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Prajadhipok

Prajadhipok[a] (8 November 1893 – 30 May 1941) was the seventh king of Siam from the Chakri dynasty, titled Rama VII. His reign was a turbulent time for Siam due to political and social changes during the 1932 Siamese revolution. He is to date the only Siamese monarch of the Chakri dynasty to abdicate.

Prajadhipok
ประชาธิปก
King Rama VII
Formal portrait, c. 1930s
King of Siam
Reign26 November 1925 – 2 March 1935
Coronation25 February 1926
PredecessorVajiravudh (Rama VI)
SuccessorAnanda Mahidol (Rama VIII)
Born(1893-11-08)8 November 1893
Grand Palace, Bangkok, Siam
Died30 May 1941(1941-05-30) (aged 47)
Virginia Water, Surrey, England
Burial3 June 1941
Spouse
(m. 1918)
HouseChakri dynasty
FatherChulalongkorn (Rama V)
MotherSaovabha Phongsri
ReligionTheravada Buddhism
Signature
Prajadhipok
Privy Seal
Thai name
Thaiพระบาทสมเด็จพระปรมินทรมหาประชาธิปก พระปกเกล้าเจ้าอยู่หัว
RTGSPhrabat Somdet Phra Poramenthra Maha Prachathipok Phra Pok Klao Chao Yu Hua

Early life edit

 
Young Prajadhipok and his mother, Saovabha Phongsri

Somdet Chaofa Prajadhipok Sakdidej (Thai: สมเด็จเจ้าฟ้าประชาธิปกศักดิเดชน์) was born on 8 November 1893 in Bangkok, Siam (now Thailand) to King Chulalongkorn and Queen Saovabha Phongsri. Prince Prajadhipok was the youngest of nine children born to the couple. Overall he was the king's second-youngest child (of a total of 77), and the 33rd and youngest of Chulalongkorn's sons.[1]

Unlikely to succeed to the throne, Prince Prajadhipok chose to pursue a military career. Like many of the king's children, he was sent abroad to study, going to Eton College in 1906, then to the Woolwich Military Academy from which he graduated in 1913. He received a commission in the Royal Horse Artillery in the British Army based in Aldershot. In 1910 Chulalongkorn died and was succeeded by Prajadhipok's older brother (also a son of Queen Saovabha), Crown Prince Vajiravudh, who became King Rama VI. Prince Prajadhipok was by then commissioned in both the British Army and the Royal Siamese Army. With the outbreak of the First World War and the declaration of Siamese neutrality, King Vajiravudh ordered his younger brother to resign his British commission and return to Siam immediately, a great embarrassment to the prince, who wanted to serve with his men on the Western front. Once home, Prajadhipok became a high-ranking military official in Siam. In 1917 he was ordained temporarily as a monk,[2]: 30  as was customary for most Buddhist Siamese men.

In August 1918 Prince Prajadhipok married his childhood friend and cousin Rambai Barni, a descendant of King Mongkut (Prajadhipok's grandfather) and his Royal Consort Piam. They were married at Sukhothai Palace which was a wedding gift to the couple from Queen Saovabha.[1]

After the war in Europe ended, he attended the École Superieure de Guerre in France, returning to Siam to the Siamese military. During this time, he was granted the additional title Krom Luang Sukhothai (Prince of Sukhothai). Prajadhipok lived a generally quiet life with his wife at their residence, Sukhothai Palace, next to the Chao Phraya River. The couple had no children. Prajadhipok soon found himself rising rapidly in succession to the throne, as his brothers all died within a relatively short period. In 1925, King Vajiravudh himself died at the age of 44. Prajadhipok became absolute monarch at only thirty-two. He was crowned King of Siam on 25 February 1926.

Last absolute monarch edit

 
King Prajadhipok on TIME magazine cover in 1931
 
Thai stamp of Rama VII's reign

Relatively unprepared for his new responsibilities, Prajadhipok was nevertheless intelligent, diplomatic in his dealings with others, modest, and eager to learn.[3]: 235  However, he had inherited serious political and economic problems from his predecessor.[2]: 30  The budget was heavily in deficit, and the royal financial accounts were in serious disorder. The entire world was in the throes of the Great Depression.

In an institutional innovation intended to restore confidence in the monarchy and government, Prajadhipok, in what was virtually his first act as king, announced the creation of the Supreme Council of the State of Siam. This council was made up of five experienced members of the royal family, although to emphasise the break with the previous reign the selected five had all fallen out of favour with the previous monarch.[2]: 31  The council thus comprised three of the king's uncles, Prince Bhanurangsi, Prince Naris and Prince Damrong Rajanubhab and two of his half-brothers, Prince Kitiyakon (Prince Chantaburi) and Prince Boriphat.[4]: 253 

Many of the Princes of the Supreme Council felt that it was their duty to make amends for the mistakes of the previous reign, but their acts were not generally appreciated, for the government failed to communicate to the public the purpose of the policies they pursued to rectify Vajiravudh's extreme financial extravagances.[5] Gradually these princes arrogated power to themselves, monopolising all the main ministerial positions and appointing their sons and brothers to both administrative and military posts. By April 1926 almost the entire cabinet of ministry heads had been replaced with newly appointed Princes or nobles, with only three former members being re-appointed.[4]: 254  While the family appointments brought back men of talent and experience, they also signalled a return to royal oligarchy.

