12 June was attended by the king and queen and royal visitors from 26 other countries. On 13 June, a state banquet for the royal visitors was held in the newly constructed Rama IX Throne Hall at the Grand Palace, the first official function of the hall. The Chiang Mai Royal Floral Expo was also held to honour the anniversary.

On 16 January 2007, the CDRM officially declared the end of the 60th anniversary celebrations and commenced year-long celebrations of Bhumibol's 80th birthday.[144]

Private life

Monarchs of
the Chakri dynasty
 Phra Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke
(Rama I)
 Phra Buddha Loetla Nabhalai
(King Rama II)
 Nangklao
(King Rama III)
 Mongkut
(King Rama IV)
 Chulalongkorn
(King Rama V)
 Vajiravudh
(King Rama VI)
 Prajadhipok
(King Rama VII)
 Ananda Mahidol
(King Rama VIII)
 Bhumibol Adulyadej
(King Rama IX)
 Vajiralongkorn
(King Rama X)

Bhumibol was a painter, musician, photographer, author and translator. His book Phra Mahachanok is based on a traditional Jataka story of Buddhist scripture. The Story of Thong Daeng is the story of his dog Thong Daeng.[145]

In his youth, Bhumibol was greatly interested in firearms. He kept a carbine, a Sten gun and two automatic pistols in his bedroom, and he and his elder brother, King Ananda Mahidol, often used the gardens of the palace for target practice.[24]: 70 

There are two English-language books that provide extensive detail—albeit not always verifiable—about Bhumibol's life, especially his early years and then throughout his entire reign. One is The Revolutionary King (2001) by William Stevenson, the other is The King Never Smiles (2006) by Paul M. Handley. A third and earlier work, The Devil's Discus (1964), is also available in Thai and English. The latter two books are banned in Thailand, while the first has never been sold in the country due to its "inaccuracies", despite having been written with royal patronage.[24]: 162 

Bhumibol's creativity in, among other things, music, art and invention, was the focus of a two-minute long documentary created by the government of Abhibisit Vejjajiva that was screened at all branches of the Major Cineplex Group and SF Cinema City, the two largest cinema chains in Thailand.[146]

Music

 
Saxophone of Bhumibol Adulyadej, displayed at Bangkok National Museum

Bhumibol was an accomplished jazz saxophone player and composer, playing Dixieland and New Orleans jazz, and also the clarinet, trumpet, guitar, and piano.[147] It is widely believed that his father, Mahidol Adulyadej, may have inspired his passion for artistic pursuits at an early age.[148] Bhumibol initially focused on classical music exclusively for two years but eventually switched to jazz since it allowed him to improvise more freely. It was during this time that he decided to specialize in wind instruments, especially the saxophone and clarinet.[148] By the time Bhumibol turned 18, he started to compose his own music with the first being Candlelight Blues.[148] He continued to compose even during his reign following his coronation in 1946. Bhumibol performed with Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Benny Goodman, Stan Getz, Lionel Hampton, and Benny Carter.[147][149] Throughout his life, Bhumibol wrote a total of 49 compositions. Much of it is jazz swing but he also composed marches, waltzes, and Thai patriotic songs. His most popular compositions were Candlelight Blues, Love at Sundown, and Falling Rain which were all composed in 1946.[147] Bhumibol's musical influences included Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Benny Carter, and Johnny Hodges.[147] The Bhumibol Adulyadej (King of Thailand) Collection, 1946–1954 at the Library of Congress Music Division includes some of his compositions, including 13 music manuscripts, 100 pieces of printed music, clippings, correspondence, and other miscellaneous documents.[150]

Bhumibol initially received general music training privately while he was studying in Switzerland, but his older brother, then King Ananda Mahidol, who had bought a saxophone, sent Bhumibol in his place.[149] King Ananda would later join him on the clarinet.[149] On his permanent return to Thailand in 1950, Bhumibol started a jazz band, Lay Kram, whom he performed with on a radio station he started at his palace.[149] The band grew, being renamed the Au Sau Wan Suk Band and he would perform with them live on Friday evenings, occasionally taking telephoned requests.[149] Bhumibol also performed with his band at Thai universities, composing anthems for the universities of Chulalongkorn, Thammasat, and Kasetsart.[149] Bhumibol performed with Benny Goodman at the Amphorn Sathan Residential Hall, in 1956, and later played at Goodman's home in New York in 1960.[147] Many bands such as Les Brown and His Band of Renown, Claude Bolling Big Band, and Preservation Hall Jazz Band recorded some of Bhumibol's compositions and can still be heard in Thailand.[147] A 1996 documentary, Gitarajan, was made about Bhumibol's music.[147]

Bhumibol still played music with his Au Sau Wan Suk Band in later years, but was rarely heard in public.[149] In 1964, Bhumibol became the 23rd person to receive the Certificate of Bestowal of Honorary Membership on behalf of Vienna's University of Music and Performing Arts.[148] In 2000, he was awarded the Sanford Medal for his contribution in music from Yale School of Music. He was the first Asian in both cases to be honored as such. In 2003, the University of North Texas College of Music awarded him an honorary doctorate in music. Bhumibol's influence is widely regarded as one reason why Thailand, and Bangkok in particular, has for decades had a strong jazz and improvised music "scene" relative to other Asian nations.[citation needed]

Sailing

Bhumibol was an accomplished sailor and sailboat designer.[151] He won a gold medal for sailing in the Fourth Southeast Asian Peninsular (SEAP) Games in 1967, together with Princess Ubol Ratana whom he tied for points.[152] This accomplishment was all the more remarkable given Bhumibol's lack of binocular depth perception. On 19 April 1966, Bhumibol also sailed the Gulf of Thailand from Hua Hin to Toey Ngam Harbour[153] in Sattahip, covering 60 nautical miles (110 km) in a 17-hour journey on the "Vega 1", an OK Class dinghy he built.[24]

Like his father, a former military naval engineer, Bhumibol was an avid boat designer and builder. He produced several small sailboat designs in the International Enterprise, OK, and Moth classes. His designs in the Moth class included the "Mod", "Super Mod", and "Micro Mod".[154]

Radio amateur

Bhumibol was a radio amateur with the call sign HS1A. He was also the patron of the Radio Amateur Society of Thailand (RAST).[155]

Patents

Bhumibol was the only Thai monarch to hold a patent.[156] He obtained one in 1993 for a waste water aerator named "Chai Pattana", and several patents on rainmaking after 1955: the "sandwich" rainmaking patent in 1999 and the "supersandwich" patent in 2003.[157][158][159]

Wealth

 
Portrait, TMB Bank office building in Bangkok 2006
 
Portrait, Thai Airways International Building

Estimates of the post-devaluation (c. 1997–1998) wealth of the royal household and the Crown Property Bureau (CPB) range from US$10–20 billion.[160] In August 2008, Forbes published its 2008 version of The World's Richest Royals and King Bhumibol was listed first, with an estimated wealth of US$35 billion.[161] A few days later, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand issued a statement that the Forbes report incorrectly conflated the wealth of the CPB and that of Bhumibol.[162] In the 2009 Forbes list, the Thai government's objections were acknowledged, but Forbes justified the continued inclusion of the CPB's assets, as the bureau is responsible for handling the Crown's property and investments.[10] The 2009 estimate was a reduced figure of US$30 billion due to declines in real estate and stocks, and this figure was also published in April 2014 by Business Spectator, which also confirmed that the CPB is the body responsible for the management of the Crown's wealth.[10][13]

The wealth and properties of Bhumibol and the royal family are managed by the Privy Purse. The CPB manages the assets of the Crown as an institution. It was established by law, but is directed without the involvement of the Thai government and reports only to the king.[163] The CPB receives many state privileges. Although the minister of finance presides over the CPB's board of directors, final decisions were made solely by Bhumibol. During his lifetime Bhumibol was the only person who could view the CPB's annual report, which was not released to the public.[164]

Through the CPB, the Crown owns equity in many companies and massive amounts of land, including 3,320 acres in central Bangkok, as well as 13,200 acres of rural land.[13][165] The CPB owns 32 percent of Siam Cement (worth US$12.6 billion), 23 percent of Siam Commercial Bank (Thailand's largest bank), and interests in Christiani & Nielsen, Deves Insurance, and Shin Corporation.[13]

The CPB also lets or leases about 36,000 properties to third parties, including the sites of the Anantara Siam Bangkok Hotel, the Suan Lum Night Bazaar, Siam Paragon, and the Central World Tower. The CPB spearheaded a plan to turn Bangkok's historical Ratchadamnoen Avenue into a shopping street known as the "Champs-Élysées of Asia" and in 2007, shocked longtime residents of traditional marketplace districts by serving them with eviction notices.[164] The Crown's substantial income from the CPB, estimated to be at least five billion baht in 2004, is exempt from taxes.[164][166]

King Bhumibol was the owner of the Golden Jubilee Diamond, the largest faceted diamond in the world, which is estimated to be worth between US$4–12 million in April 2014.[13]

Criticism

 
A government officer pays respect to the portrait of King Bhumibol.

Although Bhumibol was held in great respect by many Thais,[15] he was also protected by some of the strictest lèse-majesté laws in the world. Under these laws, critics could be jailed for three to fifteen years.[167] After the Thammasat University Massacre in 1976, the laws were toughened during the dictatorship of royalist and anti-communist Premier Thanin Kraivichien. Criticism of any member of the royal family, the royal development projects, the royal institution, the Chakri Dynasty or any previous Thai king was also banned.

During his 2005 birthday speech, Bhumibol invited criticism: "Actually, I must also be criticised. I am not afraid if the criticism concerns what I do wrong, because then I know. Because if you say the king cannot be criticised, it means that the king is not human", he claimed. "If the king can do no wrong, it is akin to looking down upon him because the king is not being treated as a human being. But the king can do wrong."[38] A widespread barrage of criticisms resulted, followed by a sharp rise in lèse-majesté prosecutions. Lèse-majesté cases rose from five or six a year pre-2005 to 478 in 2010.[168]

Although lèse-majesté officially only applies to current kings, in practice the laws are very broadly construed and flexible. Even after his death, Bhumibol remains protected by lèse-majesté.

