fbpx
Wikipedia

Mandala (political model)

Maṇḍala is a Sanskrit word meaning 'circle'. The mandala is a model for describing the patterns of diffuse political power distributed among Mueang or Kedatuan (principalities) in medieval Southeast Asian history, when local power was more important than the central leadership. The concept of the mandala balances modern tendencies to look for unified political power, eg. the power of large kingdoms and nation states of later history – an inadvertent byproduct of 15th century advances in map-making technologies.[further explanation needed][1][2] In the words of O. W. Wolters who further explored the idea in 1982:

Notable mandalas in classical Southeast Asian history (c. 5th to 15th century). From north to south; Bagan, Ayutthaya, Champa, Angkor, Srivijaya and Majapahit.

The map of earlier Southeast Asia which evolved from the prehistoric networks of small settlements and reveals itself in historical records was a patchwork of often overlapping mandalas.[3]

It is employed to denote traditional Southeast Asian political formations, such as federation of kingdoms or vassalized polity under a center of domination. It was adopted by 20th century European historians from ancient Indian political discourse as a means of avoiding the term "state" in the conventional sense. Not only did Southeast Asian polities except Vietnam not conform to Chinese and European views of a territorially defined state with fixed borders and a bureaucratic apparatus, but they diverged considerably in the opposite direction: the polity was defined by its centre rather than its boundaries, and it could be composed of numerous other tributary polities without undergoing administrative integration.[4]

In some ways similar to the feudal system of Europe, states were linked in suzeraintributary relationships.

Terminology edit

The term draws a comparison with the mandala of the Hindu and Buddhist worldview; the comparison emphasises the radiation of power from each power center, as well as the non-physical basis of the system.

Other metaphors such as S. J. Tambiah's original idea of a "galactic polity"[5] describe political patterns similar to the mandala. The historian Victor Lieberman[6] prefers the "solar polity" metaphor, referencing the gravitational pull the sun exerts over the planets.[7]

History edit

 
Intersecting mandalas c. 1360: from north to south: Lan Xang, Lanna, Sukhothai, Ayutthaya, Khmer and Champa.

Historically, the main suzerain or overlord states were the Khmer Empire of Cambodia; Srivijaya of South Sumatra; the successive kingdoms of Mataram, Kediri, Singhasari and Majapahit of Java; the Ayutthaya Kingdom of Thailand; Champa and early Đại Việt.[8] China occupies a special place in that the others often in turn paid tribute to China, although in practice the obligations imposed on the lesser kingdoms were minimal. The most notable tributary states were post-Angkor Cambodia, Lan Xang (succeeded by the Kingdom of Vientiane and Luang Prabang) and Lanna. Cambodia in the 18th century was described by the Vietnamese emperor Gia Long as "an independent country that is slave of two" (Chandler p. 119). The system was eventually ended by the arrival of the Europeans in the mid-19th century. Culturally, they introduced Western geographical practices, which assumed that every area was subject to one sovereign. Practically, the colonisation of French Indochina, Dutch East Indies, British Malaya and Burma brought pressure from the colonisers for fixed boundaries to their possessions. The tributary states were then divided between the colonies and Siam, which exercised much more centralised power but over a smaller area than thitherto.

The advent of Islam in the archipelago saw the application of this system which is still continued in the formation of the government, such as the formation of the 18th century Negeri Sembilan coalition which focused on Seri Menanti as a center flanked by four inner luak serambi and four outer districts.[9] Another example is the post-Majapahit Islamic kingdoms in Java.

Historian Martin Stuart-Fox uses the term "mandala" extensively to describe the history of the Lao kingdom of Lan Xang as a structure of loosely held together mueang that disintegrated after Lan Xang's conquest by Thailand starting in the 18th century.[10][11]

Thai historian Sunait Chutintaranond made an important contribution to study of the mandala in Southeast Asian history by demonstrating that "three assumptions responsible for the view that Ayudhya was a strong centralized state" did not hold and that "in Ayudhya the hegemony of provincial governors was never successfully eliminated."[12][13]

Obligations edit

 
Bunga mas (Flowers of Gold), tribute from northern Malay states in Malay peninsula for Siam. National Museum, Kuala Lumpur.)