The king clearly wished to demonstrate a clear break with the discredited sixth reign, and his choice of men to fill the top positions appeared to be guided largely by a wish to restore a Chulalongkorn-type government.[4] Unlike his predecessor, the king read virtually all state papers that came his way, from ministerial submissions to petitions by citizens.[4]: 255  The king was painstaking and conscientious; he would elicit comments and suggestions from a range of experts and study them, noting the good points in each submission, but when various options were available he would seldom be able to select the best one and abandon others. He would often rely upon the Supreme Council to prod him in a particular direction.[4]: 254 

 
King Prajadhipok in Khrui, carrying Krabi sword.

From the beginning of his reign King Prajadhipok was acutely aware that political change was necessary if the monarchy was to be preserved.[2]: 130  He viewed his newly established Supreme Council as an institutional check upon the powers of an absolute monarch.[2]: 130  During 1926, Prajadhipok experimented with using the Privy Council, which had over 200 members at that time, as a quasi-legislative body.[2]: 134  This large of an assembly proved too cumbersome, and in 1927 Prajadhipok created the Committee of the Privy Council consisting of 40 members selected from the royal family or nobility.[2]: 135  The committee was received positively by the press and was envisaged as a forerunner of a parliament or National Assembly.[2]: 137–139  In practice however the committee remained relatively unimportant and sadly did not develop into a more powerful or representative body.[2]: 137 

In 1926 Prajadhipok wrote a lengthy memorandum to his American adviser Francis B. Sayre titled "Problems of Siam" in which he set forth nine questions he felt were the most serious facing the nation. The third question asked whether Siam should have a parliamentary system, which Prajadhipok doubted. The fourth question asked whether Siam was ready for representative government, to which Prajadhipok answered "my personal opinion is an emphatic NO".[2]: 38  However, the king did see a possibility to introduce reform at the local level as the "next step in our educational move towards democracy".[2]: 140  In 1926 he began moves to develop the concept of prachaphiban, or "municipality", which had emerged late in the fifth reign as a law regarding public health and sanitation.[6] Information was obtained regarding local self-government in surrounding countries, and proposals to allow certain municipalities to raise local taxes and manage their own budgets were drawn up. The fact that the public was not sufficiently educated to make the scheme work militated against the success of this administrative venture. Nevertheless, the idea of teaching the Siamese the concept of democracy through a measure of decentralisation of power in municipalities had become, in Prajadhipok's mind, fundamental to future policy-making.[2] However, Yasukichi Yatabe, Japanese minister to Siam, criticized the king's way and that it would not be accomplished in a hundred years' time.[7]

 
State visit of Rama VII to Japan, at Kōtoku-in, 1931

In September 1931 Britain abandoned the gold standard and devalued sterling by 30 percent.[4]: 259  This created a crisis for Siam since most of its foreign exchange was held in sterling.[2]: 195  The Minister of Finance kept Siam on the gold standard by linking the currency to the US dollar, but debate about this policy raged within the government into 1932.[2]: 195–196  One impact of this policy was that Siam's rice exports became more expensive than competitor exporters, negatively impacting revenue.[3]: 240 

In mid-October 1931 the king returned from a trip to Canada and the US and ordered Prince Devawongse Varoprakar, the Minister of Foreign Affairs to prepare a constitution. The task of drafting this document was given to the American Raymond B. Stevens and Phaya Sri Wisarn Waja.[2]: 148  In March the following year they submitted an "Outline of Changes in the Form of Government" together with their comments.[2]: 149  Prajadhipok originally planned to announce the new constitution to the nation of 6 April at the opening of the Memorial Bridge to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Chakri dynasty.[2]: 150  These proposals met strong opposition from Prince Damrong and other royal members of the Supreme Council and despite his own misgivings that to not proceed would result in a coup against his government, the king ultimately did not make the planned announcement.

On 20 January 1932, with the country deep in depression, the king convened a "round table" meeting to discuss the many competing arguments and to agree on how to tackle the crisis.[2]: 204  From this meeting it was agreed to make large cuts in government spending and implement a retrenchment programme. Two weeks later on 5 February the king addressed a group of military officers and spoke at length about the economic situation. In this speech he remarked "I myself know nothing at all about managing finances, and all I can do is listen to the opinions of others and choose the best...If I have made a mistake, I believe I really deserve to be excused by the people of Siam".[2]: 204  No previous monarch had ever spoken so honestly.[2]: 205  The speech was widely reported and many interpreted his words not as a frank appeal for understanding and cooperation, but as a sign of weakness and proof that the system of rule of fallible autocrats should be abolished.[8]