Biographies

American journalist Paul Handley, who spent thirteen years in Thailand, wrote the biography The King Never Smiles. The Information and Communications Ministry banned the book and blocked the book's page on the Yale University Press website in January 2006. In a statement dated 19 January 2006, Thai National Police Chief General Kowit Wattana said the book had "contents which could affect national security and the good morality of the people".[169] The book provided a detailed discussion of Bhumibol's role in Thai political history, and it also analyzed the factors behind Bhumibol's popularity.

William Stevenson, who had access to the royal court and the royal family, wrote the biography The Revolutionary King in 2001.[170] An article in Time said the idea for the book was suggested by Bhumibol.[171] Critics noted that the book displayed intimate knowledge about personal aspects of Bhumibol. However, the book was unofficially banned in Thailand and the Bureau of the Royal Household warned the Thai media about even referring to it in print. An official ban was not possible as it was written with Bhumibol's blessing. The book was criticised for factual inaccuracies, disrespecting Bhumibol (it refers to him by his personal nickname "Lek"), and proposing a controversial theory explaining the mysterious death of King Ananda. Stevenson said: "The king said from the beginning the book would be dangerous for him and for me."[171]

Succession to the throne

 

Prior to 1972, there was widespread speculation that Bhumibol had been considering his eldest child Ubol Ratana as successor. Ubol Ratana, considered Bhumibol's most intelligent and favorite child, disobeyed her parents by marrying Peter Ladd Jensen, her classmate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Her parents stripped her of her royal title and banished her from the court, not returning to Thailand for nearly 8 years.[24]: 684  After this, Bhumibol's only son, Prince Vajiralongkorn, was given the title "Somdej Phra Boroma Orasadhiraj Chao Fah Maha Vajiralongkorn Sayam Makutrajakuman" (Crown Prince of Siam) on 28 December 1972 and made heir apparent (องค์รัชทายาท) to the throne in accordance with the Palace Law on Succession of 1924.[172]

On 5 December 1977, Princess Sirindhorn was given the title "Siam Boromrajakumari" (Princess Royal of Siam). Her title is often translated by the English-language press as "Crown Princess", although her official English-language title is simply "Princess".[173]

Although the constitution was later amended to allow the Privy Council to appoint a princess as successor to the throne, this would only occur in the absence of an heir apparent. This amendment is retained in Section 23 of the 1997 "People's Constitution". This effectively allowed Princess Sirindhorn to potentially be second in line to the throne, but did not affect Prince Vajiralongkorn's status as heir apparent.

Recent constitutions of Thailand have made the amendment of the Palace Law of Succession the sole prerogative of the reigning king. According to Assoc. Prof. Gothom Arya, former election commissioner, this allows the reigning king, if he so chooses, to appoint his son or any of his daughters to the throne.[174]

Name

 
 
Bhumibol's signature in 1952 Amendment to the Thai Constitution of 1932, signed as "Somdet Phra Poraminthra Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej Sayaminthrathirat Borommanatbophit"

Bhumibol's US birth certificate reads simply "Baby Songkla", as the parents had to consult his uncle, King Rama VII (Prajadhipok), then head of the House of Chakri, for an auspicious name. The king chose a name of Sanskrit origin, Bhumibol Adulyadej (Devanagari: भूमिबल अतुल्यतेज, IAST: Bhūmibala Atulyateja), a compound of Bhūmi (भूमि), meaning "Land"; Bala (बल), meaning "Strength" or "Power"; Atulya (अतुल्य), meaning "Incomparable"; and Tej (तेज), meaning "Power". Thus, Bhūmibala Atulyateja, or Bhumibol Adulyadej as it is transliterated in Thai, can be literally translated as "Strength of the Land, Incomparable Power".[22]

Titles and honours

Styles of
King Bhumibol Adulyadej
Rama IX of Thailand
 
Reference styleHis Majesty
Spoken styleYour Majesty
 
Royal Monogram of King Bhumibol Adulyadej

Titles and styles

  • 5 December 1927 – 9 July 1935: His Highness Prince Bhumibol Aduldej (พระวรวงศ์เธอ พระองค์เจ้าภูมิพลอดุลเดช Phra Worawong Thoe Phra Ong Chao Bhumibol Aduldej)
  • 9 July 1935 – 9 June 1946: His Royal Highness Prince Bhumibol Adulyadej of Siam (พระวรวงศ์เธอ พระองค์เจ้าภูมิพลอดุลยเดช Somdet Phrachao Nongya Thoe Chaofa Bhumibol Adulyadej)
  • 9 June 1946 – 13 October 2016: His Majesty The King of Thailand
    • 9 June 1946 – 5 May 1950 (สมเด็จพระเจ้าอยู่หัว Somdet Phrachao Yuhua)
    • 5 May 1950 - 13 October 2016 (พระบาทสมเด็จพระเจ้าอยู่หัว Phrabat Somdet Phrachao Yuhua)

Military rank

His highest rank was as a field marshal.[175] His other ranks in the military include Admiral of the Fleet[176] and Marshal of the Royal Thai Air Force.[175]

Issue

Name Birth Marriage Children Grandchildren
Date Spouse
Princess Ubolratana Rajakanya 5 April 1951 29 July 1981
Divorced 1998
Peter Ladd Jensen Ploypailin Jensen Maximus Wheeler
Leonardo Wheeler
Airy Wheeler[177]
Poom Jensen None
Sirikitiya Jensen None
King Maha Vajiralongkorn 28 July 1952 3 January 1977
Divorced 12 August 1991
Soamsawali Kitiyakara Princess Bajrakitiyabha None
February 1994
Divorced 1996
Yuvadhida Polpraserth Juthavachara Vivacharawongse None
Vacharaesorn Vivacharawongse None
Chakriwat Vivacharawongse None
Vatchrawee Vivacharawongse None
Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana None
10 February 2001
Divorced 11 December 2014
Srirasmi Suwadee Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti None
1 May 2019 Suthida None
Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn 2 April 1955 None
Princess Chulabhorn Walailak 4 July 1957 1982
Divorced 1996
Virayudh Tishyasarin Princess Siribha Chudabhorn None
Princess Aditiyadorn Kitikhun None

Ancestors

Works

  • King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand. The Story of Tongdaeng. Amarin Book, Bangkok. 2004. ISBN 974-272-917-4
  • King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand. The Story of Mahajanaka: Cartoon Edition. Amarin Book, Bangkok. 1999. ISBN 974-272-074-6
  • King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand. The Story of Mahajanaka. Amarin Book, Bangkok. 1997. ISBN 974-8364-71-2
  • King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand, Chaturong Pramkaew (Ed.). My Country Thailand...land of Everlasting Smile. Amarin Book, Bangkok. 1995. ISBN 974-8363-53-8
  • King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand. His Majesty the King's Photographs in the Development of the Country. Photographic Society of Thailand & Thai E, Bangkok. 1992. ISBN 974-88805-0-8
  • King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand. Paintings by his Majesty the King: Special exhibition for the Rattanakosin Bicentennial Celebration at the National Gallery, Chao Fa Road, Bangkok, 1 April – 30 June 1982. National Gallery, Bangkok. 1982. ASIN B0007CCDMO

See also

References

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  2. ^ Stengs, Irene (1 January 2009). Worshipping the Great Moderniser: King Chulalongkorn, Patron Saint of the Thai Middle Class. NUS Press. ISBN 9789971694296. from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  3. ^ Grossman, Nicholas (1 January 2009). Chronicle of Thailand: Headline News Since 1946. Editions Didier Millet. ISBN 9789814217125. from the original on 27 July 2020. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  4. ^ Fry, Gerald W.; Nieminen, Gayla S.; Smith, Harold E. (8 August 2013). Historical Dictionary of Thailand. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7525-8. from the original on 27 July 2020. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  5. ^ The Rotarian. Rotary International. 13 October 2016. from the original on 31 October 2020. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  6. ^ a b "Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej, world's longest-reigning monarch, dies". The Hindu. Reuters. 13 October 2016. from the original on 13 October 2016. Retrieved 14 October 2016.
  7. ^ . Journal. Worldhop. 1996. Archived from the original on 12 May 2006. Retrieved 5 July 2006. 12 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Redmond, Brien (13 October 2016). "Thailand's King Bhumibol Dies, Triggering Anguish and Fears of Unrest". The Daily Beast. from the original on 28 November 2016. Retrieved 14 October 2016.
  9. ^ Simon Mortland (20 January 2012). "In Thailand, A Rare Peek at His Majesty's Balance Sheet". Forbes. from the original on 10 April 2022. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  10. ^ a b c Serafin, Tatiana (7 July 2010). "The World's Richest Royals". Forbes. from the original on 25 June 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
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  12. ^ Joshua Kurlantzick (24 January 2012). . Council on Foreign Relations. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
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  17. ^ Holmes, Oliver (13 October 2016). "Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej dies after 70-year reign". The Guardian. from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  18. ^ "Thailand's King Bhumibol, world's longest reigning monarch, dies at 88". Reuters. 13 October 2016. from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  19. ^ Yimprasert, Junya (2010). . Global Labour Institute. Archived from the original on 12 January 2016. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  20. ^ "Lese majeste charge against scholar dropped". 18 January 2018. from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  21. ^ "Thai king's cremation set for Oct. 26: government official". Reuters. 19 April 2017. from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
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  23. ^ a b c d e Grossman, Nicholas; Faulder, Dominic (2012). King Bhumibol Adulyadej – A Life's Work. Editions Didier Millet. ISBN 978-9814260565.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Handley, Paul M. (2006). The King Never Smiles. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10682-3.
  25. ^ For an in-depth exploration of this theory, see MacGregor Marshall, Andrew (2013). "Thailand's saddest secret". from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
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Further reading