The obligations on each side of the relationship varied according to the strength of the relationship and the circumstances. In general, the tributary was obliged to pay bunga mas, a regular tribute of various valuable goods and slaves, and miniature trees of gold and silver (bunga mas dan perak). The overlord ruler reciprocated with presents often of greater value than those supplied by the tributary. However, the tributary also had to provide men and supplies when called on, most often in time of war. The main benefit to the tributary was protection from invasion by other powers, although as South East Asia historian Thongchai Winichakul notes, this was often "mafia-like protection"[14] from the threats of the overlord himself. In some cases, the overlord also controlled the succession in the tributary, but in general interference with the tributary's domestic affairs was minimal: he would retain his own army and powers of taxation, for example. In the case of the more tenuous relationships, the "overlord" might regard it as one of tribute, while the "tributary" might consider the exchange of gifts to be purely commercial or as an expression of goodwill (Thongchai p. 87).

Personal relationships edit

The emphasis on personal relationships was one of the defining characteristics of the mandala system. The tributary ruler was subordinate to the overlord ruler, rather than to the overlord state in the abstract. This had many important implications. A strong ruler could attract new tributaries, and would have strong relationships over his existing tributaries. A weaker ruler would find it harder to attract and maintain these relationships. This was put forward as one cause of the sudden rise of Sukhothai under Ramkhamhaeng, for example, and for its almost equally steep decline after his death (Wyatt, 45 and 48). The tributary ruler could repudiate the relationship and seek either a different overlord or complete independence. The system was non-territorial. The overlord was owed allegiance by the tributary ruler, or at most by the tributary's main town, but not by all the people of a particular area. The tributary owner in turn had power either over tributary states further down the scale, or directly over "his" people, wherever they lived. No ruler had authority over unpopulated areas.

The personal relationship between overlord and subordinate rulers also defined the dynamic of relationship within a mandala. The relations between Dharmasetu of Srivijaya and Samaratungga of Sailendra, for instance, defined the succession of this dynastic family. Dharmasetu was the Srivijayan Maharaja overlord, while the house of Sailendra in Java is suggested to be related and was subscribed to Srivijayan mandala domination. After Samaratungga married Princess Tara, the daughter of Dharmasetu, Samaratungga became his successor and the house of Sailendra was promoted to become the dynastic lineage of later Srivijayan kings, and for a century the center of Srivijaya was shifted from Sumatra to Java.

Non-exclusivity edit

The overlord-tributary relationship was not necessarily exclusive. A state in border areas might pay tribute to two or three stronger powers. The tributary ruler could then play the stronger powers against one another to minimize interference by either one, while for the major powers the tributaries served as a buffer zone to prevent direct conflict between them. For example, the Malay kingdoms in Malay Peninsula, Langkasuka and Tambralinga earlier were subject to Srivijayan mandala, and in later periods contested by both Ayutthaya mandala in the north and Majapahit mandala in the south, before finally gaining its own gravity during Malacca Sultanate.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ . Wilson Quarterly. Summer 2011. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 28 July 2011. Source: 'Mapping the Sovereign State: Technology, Authority, and Systemic Change' by Jordan Branch, in International Organization, Volume 65, Issue 1, Winter 2011
  2. ^ Branch, Jordan Nathaniel; Steven Weber (2011). Mapping the Sovereign State: Cartographic Technology, Political Authority, and Systemic Change (PhD thesis). University of California, Berkeley. pp. 1–36. doi:10.1017/S0020818310000299. Publication Number 3469226. Abstract: How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization, defined by a wide variety of territorial and non-territorial forms of authority? Answering this question can help to explain both where our international political system came from and where it might be going ...
    The idea was originally proposed by Stanley J. Tambiah, a professor of anthropology, in a 1977 article entitled "The Galactic Polity: The structure of Political Kingdoms in Southeast Asia."
  3. ^ O.W. Wolters, 1999, p. 27
  4. ^ Dellios, Rosita (2003-01-01). "Mandala: from sacred origins to sovereign affairs in traditional Southeast Asia". Bond University Australia.
  5. ^ Tambiah, Stanley Jeyaraja. World Conqueror and World Renouncer : A Study of Buddhism and Polity in Thailand against a Historical Background. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976. ISBN 0-521-29290-5. Chapter 7, cited in Lieberman, Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context c. 800-1830. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003–2009 ISBN 978-0521804967. P. 33
  6. ^ . Professor of History, Department of History, appointed 1984. University of Michigan. February 4, 2005. Archived from the original (Biography) on July 22, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2011. Center for Southeast Asian Studies
  7. ^ Lieberman, 2003, p. 33
  8. ^ O.W. Wolters, 1999, pp. 27–40, 126-154
  9. ^ Tambiah, Stanley Jeyaraja (2013). "The galactic polity in Southeast Asia". HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. 3 (3). University of Chicago Press: 504–506. doi:10.14318/hau3.3.033. S2CID 17733357.
  10. ^ Martin-Fox, 1998, pp. 14–15
  11. ^ Stuart-Fox, Martin (1994). "Conflicting conceptions of the state: Siam, France and Vietnam in the late nineteenth century" (free). Journal of the Siam Society. JSS Vol. 82.0 (digital). Siam Heritage Trust. Retrieved April 12, 2013. Historians of Southeast Asia often face problems in using terms drawn from and applicable to European polities and societies to refer to non-European equivalents that do not conform to European models.
  12. ^ O.W. Wolters, pp. 142–143 citing Chutintaranond, 1990, pp. 97–98
  13. ^ Sunait Chutintaranond, (Thai: สุเนตร ชุตินธรานนท์) (1990). "Mandala, Segmentary State and Politics of Centralization in Medieval Ayudhya" (PDF). Journal of the Siam Society. JSS Vol. 78.1i (digital). Siam Heritage Trust: image 11. Retrieved March 17, 2013. Nevertheless, the Ayudhya kings, as they are described in indigenous and foreign records, never successfully eliminated the hegemony of provincial governors.
  14. ^ Thongchai Winichakul (1994). Siam Mapped. p. 88.