Biographies

  • Richard Broderick (2013). King by Virtue: Reflections of the Lifelong Endeavor of King Bhumipol of Thailand (2nd ed.). Bangkok: Thai Khadi Research Institute. ISBN 978-974-466-717-5.
  • Nicholas Grossman; Dominic Faulder, eds. (2011). King Bhumibol Adulyadej – A Life's Work: Thailand's Monarchy in Perspective. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet. ISBN 978-981-4260-56-5.
    • (Review by Michael J. Montesano, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Vol. 34/1 (Apr 2012), pp. 128–132)
  • Paul M. Handley (2006). The King Never Smiles: A Biography of Thailand's Bhumibol Adulyadej. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10682-4.
    • (Review by Kevin Hewison, Journal of Historical Biography, Vol. 4 (Autumn 2008), pp. 115–122)
    • (Review by Paul W. Chambers, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Vol. 29/3 (Dec 2007), pp. 529–532)
    • Death of King Bhumibol Adulyadej evokes recall of memorable 700 year old Sri Lanka – Thai ties

Other

Bhumibol Adulyadej
House of Mahidol
Cadet branch of the House of Chakri
Born: 5 December 1927 Died: 13 October 2016
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Siam
1946–1947
Country name changed to "Thailand"
New title
Siam became "Thailand"
King of Thailand
1947–2016
Succeeded by
Order of precedence
Preceded by Eldest Royal Member of the Chakri Dynasty
2011–2016
Succeeded by

bhumibol, adulyadej, adulyadej, redirects, here, father, mahidol, adulyadej, thai, พลอด, ลยเดช, rtgs, phumiphon, adunyadet, pronounced, pʰūː, pʰōn, ʔā, dūn, dèːt, listen, sanskrit, bhūmi, bala, atulya, teja, might, land, unparalleled, brilliance, december, 192. Adulyadej redirects here For his father see Mahidol Adulyadej Bhumibol Adulyadej Thai phumiphlxdulyedch RTGS Phumiphon Adunyadet pronounced pʰuː mi pʰōn ʔa dun ja deːt listen Sanskrit bhumi bala atulya teja might of the land unparalleled brilliance 1 5 December 1927 13 October 2016 conferred with the title King Bhumibol the Great in 1987 officially conferred by King Vajiralongkorn in 2019 2 3 4 5 was the ninth monarch of Thailand from the Chakri dynasty titled Rama IX Reigning since 9 June 1946 he was the world s longest reigning current head of state from the death of Emperor Hirohito of Japan in 1989 until his own death in 2016 6 and is the third longest verified reigning sovereign monarch in world history after King Louis XIV and Queen Elizabeth II reigning for 70 years and 126 days 7 During his reign he was served by a total of 30 prime ministers beginning with Pridi Banomyong and ending with Prayut Chan o cha 8 Bhumibol Adulyadej phumiphlxdulyedchKing Rama IXBhumibol in 1960King of ThailandReign9 June 1946 13 October 2016Coronation5 May 1950PredecessorAnanda Mahidol Rama VIII SuccessorMaha Vajiralongkorn Rama X Prime ministersSee list Pridi BanomyongThawan ThamrongnawasawatPhin Choonhavan acting Khuang AphaiwongPlaek PhibunsongkhramPote SarasinSarit Thanarat acting Thanom KittikachornSarit ThanaratThanom KittikachornSanya DharmasaktiSeni PramojKukrit PramojSeni PramojSangad Chaloryu acting Thanin KraivichienSangad Chaloryu acting Kriangsak ChamananPrem TinsulanondaChatichai ChoonhavanSunthorn Kongsompong acting Anand PanyarachunSuchinda KraprayoonMeechai Ruchuphan acting Anand PanyarachunChuan LeekpaiBanharn Silpa archaChavalit YongchaiyudhChuan LeekpaiThaksin ShinawatraChitchai Wannasathit acting Thaksin ShinawatraSonthi Boonyaratglin acting Surayud ChulanontSamak SundaravejSomchai WongsawatChavarat Charnvirakul acting Abhisit VejjajivaYingluck ShinawatraNiwatthamrong Boonsongpaisan acting Prayut Chan o chaBornPrince Bhumibol Adulyadej 1927 12 05 5 December 1927Mount Auburn Hospital Cambridge Massachusetts USDied13 October 2016 2016 10 13 aged 88 Siriraj Hospital Bangkok ThailandBurial30 October 2017Wat Bowonniwet Vihara Wat Ratchabophit Phra Nakhon Bangkok interment of ashes SpouseSirikit Kitiyakara m 1950 wbr IssueUbolratana Maha Vajiralongkorn Rama X Sirindhorn Princess Royal Chulabhorn Princess SrisavangavadhanaNamesBhumibol AdulyadejRegnal namePhrabat Somdet Phra Paraminthara Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej Mahitalathibet Ramathibodi Chakkrinaruebodin Sayamminthrathirat Borommanat PobitraPosthumous namePhrabat Somdet Phra Boromchanakadhipeshra Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej Maharaj Borommanat PobitraHouseMahidolDynastyChakriFatherMahidol Adulyadej Prince of SongklaMotherSangwan TalapatReligionTheravadaSignatureMilitary careerAllegianceThailandService wbr branchRoyal Thai Armed ForcesYears of service1946 2016RankField marshalAdmiral of the fleetMarshal of the Royal Thai Air ForceCommands heldRoyal Thai Armed ForcesBhumibol Adulyadej s voice source source track track Forbes estimated Bhumibol s fortune including property and investments managed by the Crown Property Bureau a body that is neither private nor government owned assets managed by the Bureau were owned by the crown as an institution not by the monarch as an individual 9 to be US 30 billion in 2010 and he headed the magazine s list of the world s richest royals from 2008 to 2013 10 11 12 In May 2014 Bhumibol s wealth was again listed as US 30 billion 13 After a period of deteriorating health which left him hospitalized on several occasions Bhumibol died on 13 October 2016 in Siriraj Hospital 14 He was highly revered by the people in Thailand 15 16 some saw him as close to divine 17 18 Notable political activists and Thai citizens who criticized the king or the institution of monarchy were often forced into exile or to suffer frequent imprisonments 19 yet many cases were dropped before being proceeded or were eventually given royal pardon 20 His cremation was held on 26 October 2017 at the royal crematorium at Sanam Luang 21 His son Maha Vajiralongkorn succeeded him as King Contents 1 Early life 2 Succession and marriage 3 Coronation and titles 4 Role in Thai politics 4 1 Plaek Phibunsongkhram era 4 2 Sarit Thanarat era 4 3 Thammasat University massacre 4 4 Prem Tinsulanonda era 4 5 Crisis of 1992 4 6 Crisis of 2005 2006 and the September 2006 coup 4 6 1 Background to the coup 4 6 2 The coup 4 6 3 After the coup 4 7 2008 crisis 4 8 2013 2014 crisis 4 9 Declining health 5 Death 6 Royal powers 6 1 Constitutional powers 6 2 Network monarchy and extraconstitutional powers 7 Royal projects 7 1 History 7 2 Project samplings 8 60th anniversary celebrations 9 Private life 9 1 Music 9 2 Sailing 9 3 Radio amateur 9 4 Patents 10 Wealth 11 Criticism 12 Biographies 13 Succession to the throne 14 Name 15 Titles and honours 15 1 Titles and styles 15 2 Military rank 16 Issue 17 Ancestors 18 Works 19 See also 19 1 Namesakes 20 References 21 Further readingEarly life Bhumibol centre with his mother and siblings Ananda Mahidol left and Galyani Vadhana right Bhumibol in 1945 Bhumibol was born at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge Massachusetts in the United States on 5 December 1927 22 He was the youngest son of Prince Mahidol Adulyadej the Prince of Songkla and his commoner wife Mom Sangwan later Princess Srinagarindra the Princess Mother His father was enrolled in the public health program at Harvard University which is why Bhumibol was the only monarch to be born in the US 23 46 47 Bhumibol had an older sister Princess Galyani Vadhana and an older brother Prince Ananda Mahidol Bhumibol came to Thailand in 1928 after his father obtained a certificate from Harvard His father died of kidney failure in September 1929 when Bhumibol was less than two years old 23 62 He briefly attended Mater Dei school in Bangkok but in 1933 his mother took her family to Switzerland where he continued his education at the Ecole nouvelle de la Suisse romande in Lausanne In 1934 Bhumibol was given his first camera which ignited his lifelong enthusiasm for photography 23 67 When Bhumibol s childless uncle Prajadhipok abdicated in 1935 his nine year old brother Ananda Mahidol became King Rama VIII However the family remained in Switzerland and the affairs of the head of state were conducted by a regency council They returned to Thailand for only two months in 1938 In 1942 Bhumibol became a jazz enthusiast and started to play the saxophone a passion that he kept throughout his life 23 73 74 He received the baccalaureat des lettres high school diploma with a major in French literature Latin and Greek from the Gymnase Classique Cantonal de Lausanne and by 1945 had begun studying sciences at the University of Lausanne when World War II ended and the family was able to return to Thailand 22 Succession and marriage King Ananda Mahidol returned from Switzerland to Thailand during an official ceremony in January 1946 in Bangkok with Pridi Banomyong Srinagarindra and Prince Bhumibol Bhumibol ascended the throne following the death by gunshot wound of his brother King Ananda Mahidol on 9 June 1946 under circumstances that remain unclear While a first government statement stated that Ananda had accidentally shot himself 24 76 77 an investigation committee ruled this was virtually impossible 24 87 Two palace aides were eventually convicted of regicide and executed A third possibility that Bhumibol accidentally shot his brother while the brothers played with their pistols was never officially considered 24 77 78 25 Bhumibol succeeded his brother but returned to Switzerland before the end of the 100 day mourning period Despite his interest in science and technology he changed his major and enrolled in law and political science to prepare for his duties as head of state His uncle Rangsit Prince of Chainat was appointed Prince Regent In Bhumibol s name Prince Rangsit acknowledged a military coup that overthrew the government of Thamrongnawasawat in November 1947 24 88 The regent also signed the 1949 constitution which returned to the monarchy many of the powers it had lost by the 1932 Revolution 24 91 93 In December 1946 the Siamese government allocated several hundred thousand dollars for the ceremonial cremation of the remains of the late King Ananda a necessary preliminary to the coronation of Bhumibol who was required by religious custom to light the funeral pyre Unsettled conditions in 1947 following a coup d etat resulted in a postponement and court astrologers determined that 2 March 1949 was the most auspicious date 26 While doing his degree in Switzerland Bhumibol visited Paris frequently It was in Paris that he first met Mom Rajawongse Sirikit Kitiyakara daughter of the Thai ambassador to France Nakkhatra Mangala and a great granddaughter of King Chulalongkorn and thus a cousin of Bhumibol She was then 15 years old and training to be a concert pianist 26 27 On 4 October 1948 while Bhumibol was driving a Fiat Topolino on the Geneva Lausanne road he collided with the rear of a braking truck 10 km outside Lausanne He injured his back suffered paralysis in half of his face and incurred cuts on his face that cost him the sight of his right eye 24 104 28 Both the royal cremation and coronation had to be postponed once more 26 While he was hospitalised in Lausanne Sirikit visited him frequently She met his mother who asked her to continue her studies nearby so that Bhumibol could get to know her better Bhumibol selected for her a boarding school in Lausanne Riante Rive 29 A quiet engagement in Lausanne followed on 19 July 1949 and they were married on 28 April 1950 just a week before his coronation Their wedding was described by The New York Times as the shortest simplest royal wedding ever held in the land of gilded elephants and white umbrellas The ceremony was performed by Bhumibol s ageing grandmother Savang Vadhana 26 Bhumibol and Sirikit have four children Formerly HRH Princess Ubolratana Rajakanya born 5 April 1951 in Lausanne Switzerland married Peter Ladd Jensen now divorced and has two daughters Her son Bhumi Jensen was killed in the tsunami caused by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake 30 31 King Maha Vajiralongkorn Rama X born 28 July 1952 married Mom Luang Soamsawali Kitiyakara later divorced and became HRH the Princess Niece one daughter Then married Yuvadhida Polpraserth later divorced four sons and a daughter Third marriage was to Srirasmi Suwadee now divorced one son Fourth and current marriage is to Suthida Tidjai HRH Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn The Princess Royal born 2 April 1955 never married no issue HRH Princess Chulabhorn Walailak born 4 July 1957 married Virayudh Tishyasarin now divorced two daughtersCoronation and titlesMain articles Coronation of the Thai monarch and Coronation of Bhumibol Adulyadej Bhumibol at his coronation at the Grand Palace Bhumibol at his coronation on a royal procession After presiding over the long delayed ceremonial cremation of his brother Ananda Mahidol Bhumibol was crowned King of Thailand on 5 May 1950 in the Phaisan Thaksin Throne Hall in the Grand Palace in Bangkok It was the first coronation ceremony of a Thai sovereign to rule under the system of constitutional monarchy 26 During the ceremony he pledged that he would reign with righteousness for the benefit and happiness of the Siamese people eracakhrxngaephndinodythrrm ephuxpraoychnsukhaehngmhachnchawsyam 32 Notable elements associated with the coronation included the Bahadrabith Throne th beneath the Great White Umbrella of State and royal regalia and utensils 33 In 1950 on Coronation Day Bhumibol s consort was made queen Somdej Phra Boromarajini The date of his coronation is celebrated each 5 May in Thailand as Coronation Day a public holiday On 9 June 2006 Bhumibol celebrated his 60th anniversary as the King of Thailand becoming the longest reigning monarch in Thai history citation needed The royal couple spent their honeymoon at Hua Hin before they returned to Switzerland where the king completed his university studies They returned to Thailand in 1951 26 Following the death of his grandmother Queen Savang Vadhana Bhumibol entered a 15 day monkhood 22 October 1956 5 November 1956 at Wat Bowonniwet as is customary for Buddhist males on the death of elder relatives He was ordained by the Supreme Patriarch on 22 October 1956 at the Royal Chapel of the Emerald Buddha in the Grand Palace 26 34 At this time Sirikit was appointed his regent She was later appointed Queen Regent Somdej Phra Boromarajininat in recognition of this Although Bhumibol was sometimes referred to as King Rama IX in English Thais referred to him as Nai Luang or Phra Chao