Additional references edit

  • Chandler, David. A History of Cambodia. Westview Press, 1983. ISBN 0-8133-3511-6
  • Chutintaranond, Sunait (1990). "Mandala, Segmentary State and Politics of Centralization in Medieval Ayudhya" (free). Journal of the Siam Society. JSS Vol. 78.1 (digital). Siam Heritage Trust. Retrieved March 17, 2013. ... I am interested in the ways in which Kautilya's theory of mandala has been interpreted by historians for the purpose of studying ancient states in South and Southeast Asia.
  • Lieberman, Victor, Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c. 800-1830, Volume 1: Integration on the Mainland, Cambridge University Press, 2003.
  • Stuart-Fox, Martin, The Lao Kingdom of Lan Xang: Rise and Decline, White Lotus, 1998.
  • Tambiah, S. J., World Conqueror and World Renouncer, Cambridge, 1976.
  • Thongchai Winichakul. Siam Mapped. University of Hawaii Press, 1994. ISBN 0-8248-1974-8
  • Wolters, O.W. History, Culture and Region in Southeast Asian Perspectives. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1982. ISBN 0-87727-725-7
  • Wolters, O.W. History, Culture and Region in Southeast Asian Perspectives. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Revised Edition, 1999.
  • Wyatt, David. Thailand: A Short History (2nd edition). Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-300-08475-7

Further reading edit

  • Political reasons for survey and map making in Siam detailed in Giblin, R.W. (2008) [1908]. "Royal Survey Work." (65.3 MB). In Wright, Arnold; Breakspear, Oliver T (eds.). Twentieth century impressions of Siam. London&c: Lloyds Greater Britain Publishing Company. pp. 121–127. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  • Renée Hagesteijn (1989), Circles of Kings: Political Dynamics in Early Continental Southeast Asia, Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, Dordrecht and Providence, RI: Foris Publications
  • Hermann Kulke (1993), Kings and Cults. State Formation and Legitimation in India and Southeast Asia
  • Stanley J. Tambiah (1977), "The Galactic Polity. The Structure of Traditional Kingdoms in Southeast Asia", Anthropology and the Climate of Opinion, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 293, no. 1, New York, pp. 69–97, Bibcode:1977NYASA.293...69T, doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1977.tb41806.x, S2CID 84461786