Yu Hua inhlwng or phraecaxyuhw which translated to the King and Lord Upon our Heads respectively He was also called Chao Chiwit Lord of Life 15 Formally he was referred to as Phrabat Somdet Phra Chao Yu Hua phrabathsmedcphraecaxyuhw or in legal documents Phrabat Somdet Phra Paraminthara Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej phrabathsmedcphraprminthrmhaphumiphlxdulyedch and in English as His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej He signed his name as phumiphlxdulyedch p r Bhumibol Adulyadej Por Ror the Thai equivalent of Bhumibol Adulyadej R ex Role in Thai politics Queen Sirikit and King Bhumibol Adulyadej in 1960 In 1957 a military coup overthrew the government of Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram with allegations of lese majeste 24 136 137 35 corruption and manipulation of the election held earlier that year 35 146 148 This began a new and long lasting relationship between the monarch and military 36 leading some to perceive that the king condones the Thammasat University massacre in defense of his throne and support a series of military dictatorships 24 37 However during his interview given to the BBC in 1979 the king reiterated that the monarchy should remain impartial and be in peaceful co existence with everybody 23 139 141 Bhumibol invited public criticism in a 2005 speech 38 but the lese majeste laws have not been revoked by the Thai parliament yet Plaek Phibunsongkhram era Marshal and Mrs Phibunsongkhram with Eleanor Roosevelt In the early years of his reign during the government of military dictator Plaek Phibunsongkhram Bhumibol had no real political power and was little more than a ceremonial figure under the military dominated government In August 1957 six months after parliamentary elections General Sarit Thanarat accused the government of Field Marshal Phibunsongkhram of lese majeste due to its conduct of the 2 500th anniversary celebration of Buddhism 24 129 130 136 137 35 On 16 September 1957 Phibunsongkhram went to Bhumibol to seek support for his government 39 Bhumibol advised the field marshal to resign to avoid a coup Phibunsongkhram refused That evening Sarit Thanarat seized power Two hours later Bhumibol imposed martial law throughout the kingdom 40 Bhumibol issued a proclamation appointing Sarit as military defender of the capital without anyone countersigning the proclamation It included the following 41 Whereas it appears that the public administration by the government under the premiership of Field Marshal P Phibunsongkhram is untrustworthy and that the government could not maintain the public order and whereas the military led by Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat has successfully taken over the public administration and now acts as the Military Defender of the Capital now therefore I do hereby appoint Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat as the Military Defender of the Capital and command that all the citizens shall remain calm whilst all the government officers shall serve the orders issued by Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat This Proclamation shall come into force immediately Done this 16th Day of September Buddhist Era 2500 1957 citation needed Sarit later admitted in a rare interview with foreign correspondent that the king had no involvement and did not acknowledge anything about the coup until it had been done successfully 42 Sarit Thanarat era Bhumibol visited Nakhon Si Thammarat 1959 Bhumibol addresses a joint session of the United States Congress 29 June 1960 During Sarit s dictatorship the monarchy was revitalised Bhumibol attended public ceremonies toured the provinces and patronised development projects he also visited the United States in June 1960 addressing Congress and many countries in Europe including a visit to Rome hosted by PM Giovanni Gronchi in September 1960 Under Sarit the practice of crawling in front of royalty during audiences banned by King Chulalongkorn was revived in certain situations and the royal sponsored Thammayut Nikaya order was revitalised For the first time since the absolute monarchy was overthrown a king was conveyed up the Chao Phraya River in a Royal Barge Procession to offer robes at temples 43 44 Other disused ceremonies from the classical period of the Chakri Dynasty such as the royally patronised ploughing ceremony Thai phithiphuchmngkhl were also revived 45 Bhumibol s birthday 5 December was declared the national day replacing the previous national day the anniversary of the Siamese revolution of 1932 24 June 46 Upon Sarit s death on 8 December 1963 an unprecedented 21 days of mourning were declared in the palace A royal five tier umbrella shaded his body while it lay in state Long time royal adviser Phraya Srivisaravacha later noted that no Prime Minister ever had such an intimate relationship with Bhumibol as Sarit 47 Bhumibol biographer Paul Handley in The King Never Smiles writes that the dictator Sarit was Bhumibol s tool Political scientist Thak Chaloemtiarana writes that Sarit used Bhumibol in order to build his own credibility 48 49 Thammasat University massacre Main article Thammasat University massacre Following Sarit s death General Thanom Kittikachorn rose to power to lead Thailand s military dictatorship ultimately challenged by the 1973 Thai popular uprising Bhumibol initially asked student protestors to disband When police attacked and killed dozens of students sparking protest riots Bhumibol announced general Thanom s resignation and departure from Thailand 50 According to William Stevenson the king had asked the three tyrants to avoid bloodshed although the three tyrants had agreed they later changed their minds Eventually it led to the incidents of October 1973 51 Bhumibol distanced himself from the Thai military after Thanom s fall Political events in Vietnam Cambodia and Laos brought powerful guerrilla and communist movements into power or prominence which threatened the Thai monarchy and political establishment Fearing unrest Bhumibol began to court the military in 1975 visiting camps throughout the country and publicly warning of internal and external threats 37 87 At this time Bhumibol increasingly cultivated far right militias and paramilitary forces including the Red Gaurs and the Village Scouts warning that students and political dissidents planned to bring communists to power in Thailand 24 232 9 Finally Bhumibol provoked outrage among students and legal groups by inviting general Thanom back into the country The ensuing chaos was used as a pretext for a military coup which Bhumibol backed and described as a manifestation of the people s will 37 90 1 The event that catalyzed the coup was the Thammasat University massacre carried out in the name of defending Bhumibol s throne 24 9 The victorious military junta submitted three names to the king as possible premiers Deputy President of the king s Privy Council Prakob Hutasingh th right wing Bangkok Governor Thamnoon Thien ngern th and staunchly anti communist Supreme Court judge Thanin Kraivichien 37 90 1 52 Thanin was a member of the Nawaphon monarchist paramilitary group which had the backing of the CIA and which Bhumibol was alleged to have sponsored 37 84 5 citation needed Bhumibol chose Thanin as the most suitable premier leading student protesters to flee to join the communists in the jungle Thanin was overthrown in a military coup in October 1977 led by General Kriangsak Chamanan Prem Tinsulanonda era Kriangsak was succeeded in 1980 by the popular Army Commander in Chief General Prem Tinsulanonda who later became the Privy Council President Bhumibol s refusal to endorse military coups in 1981 the April Fool s Day coup and 1985 the Share Rebellion ultimately led to the victory of forces loyal to the government despite some violence including in 1981 the seizure of Bangkok by rebel forces The coups led many to believe that Bhumibol had misjudged Thai society and that his credibility as an impartial mediator between various political and military factions had been compromised 53 54 55 Following the death of Emperor Hirohito of Japan in 1989 he overtook the distinction as the world s longest reigning living monarch 56 Crisis of 1992 Royal intervention on the night of 20 May Chamlong Srimuang left and Suchinda Kraprayoon middle submit to the King seated Main article Black May 1992 In 1992 Bhumibol played a key role in Thailand s transition to a democratic system The 1991 Thai coup d etat on 23 February returned Thailand to military dictatorship After a general election in 1992 the majority parties invited General Suchinda Kraprayoon a leader of the coup group to be prime minister This caused much dissent which escalated into demonstrations called Black May that led to a large number of deaths when the military was brought in to control protesters The situation became increasingly critical as police and military forces clashed with protesters Violence and riots spread to many areas of the capital with rumours of a rift among the armed forces 57 Amidst the fear of civil war Bhumibol intervened He summoned Suchinda and the leader of the pro democracy movement retired Major General Chamlong Srimuang to a televised audience and urged them to find a peaceful resolution At the height of the crisis the sight of both men appearing together on their knees in accordance with royal protocol made a strong impression on the nation Bhumibol then signed Suchinda s amnesty decree that applied to both side of a conflict with the reason to protect security and unity of the country 58 Suchinda resigned soon afterwards It was one of the few occasions in which Bhumibol directly and publicly intervened in a political conflict A general election was held shortly afterward leading to a civilian government 59 With President Vladimir Putin in Bangkok on 22 October 2003 Crisis of 2005 2006 and the September 2006 coup Main articles 2005 06 Thai political crisis Finland Plot and 2006 Thai coup d etat Background to the coup See also 2005 06 Thai political crisis Weeks before the April 2006 legislative election the Democrat Party led opposition and the People s Alliance for Democracy petitioned Bhumibol to appoint a replacement prime minister and cabinet Demands for royal intervention were met with much criticism from the public Bhumibol in a speech on 26 April 2006 responded Asking for a Royally appointed prime minister is undemocratic It is pardon me a mess It is irrational 60 After publicly claiming victory in the boycotted April parliamentary elections Thaksin Shinawatra had a private audience with the king A few hours later Thaksin appeared on national television to announce that he would be taking a break from politics Due to the election result Bhumibol took the unprecedented step of calling the elections undemocratic 61 In May 2006 the Sondhi Limthongkul owned Manager Daily newspaper published a series of articles describing the Finland Plot alleging that Thaksin and former members of the Communist Party of Thailand planned to overthrow the king and seize control of the nation No evidence was ever produced to verify the existence of such a plot and Thaksin and his Thai Rak Thai party vehemently denied the accusations and sued the accusers In a rare televised speech to senior judges Bhumibol requested the judiciary to take action to resolve the political crisis 60 On 8 May 2006 the Constitutional Court invalidated the results of the April elections and ordered new elections scheduled for 15 October 2006 62 The Criminal Court later jailed the Election Commissioners 63 64 On 14 July 2006 Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda addressed graduating cadets of the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy telling them that the Thai military must serve the nation and the king not the government 65 On 20 July Bhumibol signed a royal decree endorsing new House elections for 15 October 2006 In an unprecedented act the King wrote a note on the royal decree calling for a clean and fair election That very day Bhumibol underwent spinal surgery 66 The coup See also 2006 Thai coup d etat On the evening of 19 September the Thai military overthrew the Thaksin government and seized control of Bangkok in a bloodless coup The junta led by the Sonthi Boonyaratglin Commander of the Army called itself the Council for Democratic Reform under the Constitutional Monarchy It accused the deposed prime minister and his regime of crimes including lese majeste and pledged its loyalty to Bhumibol Martial law was declared the constitution repealed and the October elections cancelled Protests and political meetings were banned 67 The king s role in the coup was the subject of much speculation among Thai analysts and the international media although publication of such speculation was banned in Thailand The king had an audience with Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda at the same time that special forces troops were mobilised 68 Anti coup protesters claimed that Prem was the mastermind of the coup although the military claimed otherwise and banned any discussion of the topic In a BBC interview Thitinan Pongsudhirak of Chulalongkorn University noted This coup was nothing short of Thaksin versus the King He the king is widely seen as having implicitly endorsed the coup In the same interview social critic Sulak Sivaraksa claimed Without his the king s involvement the coup would have been impossible Sulak added that the king is very skillful He never becomes obviously involved If this coup goes wrong Sonthi will get the blame but whatever happens the King will only get praise 69 On Saturday 23 September 2006 the junta warned it would urgently retaliate against foreign reporters whose coverage has been deemed insulting to the monarchy 70 Prem did help secure the appointment of Surayud Chulanont another member of the King s Privy Council as Premier and allegedly had a say in the appointment of Surayud s Cabinet Critics claimed the cabinet was full of Prem s boys 71 72 73 On 20 April 2009 Thaksin claimed in an interview with the Financial Times that Bhumibol had been briefed by Privy Councillors Prem Tinsulanonda and Surayud Chulanont about their plans to stage the 2006 coup He claimed that General Panlop Pinmanee a leader of the People s Alliance for Democracy had told him of the briefing 74 75 The Thai embassy in London denied Thaksin s claims After the coup The junta appointed a constitutional tribunal to rule on alleged polling fraud involving the Thai Rak Thai and Democrat political parties Guilty rulings would have dissolved both parties Thailand s largest and oldest respectively and banned the parties leadership from politics for five years The weeks leading up to the verdicts saw rising political tensions On 24 May 2007 about a week before the scheduled verdict Bhumibol gave a rare speech to the Supreme Administrative Court the president of which is also a member of the constitutional tribunal You have the responsibility to prevent the country from collapsing he warned them in the speech which was shown on all national television channels simultaneously during the evening The nation needs political parties In my mind I have a judgment but I cannot say he said Either way the ruling goes it will be bad for the country there will be mistakes 76 77 78 The tribunal later acquitted the Democrat Party but dissolved the Thai Rak Thai Party and banned 111 of its executives from politics for five years The junta appointed Constitution Drafting Assembly later tried to use the King in a propaganda campaign to increase public support for its widely criticised draft constitution The CDA placed billboards saying Love the King Care about the King Vote in the referendum throughout northeast Thailand where opposition to the junta was greatest 79 2008 crisis Main article 2008 Thai political crisis The military s constitution passed the referendum and a general election was held in December 2007 The People s Power Party PPP consisting of many former Thai Rak Thai Party MPs and supporters won the majority and formed a government 80 The People s Alliance for Democracy PAD refused to accept the election results and started protests eventually laying siege to Government House Don Mueang Airport and Suvarnabhumi Airport Although the PAD claimed they were defending the monarchy Bhumibol remained silent However after a PAD supporter died in a clash with police Queen Sirikit presided over her cremation Princess Sirindhorn when asked at a US press conference whether PAD was acting on behalf of the monarchy replied I don t think so They do things for themselves 81 Questioning and criticism over Bhumibol s role in the crisis increased particularly from the international press 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 It is more and more difficult for them to hold the illusion that the monarchy is universally adored says a Thai academic 89 In April 2008 Bhumibol appointed alleged coup plotter General Surayud Chulanont to the Privy Council of Thailand In the weeks leading up to the 2011 general election Bhumibol appointed Air Chief Marshal Chalit Pukbhasuk a leader of the 2006 military coup to his privy council 90 2013 2014 crisis Wikisource has original text related to this article Proclamation on Appointment of Leader of the National Council for Peace and Order After Prayut Chan o cha Commander of the Royal Thai Army launched a coup d etat the 12th since the country s first coup in 1932 91 against the caretaker government following six months of political crisis On 24 May 2014 the National Council for Peace and Order NCPO said Bhumibol had acknowledged the coup but stopped short of describing the response as an endorsement 92 However on 26 May 2014 Bhumibol formally appointed General Prayut to run the country In Thailand the monarchy is highly respected and royal endorsement was seen as legitimation of the takeover 93 Paul Chambers said that the military is the only institution that can sustain the power of Bhumibol monarch and Bhumibol gave legitimacy to the military and blessing each of the coups Past two coups showed relationship between the military and the monarch 94 Serhat Uenaldi said that Bhumibol helped kill off democracy since last 2006 coup by endorsed a military coup against the popular Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra 95 Declining health This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2017 This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bhumibol suffered from lumbar spinal stenosis and received a microsurgical decompression for the condition in July 2006 96 97 He was admitted to the hospital in October 2007 and diagnosed with a blood shortage to his brain 98 He received treatment for various ailments including heart problems and was released after three weeks 99 King Bhumibol Adulyadej in 2010 Bhumibol was again admitted to Siriraj Hospital in September 2009 apparently suffering from flu and pneumonia In 2011 it was revealed as part of WikiLeaks leak of United States diplomatic cables that he had suffered from Parkinson s disease and depression 100 He was diagnosed with diverticulitis in hospital in November 2011 and was treated for the condition in January 2012 101 Bhumibol suffered minute subdural bleeding in the left frontal area of his brain for which he was treated in July 2012 102 Bhumibol left the hospital in July 2013 103 and travelled to Klai Kangwon Palace at Hua Hin on 2 August 2013 104 but returned intermittently in the following years most recently on 1 June 2015 105 Bhumibol was too ill to appear for the public celebration of his birthday on 5 December 2015 106 but made a televised appearance on 14 December his first in several months 107 The King temporarily left hospital to visit Chitralada Royal Villa on 11 January 2016 but returned later that day 108 On 1 October 2016 the palace released a bulletin stating that after recovering from a fever King Bhumibol underwent tests that revealed a blood infection and an X ray found inflammation on his left lung along with water in his lungs 109 He had been in kidney failure for some time and received dialysis 110 111 By 9 October he had been placed on a ventilator and doctors pronounced him not yet stable 112 Crowds of well wishers many dressed in pink symbolizing good health and luck gathered outside Siriraj Hospital and the Grand Palace to offer prayers and support 113 By 12 October the royal children had arrived at Siriraj Hospital and Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn had met with the prime minister 114 115 There were some internal concerns about the succession of the crown prince in that he was not perceived to be as well respected as his father and it was speculated that some palace elites responding to the people s admiration for Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn might try to position her to take the throne 116 117 DeathMain article Death and funeral of Bhumibol Adulyadej Funeral pyre of King Bhumibol Adulyadej Bureau of the Royal Household announcement of King Bhumibol Adulyadej s death 13 October 2016 King Bhumibol Adulyadej died in Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok Thailand on 13 October 2016 at 15 52 local time at the age of 88 as announced by the royal palace later that day 6 The following day his body was taken by motorcade to the Grand Palace for the customary bathing rite 118 Thousands of the bereaved public lined the route demonstrating their affection for their king of kings The royal procession arrived at the Grand Palace through Viset Chaisri Gate at 17 00 His only son and the next in line to rule the kingdom Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn presided over the bathing ritual at Phiman Rattaya Throne Hall 119 A royal cremation ceremony took place over five days at the end of October 2017 The actual cremation which was not broadcast on television was held in the late evening of 26 October 2017 120 121 Following cremation his ashes were taken to the Grand Palace and were enshrined at the Chakri Maha Phasat Throne Hall royal remains the Royal Cemetery at Wat Ratchabophit and the Wat Bowonniwet Vihara Royal Temple royal ashes citation needed Following burial the mourning period officially ended on midnight of 30 October 2017 after which Thais resumed wearing regular colours while they awaited the future coronation of King Vajiralongkorn which was hosted between 4 6 May 2019 122 123 Royal powersConstitutional powers For a historical perspective on how Bhumibol s constitutional powers changed over time see Constitutions of Thailand Bhumibol in a meeting with US president Barack Obama 2012 Bhumibol retained enormous powers partly because of his immense popularity and partly because his powers although clearly defined in the Thai constitution were often subject to conflicting interpretations This was highlighted by the controversy surrounding the appointment of Jaruvan Maintaka as Auditor General Jaruvan had been appointed by The State Audit Commission but in July 2004 the Constitutional Court ruled that her appointment was unconstitutional Jaruvan refused to vacate her office without an explicit order from Bhumibol on the grounds that she had previously been royally approved When the Senate elected a replacement for Jaruvan Bhumibol refused to approve him 124 The Senate declined to vote to override Bhumibol s veto 125 Finally in February 2006 the Audit Commission reinstated Jaruvan when it became clear from a memo from the Office of the King s Principal Private Secretary that King Bhumibol supported her appointment Bhumibol only vetoed legislation on rare occasions In 1976 when the Parliament voted 149 19 to extend democratic elections down to district levels Bhumibol refused to sign the law 24 233 The Parliament refused to vote to overturn the King s veto In 1954 Bhumibol vetoed parliamentary approved land reform legislation twice before consenting to sign it 24 126 The law limited the maximum land an individual could hold to 50 rai 80 000 square metres 860 000 sq ft at a time when the Crown Property Bureau was the kingdom s largest land owner The law was not enforced as General Sarit soon overthrew the elected government in a coup and repealed the law Bhumibol had the constitutional prerogative to pardon criminals although there are several criteria for receiving a pardon including age and remaining sentence The 2006 pardoning of several convicted child rapists including an Australian rapist and child pornographer caused controversy 126 127 128 However under the Thai constitution the king has the prerogative to grant pardons and all laws royal rescripts and royal commands relating to state affairs must be countersigned by a minister unless otherwise provided for in the constitution Network monarchy and extraconstitutional powers Main article Network monarchy City decoration in observance of King Bhumibol s birthday in Phitsanulok Thailand Several academics outside Thailand including Duncan McCargo and Federico Ferrara noted the active but indirect political involvement of Bhumibol through a network monarchy whose most significant proxy is Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda McCargo claimed that Bhumibol s conservative network worked behind the scenes to establish political influence in the 1990s but was threatened by the landslide election victories of Thaksin Shinawatra in 2001 and 2005 129 Ferrara claimed shortly before the Thai Supreme Court delivered its verdict to seize Thaksin Shinawatra s assets that the judiciary was a well established part of Bhumibol s network and represented his main avenue to exercise extra constitutional prerogatives despite having the appearance of being constitutional He also noted how in comparison to the Constitutional Court s 2001 acquittal of Thaksin the judiciary was a much more important part of the network than it was in the past 130 The network s ability to exercise power is based partly on Bhumibol s popularity and strict control of Bhumibol s popular image