mandala, political, model, maṇḍala, sanskrit, word, meaning, circle, mandala, model, describing, patterns, diffuse, political, power, distributed, among, mueang, kedatuan, principalities, medieval, southeast, asian, history, when, local, power, more, important. Maṇḍala is a Sanskrit word meaning circle The mandala is a model for describing the patterns of diffuse political power distributed among Mueang or Kedatuan principalities in medieval Southeast Asian history when local power was more important than the central leadership The concept of the mandala balances modern tendencies to look for unified political power eg the power of large kingdoms and nation states of later history an inadvertent byproduct of 15th century advances in map making technologies further explanation needed 1 2 In the words of O W Wolters who further explored the idea in 1982 Notable mandalas in classical Southeast Asian history c 5th to 15th century From north to south Bagan Ayutthaya Champa Angkor Srivijaya and Majapahit The map of earlier Southeast Asia which evolved from the prehistoric networks of small settlements and reveals itself in historical records was a patchwork of often overlapping mandalas 3 It is employed to denote traditional Southeast Asian political formations such as federation of kingdoms or vassalized polity under a center of domination It was adopted by 20th century European historians from ancient Indian political discourse as a means of avoiding the term state in the conventional sense Not only did Southeast Asian polities except Vietnam not conform to Chinese and European views of a territorially defined state with fixed borders and a bureaucratic apparatus but they diverged considerably in the opposite direction the polity was defined by its centre rather than its boundaries and it could be composed of numerous other tributary polities without undergoing administrative integration 4 In some ways similar to the feudal system of Europe states were linked in suzerain tributary relationships Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 3 Obligations 4 Personal relationships 5 Non exclusivity 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Additional references 9 Further readingTerminology editThe term draws a comparison with the mandala of the Hindu and Buddhist worldview the comparison emphasises the radiation of power from each power center as well as the non physical basis of the system Other metaphors such as S J Tambiah s original idea of a galactic polity 5 describe political patterns similar to the mandala The historian Victor Lieberman 6 prefers the solar polity metaphor referencing the gravitational pull the sun exerts over the planets 7 History edit nbsp Intersecting mandalas c 1360 from north to south Lan Xang Lanna Sukhothai Ayutthaya Khmer and Champa Historically the main suzerain or overlord states were the Khmer Empire of Cambodia Srivijaya of South Sumatra the successive kingdoms of Mataram Kediri Singhasari and Majapahit of Java the Ayutthaya Kingdom of Thailand Champa and early Đại Việt 8 China occupies a special place in that the others often in turn paid tribute to China although in practice the obligations imposed on the lesser kingdoms were minimal The most notable tributary states were post Angkor Cambodia Lan Xang succeeded by the Kingdom of Vientiane and Luang Prabang and Lanna Cambodia in the 18th century was described by the Vietnamese emperor Gia Long as an independent country that is slave of two Chandler p 119 The system was eventually ended by the arrival of the Europeans in the mid 19th century Culturally they introduced Western geographical practices which assumed that every area was subject to one sovereign Practically the colonisation of French Indochina Dutch East Indies British Malaya and Burma brought pressure from the colonisers for fixed boundaries to their possessions The tributary states were then divided between the colonies and Siam which exercised much more centralised power but over a smaller area than thitherto The advent of Islam in the archipelago saw the application of this system which is still continued in the formation of the government such as the formation of the 18th century Negeri Sembilan coalition which focused on Seri Menanti as a center flanked by four inner luak serambi and four outer districts 9 Another example is the post Majapahit Islamic kingdoms in Java Historian Martin Stuart Fox uses the term mandala extensively to describe the history of the Lao kingdom of Lan Xang as a structure of loosely held together mueang that disintegrated after Lan Xang s conquest by Thailand starting in the 18th century 10 11 Thai historian Sunait Chutintaranond made an important contribution to study of the mandala in Southeast Asian history by demonstrating that three assumptions responsible for the view that Ayudhya was a strong centralized state did not hold and that in Ayudhya the hegemony of provincial governors was never successfully eliminated 12 13 Obligations edit nbsp Bunga mas Flowers of Gold tribute from northern Malay states in Malay