According to Jost Pachaly of the Heinrich Boll Foundation Bhumibol plays an important role behind the scenes But the role is difficult to assess because nothing is reported about it and no one really knows anything specific due to lese majeste laws forbidding discussion about Bhumibol s political activities 131 Bhumibol s popularity was demonstrated following the 2003 Phnom Penh riots in Cambodia when hundreds of Thai protesters enraged by rumors that Cambodian rioters had stomped on photographs of Bhumibol gathered outside the Cambodian embassy in Bangkok Photographs of the stomping were not published in Thailand but were available on the internet The situation was resolved peacefully only when Police General Sant Sarutanonda told the crowd that he had received a call from royal secretary Arsa Sarasin conveying Bhumibol s request for calm The crowd dispersed 132 Royal projectsHistory This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bhumibol Adulyadej news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bhumibol Dam The development of the country must be fostered in stages It must start with the construction of infrastructure that is the provision of food and basic necessities for the people by methods which are economic cautious and conforming with principles Once the foundation is firmly established progress can be continually carefully and economically promoted This approach will prevent incurring mistakes and failures and lead to the certain and complete achievement of the objectives Bhumibol s speech at Kasetsart University Commencement Ceremony 19 July 1974 133 Bhumibol was involved in many social and economic development projects The nature of his involvement varied by political regime 134 The government of Plaek Phibunsongkhram 1951 1957 limited Bhumibol to a ceremonial role During that period Bhumibol produced some films and operated a radio station from Chitlada Palace using personal funds In the military governments of Sarit Thanarat and his successors 1958 1980 Bhumibol was portrayed as the development King and the inspiration for the economic and political goals of the regime Royally ordered projects were implemented under the financial and political support of the government including projects in rural areas and communities under the influence of the Communist Party of Thailand Bhumibol s visits to these projects were heavily promoted by the Sarit government and broadcast in state controlled media During the governments of General Prem Tinsulanonda 1981 1987 the relationship between the Thai state and the monarch was at its closest Prem later to become President of Bhumibol s Privy Council officially allocated government budgets and manpower to support royal projects Most activities in this period involved the development of large scale irrigation projects in rural areas During the modern period post 1988 the structured development of the royal projects reached its apex Bhumibol s Chaipattana Foundation was established promoting his sufficiency economy theory an alternative to the export oriented policies adopted by the period s elected governments Following the 2006 coup establishment of a sufficiency economy was enshrined in the constitution as being a primary goal of the government and government financial support for royal projects was boosted Project samplings Bhumibol on agricultural practice in Chitralada Royal Villa Sandwich and Supersandwich artificial rainmaking project under the Thailand Royal Rainmaking Project Chai Pattana Waste Water Aerator awarded gold medal by BKU The Belgian Chamber of Inventors at Brussels Eureka 2000 Sufficiency economy Theory New Theory of Agriculture Rice policy especially increasing production 135 and improvement of germplasm collections which continues through today 136 For this he received the first Borlaug Medallion in 2007 137 Use of Vetiver Grass for soil improvement 135 136 awarded the International Merit Award by the IECA International Erosion Control Association Kaem Ling Project formation of detention basins 138 Klaeng Din Project acidic soil treatment 139 Fai Maeo Project formation of check dams Khun Dan Prakanchon Dam Nakhon Nayok Province Pa Sak Jolasid Dam Lop Buri Province Pa Sak River Basin Improvement Project Khlong Lat Pho Project water diversion to prevent flooding in Bangkok Rama VIII Bridge Ratchadaphisek Road Bangkok Industrial Ring Road Bhumibol Bridge Huai Ongkod Land Rehabilitation Project Kanchanaburi Province Khao Hin Son Royal Development Study Centre Chachoengsao Province Phikun Thong Royal Development Study Centre Narathiwat Province Huai Sai Royal Development Study Centre Phetchaburi Province Royal Medical Team Bhumibol s private physicians accompanying him on village tours were encouraged to provide medical care for local residents In addition the Royal Household sends letters of support to physicians who volunteer to serve in hospitals in provinces where royal palaces are present 140 In honour of his work in soil science the United Nations observes the king s birthday 5 December as World Soil Day The first observance was in 2014 141 142 60th anniversary celebrationsMain article 60th Anniversary Celebrations of Bhumibol Adulyadej s Accession Also called the Diamond Jubilee the 60th anniversary celebrations of the king s accession to the throne were a series of events marking Bhumibol s reign in June 2006 Events included a royal barge procession on the Chao Phraya River fireworks displays art exhibitions and the pardoning of 25 000 prisoners 143 concerts and dance performances Tied in with the anniversary United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan presented Bhumibol with the United Nations Development Programme s first Human Development Lifetime Achievement Award on 26 May 2006 National holidays were observed on 9 June and 12 13 June 2006 On 9 June the king and queen appeared on the balcony of Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall before hundreds of thousands of people The official royal barge procession on 12 June was attended by the king and queen and royal visitors from 26 other countries On 13 June a state banquet for the royal visitors was held in the newly constructed Rama IX Throne Hall at the Grand Palace the first official function of the hall The Chiang Mai Royal Floral Expo was also held to honour the anniversary On 16 January 2007 the CDRM officially declared the end of the 60th anniversary celebrations and commenced year long celebrations of Bhumibol s 80th birthday 144 Private lifeMonarchs of the Chakri dynasty Phra Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke Rama I Phra Buddha Loetla Nabhalai King Rama II Nangklao King Rama III Mongkut King Rama IV Chulalongkorn King Rama V Vajiravudh King Rama VI Prajadhipok King Rama VII Ananda Mahidol King Rama VIII Bhumibol Adulyadej King Rama IX Vajiralongkorn King Rama X vteBhumibol was a painter musician photographer author and translator His book Phra Mahachanok is based on a traditional Jataka story of Buddhist scripture The Story of Thong Daeng is the story of his dog Thong Daeng 145 In his youth Bhumibol was greatly interested in firearms He kept a carbine a Sten gun and two automatic pistols in his bedroom and he and his elder brother King Ananda Mahidol often used the gardens of the palace for target practice 24 70 There are two English language books that provide extensive detail albeit not always verifiable about Bhumibol s life especially his early years and then throughout his entire reign One is The Revolutionary King 2001 by William Stevenson the other is The King Never Smiles 2006 by Paul M Handley A third and earlier work The Devil s Discus 1964 is also available in Thai and English The latter two books are banned in Thailand while the first has never been sold in the country due to its inaccuracies despite having been written with royal patronage 24 162 Bhumibol s creativity in among other things music art and invention was the focus of a two minute long documentary created by the government of Abhibisit Vejjajiva that was screened at all branches of the Major Cineplex Group and SF Cinema City the two largest cinema chains in Thailand 146 Music See also Compositions by Bhumibol Adulyadej Saxophone of Bhumibol Adulyadej displayed at Bangkok National Museum Bhumibol was an accomplished jazz saxophone player and composer playing Dixieland and New Orleans jazz and also the clarinet trumpet guitar and piano 147 It is widely believed that his father Mahidol Adulyadej may have inspired his passion for artistic pursuits at an early age 148 Bhumibol initially focused on classical music exclusively for two years but eventually switched to jazz since it allowed him to improvise more freely It was during this time that he decided to specialize in wind instruments especially the saxophone and clarinet 148 By the time Bhumibol turned 18 he started to compose his own music with the first being Candlelight Blues 148 He continued to compose even during his reign following his coronation in 1946 Bhumibol performed with Preservation Hall Jazz Band Benny Goodman Stan Getz Lionel Hampton and Benny Carter 147 149 Throughout his life Bhumibol wrote a total of 49 compositions Much of it is jazz swing but he also composed marches waltzes and Thai patriotic songs His most popular compositions were Candlelight Blues Love at Sundown and Falling Rain which were all composed in 1946 147 Bhumibol s musical influences included Louis Armstrong Sidney Bechet Benny Carter and Johnny Hodges 147 The Bhumibol Adulyadej King of Thailand Collection 1946 1954 at the Library of Congress Music Division includes some of his compositions including 13 music manuscripts 100 pieces of printed music clippings correspondence and other miscellaneous documents 150 Bhumibol initially received general music training privately while he was studying in Switzerland but his older brother then King Ananda Mahidol who had bought a saxophone sent Bhumibol in his place 149 King Ananda would later join him on the clarinet 149 On his permanent return to Thailand in 1950 Bhumibol started a jazz band Lay Kram whom he performed with on a radio station he started at his palace 149 The band grew being renamed the Au Sau Wan Suk Band and he would perform with them live on Friday evenings occasionally taking telephoned requests 149 Bhumibol also performed with his band at Thai universities composing anthems for the universities of Chulalongkorn Thammasat and Kasetsart 149 Bhumibol performed with Benny Goodman at the Amphorn Sathan Residential Hall in 1956 and later played at Goodman s home in New York in 1960 147 Many bands such as Les Brown and His Band of Renown Claude Bolling Big Band and Preservation Hall Jazz Band recorded some of Bhumibol s compositions and can still be heard in Thailand 147 A 1996 documentary Gitarajan was made about Bhumibol s music 147 Bhumibol still played music with his Au Sau Wan Suk Band in later years but was rarely heard in public 149 In 1964 Bhumibol became the 23rd person to receive the Certificate of Bestowal of Honorary Membership on behalf of Vienna s University of Music and Performing Arts 148 In 2000 he was awarded the Sanford Medal for his contribution in music from Yale School of Music He was the first Asian in both cases to be honored as such In 2003 the University of North Texas College of Music awarded him an honorary doctorate in music Bhumibol s influence is widely regarded as one reason why Thailand and Bangkok in particular has for decades had a strong jazz and improvised music scene relative to other Asian nations citation needed Sailing Bhumibol was an accomplished sailor and sailboat designer 151 He won a gold medal for sailing in the Fourth Southeast Asian Peninsular SEAP Games in 1967 together with Princess Ubol Ratana whom he tied for points 152 This accomplishment was all the more remarkable given Bhumibol s lack of binocular depth perception On 19 April 1966 Bhumibol also sailed the Gulf of Thailand from Hua Hin to Toey Ngam Harbour 153 in Sattahip covering 60 nautical miles 110 km in a 17 hour journey on the Vega 1 an OK Class dinghy he built 24 Like his father a former military naval engineer Bhumibol was an avid boat designer and builder He produced several small sailboat designs in the International Enterprise OK and Moth classes His designs in the Moth class included the Mod Super Mod and Micro Mod 154 Radio amateur Bhumibol was a radio amateur with the call sign HS1A He was also the patron of the Radio Amateur Society of Thailand RAST 155 Patents Bhumibol was the only Thai monarch to hold a patent 156 He obtained one in 1993 for a waste water aerator named Chai Pattana and several patents on rainmaking after 1955 the sandwich rainmaking patent in 1999 and the supersandwich patent in 2003 157 158 159 Wealth Portrait TMB Bank office building in Bangkok 2006 Portrait Thai Airways International Building Estimates of the post devaluation c 1997 1998 wealth of the royal household and the Crown Property Bureau CPB range from US 10 20 