peninsula for Siam National Museum Kuala Lumpur The obligations on each side of the relationship varied according to the strength of the relationship and the circumstances In general the tributary was obliged to pay bunga mas a regular tribute of various valuable goods and slaves and miniature trees of gold and silver bunga mas dan perak The overlord ruler reciprocated with presents often of greater value than those supplied by the tributary However the tributary also had to provide men and supplies when called on most often in time of war The main benefit to the tributary was protection from invasion by other powers although as South East Asia historian Thongchai Winichakul notes this was often mafia like protection 14 from the threats of the overlord himself In some cases the overlord also controlled the succession in the tributary but in general interference with the tributary s domestic affairs was minimal he would retain his own army and powers of taxation for example In the case of the more tenuous relationships the overlord might regard it as one of tribute while the tributary might consider the exchange of gifts to be purely commercial or as an expression of goodwill Thongchai p 87 Personal relationships editFurther information Kinship Recognition of fluidity in kinship meanings and relations The emphasis on personal relationships was one of the defining characteristics of the mandala system The tributary ruler was subordinate to the overlord ruler rather than to the overlord state in the abstract This had many important implications A strong ruler could attract new tributaries and would have strong relationships over his existing tributaries A weaker ruler would find it harder to attract and maintain these relationships This was put forward as one cause of the sudden rise of Sukhothai under Ramkhamhaeng for example and for its almost equally steep decline after his death Wyatt 45 and 48 The tributary ruler could repudiate the relationship and seek either a different overlord or complete independence The system was non territorial The overlord was owed allegiance by the tributary ruler or at most by the tributary s main town but not by all the people of a particular area The tributary owner in turn had power either over tributary states further down the scale or directly over his people wherever they lived No ruler had authority over unpopulated areas The personal relationship between overlord and subordinate rulers also defined the dynamic of relationship within a mandala The relations between Dharmasetu of Srivijaya and Samaratungga of Sailendra for instance defined the succession of this dynastic family Dharmasetu was the Srivijayan Maharaja overlord while the house of Sailendra in Java is suggested to be related and was subscribed to Srivijayan mandala domination After Samaratungga married Princess Tara the daughter of Dharmasetu Samaratungga became his successor and the house of Sailendra was promoted to become the dynastic lineage of later Srivijayan kings and for a century the center of Srivijaya was shifted from Sumatra to Java Non exclusivity editThe overlord tributary relationship was not necessarily exclusive A state in border areas might pay tribute to two or three stronger powers The tributary ruler could then play the stronger powers against one another to minimize interference by either one while for the major powers the tributaries served as a buffer zone to prevent direct conflict between them For example the Malay kingdoms in Malay Peninsula Langkasuka and Tambralinga earlier were subject to Srivijayan mandala and in later periods contested by both Ayutthaya mandala in the north and Majapahit mandala in the south before finally gaining its own gravity during Malacca Sultanate See also editIndianisation mandalas led to Indianisation of Southeast Asia Sanskrit related topics Chakravartin universal ruler Devaraja Hindu Buddhist concept of deified royalty in Southeast Asia Greater India mandalas were key components History of Indian influence on Southeast Asia expansion of Indianised mandalas Indian influences in early Philippine polities mandalas of Srivijaya empire Indian maritime history responsible for spread of mandalas Indosphere term mandalas originated from Sanskrit Monthon Siamese system of local administration from 1897 to 1933 Rajamandala circle of states in India from 4th century BC to 2nd century AD Similar models elsewhere Chiefdom Fealty European analogue Hegemony similar European concept Homage feudal similar European system Honour feudal barony similar 11th and 12th centuries European system Metropole a term for the centre of British Empire Tusi system of local chiefdoms in southern China General Palace economy centralized administration methods in antiquity Political geography impact of geography on the politics Sacred king position of kingship carries a sacred meaning Sphere of influence Suzerainty allowing limited self rule Zomia geography a term used for those on the peripheryNotes edit How Maps Made the World Wilson Quarterly Summer 2011 Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 28 July 2011 Source Mapping the Sovereign State Technology Authority and Systemic Change by Jordan Branch in International Organization Volume 65 Issue 1 Winter 2011 Branch Jordan Nathaniel Steven Weber 2011 Mapping the Sovereign State Cartographic Technology Political Authority and Systemic Change PhD thesis University of California Berkeley pp 1 36 doi 10 1017 S0020818310000299 Publication Number 3469226 Abstract How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization defined by a wide variety of territorial and non territorial forms of authority Answering this question can help to explain both where our international political system came from and where it might be going The idea was originally proposed by Stanley J Tambiah a professor of anthropology in a 1977 article entitled The Galactic Polity The structure of Political Kingdoms in Southeast Asia O W Wolters 1999 p 27 Dellios Rosita 2003 01 01 Mandala from sacred origins to sovereign affairs in traditional Southeast Asia Bond University Australia Tambiah Stanley Jeyaraja World Conqueror and World Renouncer A Study of Buddhism and Polity in Thailand against a Historical Background Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1976 ISBN 0 521 29290 5 Chapter 7 cited in Lieberman Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 2009 ISBN 978 0521804967 P 33 Victor B Lieberman Professor of History Department of History appointed 1984 University of Michigan February 4 2005 Archived from the original Biography on July 22 2011 Retrieved August 17 2011 Center for Southeast Asian Studies Lieberman 2003 p 33 O W Wolters 1999 pp 27 40 126 154 Tambiah Stanley Jeyaraja 2013 The galactic polity in Southeast Asia HAU Journal of Ethnographic Theory 3 3 University of Chicago Press 504 506 doi 10 14318 hau3 3 033 S2CID 17733357 Martin Fox 1998 pp 14 15 Stuart Fox Martin 1994 Conflicting conceptions of the state Siam France and Vietnam in the late nineteenth century free Journal of the Siam Society JSS Vol 82 0 digital Siam Heritage Trust Retrieved April 12 2013 Historians of Southeast Asia often face problems in using terms drawn from and applicable to European polities and societies to refer to non European equivalents that do not conform to European models O W Wolters pp 142 143 citing Chutintaranond 1990 pp 97 98 Sunait Chutintaranond Thai suentr chutinthrannth 1990 Mandala Segmentary State and Politics of Centralization in Medieval Ayudhya PDF Journal of the Siam Society JSS Vol 78 1i digital Siam Heritage Trust image 11 Retrieved March 17 2013 Nevertheless the Ayudhya kings as they are described in indigenous and foreign records never successfully eliminated the hegemony of provincial governors Thongchai Winichakul 1994 Siam Mapped p 88 Additional references editChandler David A History of Cambodia Westview Press 1983 ISBN 0 8133 3511 6 Chutintaranond Sunait 1990 Mandala Segmentary State and Politics of Centralization in Medieval Ayudhya free Journal of the Siam Society JSS Vol 78 1 digital Siam Heritage Trust Retrieved March 17 2013 I am interested in the ways in which Kautilya s theory of mandala has been interpreted by historians for the purpose of studying ancient states in South and Southeast Asia Lieberman Victor Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 Volume 1 Integration on the Mainland Cambridge University Press 2003 Stuart Fox Martin The Lao Kingdom of Lan Xang Rise and Decline White Lotus 1998 Tambiah S J World Conqueror and World Renouncer Cambridge 1976 Thongchai Winichakul Siam Mapped University of Hawaii Press 1994 ISBN 0 8248 1974 8 Wolters O W History Culture and Region in Southeast Asian Perspectives Institute of Southeast Asian Studies 1982 ISBN 0 87727 725 7 Wolters O W History Culture and Region in Southeast Asian Perspectives Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Revised Edition 1999 Wyatt David Thailand A Short History 2nd edition Yale University Press 2003 ISBN 0 300 08475 7Further reading editPolitical reasons for survey and map making in Siam detailed in Giblin R W 2008 1908 Royal Survey Work 65 3 MB In Wright Arnold Breakspear Oliver T eds Twentieth century impressions of Siam London amp c Lloyds Greater Britain Publishing Company pp 121 127 Retrieved 7 October 2011 Renee Hagesteijn 1989 Circles of Kings Political Dynamics in Early Continental Southeast Asia Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal Land en Volkenkunde Dordrecht and Providence RI Foris Publications Hermann Kulke 1993 Kings and Cults State Formation and Legitimation in India and Southeast Asia Stanley J Tambiah 1977 The Galactic Polity The Structure of Traditional Kingdoms in Southeast Asia Anthropology and the Climate of Opinion Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences vol 293 no 1 New York pp 69 97 Bibcode 1977NYASA 293 69T doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1977 tb41806 x S2CID 84461786 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mandala political model amp oldid 1219350388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.