billion 160 In August 2008 Forbes published its 2008 version of The World s Richest Royals and King Bhumibol was listed first with an estimated wealth of US 35 billion 161 A few days later the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand issued a statement that the Forbes report incorrectly conflated the wealth of the CPB and that of Bhumibol 162 In the 2009 Forbes list the Thai government s objections were acknowledged but Forbes justified the continued inclusion of the CPB s assets as the bureau is responsible for handling the Crown s property and investments 10 The 2009 estimate was a reduced figure of US 30 billion due to declines in real estate and stocks and this figure was also published in April 2014 by Business Spectator which also confirmed that the CPB is the body responsible for the management of the Crown s wealth 10 13 The wealth and properties of Bhumibol and the royal family are managed by the Privy Purse The CPB manages the assets of the Crown as an institution It was established by law but is directed without the involvement of the Thai government and reports only to the king 163 The CPB receives many state privileges Although the minister of finance presides over the CPB s board of directors final decisions were made solely by Bhumibol During his lifetime Bhumibol was the only person who could view the CPB s annual report which was not released to the public 164 Through the CPB the Crown owns equity in many companies and massive amounts of land including 3 320 acres in central Bangkok as well as 13 200 acres of rural land 13 165 The CPB owns 32 percent of Siam Cement worth US 12 6 billion 23 percent of Siam Commercial Bank Thailand s largest bank and interests in Christiani amp Nielsen Deves Insurance and Shin Corporation 13 The CPB also lets or leases about 36 000 properties to third parties including the sites of the Anantara Siam Bangkok Hotel the Suan Lum Night Bazaar Siam Paragon and the Central World Tower The CPB spearheaded a plan to turn Bangkok s historical Ratchadamnoen Avenue into a shopping street known as the Champs Elysees of Asia and in 2007 shocked longtime residents of traditional marketplace districts by serving them with eviction notices 164 The Crown s substantial income from the CPB estimated to be at least five billion baht in 2004 is exempt from taxes 164 166 King Bhumibol was the owner of the Golden Jubilee Diamond the largest faceted diamond in the world which is estimated to be worth between US 4 12 million in April 2014 13 Criticism A government officer pays respect to the portrait of King Bhumibol Main article Lese majeste in Thailand Although Bhumibol was held in great respect by many Thais 15 he was also protected by some of the strictest lese majeste laws in the world Under these laws critics could be jailed for three to fifteen years 167 After the Thammasat University Massacre in 1976 the laws were toughened during the dictatorship of royalist and anti communist Premier Thanin Kraivichien Criticism of any member of the royal family the royal development projects the royal institution the Chakri Dynasty or any previous Thai king was also banned During his 2005 birthday speech Bhumibol invited criticism Actually I must also be criticised I am not afraid if the criticism concerns what I do wrong because then I know Because if you say the king cannot be criticised it means that the king is not human he claimed If the king can do no wrong it is akin to looking down upon him because the king is not being treated as a human being But the king can do wrong 38 A widespread barrage of criticisms resulted followed by a sharp rise in lese majeste prosecutions Lese majeste cases rose from five or six a year pre 2005 to 478 in 2010 168 Although lese majeste officially only applies to current kings in practice the laws are very broadly construed and flexible Even after his death Bhumibol remains protected by lese majeste BiographiesAmerican journalist Paul Handley who spent thirteen years in Thailand wrote the biography The King Never Smiles The Information and Communications Ministry banned the book and blocked the book s page on the Yale University Press website in January 2006 In a statement dated 19 January 2006 Thai National Police Chief General Kowit Wattana said the book had contents which could affect national security and the good morality of the people 169 The book provided a detailed discussion of Bhumibol s role in Thai political history and it also analyzed the factors behind Bhumibol s popularity William Stevenson who had access to the royal court and the royal family wrote the biography The Revolutionary King in 2001 170 An article in Time said the idea for the book was suggested by Bhumibol 171 Critics noted that the book displayed intimate knowledge about personal aspects of Bhumibol However the book was unofficially banned in Thailand and the Bureau of the Royal Household warned the Thai media about even referring to it in print An official ban was not possible as it was written with Bhumibol s blessing The book was criticised for factual inaccuracies disrespecting Bhumibol it refers to him by his personal nickname Lek and proposing a controversial theory explaining the mysterious death of King Ananda Stevenson said The king said from the beginning the book would be dangerous for him and for me 171 Succession to the throne The King s Royal Cypher and personal flag Prior to 1972 there was widespread speculation that Bhumibol had been considering his eldest child Ubol Ratana as successor Ubol Ratana considered Bhumibol s most intelligent and favorite child disobeyed her parents by marrying Peter Ladd Jensen her classmate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Her parents stripped her of her royal title and banished her from the court not returning to Thailand for nearly 8 years 24 684 After this Bhumibol s only son Prince Vajiralongkorn was given the title Somdej Phra Boroma Orasadhiraj Chao Fah Maha Vajiralongkorn Sayam Makutrajakuman Crown Prince of Siam on 28 December 1972 and made heir apparent xngkhrchthayath to the throne in accordance with the Palace Law on Succession of 1924 172 On 5 December 1977 Princess Sirindhorn was given the title Siam Boromrajakumari Princess Royal of Siam Her title is often translated by the English language press as Crown Princess although her official English language title is simply Princess 173 Although the constitution was later amended to allow the Privy Council to appoint a princess as successor to the throne this would only occur in the absence of an heir apparent This amendment is retained in Section 23 of the 1997 People s Constitution This effectively allowed Princess Sirindhorn to potentially be second in line to the throne but did not affect Prince Vajiralongkorn s status as heir apparent Recent constitutions of Thailand have made the amendment of the Palace Law of Succession the sole prerogative of the reigning king According to Assoc Prof Gothom Arya former election commissioner this allows the reigning king if he so chooses to appoint his son or any of his daughters to the throne 174 Name Bhumibol s signature in 1952 Amendment to the Thai Constitution of 1932 signed as Somdet Phra Poraminthra Maha Bhumibol Adulyadej Sayaminthrathirat Borommanatbophit Bhumibol s US birth certificate reads simply Baby Songkla as the parents had to consult his uncle King Rama VII Prajadhipok then head of the House of Chakri for an auspicious name The king chose a name of Sanskrit origin Bhumibol Adulyadej Devanagari भ म बल अत ल यत ज IAST Bhumibala Atulyateja a compound of Bhumi भ म meaning Land Bala बल meaning Strength or Power Atulya अत ल य meaning Incomparable and Tej त ज meaning Power Thus Bhumibala Atulyateja or Bhumibol Adulyadej as it is transliterated in Thai can be literally translated as Strength of the Land Incomparable Power 22 Titles and honoursSee also List of titles and honours of Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand Styles of King Bhumibol Adulyadej Rama IX of Thailand Reference styleHis MajestySpoken styleYour Majesty Royal Monogram of King Bhumibol Adulyadej Titles and styles 5 December 1927 9 July 1935 His Highness Prince Bhumibol Aduldej phrawrwngsethx phraxngkhecaphumiphlxduledch Phra Worawong Thoe Phra Ong Chao Bhumibol Aduldej 9 July 1935 9 June 1946 His Royal Highness Prince Bhumibol Adulyadej of Siam phrawrwngsethx phraxngkhecaphumiphlxdulyedch Somdet Phrachao Nongya Thoe Chaofa Bhumibol Adulyadej 9 June 1946 13 October 2016 His Majesty The King of Thailand 9 June 1946 5 May 1950 smedcphraecaxyuhw Somdet Phrachao Yuhua 5 May 1950 13 October 2016 phrabathsmedcphraecaxyuhw Phrabat Somdet Phrachao Yuhua Military rank His highest rank was as a field marshal 175 His other ranks in the military include Admiral of the Fleet 176 and Marshal of the Royal Thai Air Force 175 IssueName Birth Marriage Children GrandchildrenDate SpousePrincess Ubolratana Rajakanya 5 April 1951 29 July 1981Divorced 1998 Peter Ladd Jensen Ploypailin Jensen Maximus WheelerLeonardo Wheeler Airy Wheeler 177 Poom Jensen NoneSirikitiya Jensen NoneKing Maha Vajiralongkorn 28 July 1952 3 January 1977Divorced 12 August 1991 Soamsawali Kitiyakara Princess Bajrakitiyabha NoneFebruary 1994Divorced 1996 Yuvadhida Polpraserth Juthavachara Vivacharawongse NoneVacharaesorn Vivacharawongse NoneChakriwat Vivacharawongse NoneVatchrawee Vivacharawongse NonePrincess Sirivannavari Nariratana None10 February 2001Divorced 11 December 2014 Srirasmi Suwadee Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti None1 May 2019 Suthida NonePrincess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn 2 April 1955 NonePrincess Chulabhorn Walailak 4 July 1957 1982Divorced 1996 Virayudh Tishyasarin Princess Siribha Chudabhorn NonePrincess Aditiyadorn Kitikhun NoneAncestorsThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancestors of Bhumibol Adulyadej8 10 King Mongkut Rama IV of Siam4 King Chulalongkorn Rama V of Siam9 Princess Ramphoei Siriwong2 Prince Mahidol Adulyadej Prince of Songkla10 8 King Mongkut Rama IV of Siam5 Princess Savang Vadhana of Siam11 Piam Sucharitakul1 King Bhumibol Adulyadej Rama IX of Thailand12 Chum Chukramol6 Chu Chukramol3 Sangwan Talapat7 Kham15 PhaWorksKing Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand The Story of Tongdaeng Amarin Book Bangkok 2004 ISBN 974 272 917 4 King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand The Story of Mahajanaka Cartoon Edition Amarin Book Bangkok 1999 ISBN 974 272 074 6 King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand The Story of Mahajanaka Amarin Book Bangkok 1997 ISBN 974 8364 71 2 King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand Chaturong Pramkaew Ed My Country Thailand land of Everlasting Smile Amarin Book Bangkok 1995 ISBN 974 8363 53 8 King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand His Majesty the King s Photographs in the Development of the Country Photographic Society of Thailand amp Thai E Bangkok 1992 ISBN 974 88805 0 8 King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand Paintings by his Majesty the King Special exhibition for the Rattanakosin Bicentennial Celebration at the National Gallery Chao Fa Road Bangkok 1 April 30 June 1982 National Gallery Bangkok 1982 ASIN B0007CCDMOSee also Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bhumibol Adulyadej category Wikiquote has quotations related to Bhumibol Adulyadej History of Thailand 1932 1973 History of Thailand 1973 2001 Public holidays in Thailand List of covers of Time magazine 1960s Namesakes Bhumibol Adulyadej Hospital Kanchanaphisek Bridge Rama IX Bridge Portals Biography Royalty ThailandReferences Williams Monier 1899 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 458052227 pages 763 722 451 452 Stengs Irene 1 January 2009 Worshipping the Great Moderniser King Chulalongkorn Patron Saint of the Thai Middle Class NUS Press ISBN 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Press ISBN 978 0 300 10682 4 Review by Kevin Hewison Journal of Historical Biography Vol 4 Autumn 2008 pp 115 122 Review by Paul W Chambers Contemporary Southeast Asia Vol 29 3 Dec 2007 pp 529 532 Death of King Bhumibol Adulyadej evokes recall of memorable 700 year old Sri Lanka Thai tiesOther Matthew Phillips 2021 Re ordering the Cold War Cosmos King Bhumibol s 1960 U S Tour Diplomatic History Bhumibol AdulyadejHouse of MahidolCadet branch of the House of ChakriBorn 5 December 1927 Died 13 October 2016Regnal titlesPreceded byAnanda Mahidol King of Siam1946 1947 Country name changed to Thailand New titleSiam became Thailand King of Thailand1947 2016 Succeeded byMaha VajiralongkornOrder of precedencePreceded byPrincess Bejaratana Rajasuda Eldest Royal Member of the Chakri Dynasty2011 2016 Succeeded byQueen Sirikit Portals Thailand Biography Politics Royalty Monarchy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bhumibol Adulyadej amp oldid 1135538736, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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