Revolution of 1932 edit

 
Sesquicentennial celebrations of The Revolution in 1932

A small group of soldiers and civil servants began secretly plotting to overthrow absolute monarchy and bring a constitutional government to the kingdom. Their efforts culminated in an almost bloodless "revolution" on the morning of 24 June 1932 by the self-proclaimed Khana Ratsadon (People's Party; คณะราษฎร).[4]: 262  While Prajadhipok was away at Klai Kangwon Palace in Hua Hin, the plotters took control of the Ananda Samakhom Throne Hall in Bangkok and arrested key officials (mainly princes and relatives of the king).[4]: 262  The People's Party demanded Prajadhipok become a constitutional monarch and grant Thai people a constitution. In the event of a negative response, they reserved the right to declare Siam a republic. The king immediately accepted the People's Party's request and the first "permanent" constitution of Siam was promulgated on 10 December.[4]: 263 

Prajadhipok returned to Bangkok on 26 June and received the coup plotters in a royal audience. As they entered the room, Prajadhipok greeted them, saying "I rise in honour of the Khana Ratsadorn."[9][10] It was a significant gesture because, according to previous royal rituals, monarchs were to remain seated while their subjects made obeisance, this showed that Prajadhipok was acknowledging the changed circumstances.[5]

First constitutional monarch edit

 
King Prajadhipok signs The Constitution of the Siam Kingdom 1932[clarification needed] on 10 December 1932

In the early stages of the constitutional monarchy, the King and the royalists seemed to be able to compromise with Khana Ratsadon. The constitutional bill which was drafted by Pridi Banomyong and intended to be a permanent one was made temporary. The new constitution restored some of the monarch's lost power and status. Among them were introduction of unelected half of the House of Representatives and royal veto power. The country's first prime minister Phraya Manopakorn Nititada was a conservative and royalist nobleman.

The compromise broke down quickly. He did not contest when his interpretation of Pridi's economic plan, which also aim on land reform and seizure of royal land, was released with his signature. The king played a role in the coup d'état of April 1933 where the House was ordered to close by the Prime Minister. He signed an order to execute Khana Ratsadon leaders. But Khana Ratsadon's military wing leader Phraya Phahol Phonphayuhasena ousted the government and restored its power.

He played an active role in an anti-revolutionary network, which also aimed to assassinate Khana Ratsadon's leaders.[11]: 27 

In October 1933, the maverick Prince Boworadej, a former minister of defence, led an armed revolt against the government. In the Boworadet Rebellion, he mobilised several provincial garrisons and marched on Bangkok, occupying the Don Muang aerodrome. Prince Boworadej accused the government of being disrespectful to the monarch and of promoting communism, and demanded that government leaders resign. However, the rebellion ultimately failed.

The king did not directly support the rebellion, but there was a cheque from the treasury to Boworadej.[11]: 11  The insurrection diminished the king's prestige. When the revolt began, Prajadhipok immediately informed the government that he regretted the strife and civil disturbances. The royal couple then took refuge at Songkhla, in the far south. The king's withdrawal from the scene was interpreted by the Khana Ratsadorn as a failure to do his duty. By not throwing his full support behind government forces, he had undermined their trust in him.[2]

In 1934 the Assembly voted to amend civil and military penal codes. The king vetoed the changes to the separation between personal and royal assets as he did not want to pay tax, and protested an amendment to diminish the king's consideration of death sentence over the courts.[11]: 34–5  After many losses to Khana Ratsadon, the king seemed to change his stance and expressed support for democracy and blamed Khana Ratsadon for being anti-democratic.[11]: 35–6  However, Phibul later discussed in the House that unelected parliamentary members were the king's wish,[11]: 17–8  and another House member criticized the king for being unbearable.[11]: 36 

Prajadhipok, whose relations with the Khana Ratsadon had been deteriorating for some time, went on a tour of Europe before visiting England for medical treatment. He continued to correspond with the government regarding the conditions under which he would continue to serve. He tried to retain some of the royal powers, such as power to veto law with no possible override. Other disagreements were on royal assets and royal benefits. After the government did not comply, on 14 October Prajadhipok announced his intention to abdicate unless his requests were met.

King Prajadhipok's trip to Europe edit

Abdication edit

 
Prajadhipok looking outside a train, c. 1930

The People's Party rejected the ultimatum, and on 2 March 1935, Prajadhipok abdicated, to be replaced by Ananda Mahidol. Prajadhipok issued a brief statement criticising the regime that included the following phrases, since often quoted by critics of Thailand's slow political development.

I am willing to surrender the powers I formerly exercised to the people as a whole, but I am not willing to turn them over to any individual or any group to use in an autocratic manner without heeding the voice of the people.

The former king had good grounds for complaint.[4]

Reaction to the abdication was muted. Stowe wrote that the absolutism of the monarchy had been replaced by that of the People's Party, with the military looming in the wings as the ultimate arbiter of power.[5]

Life after abdication and death edit

 
Queen Rambhai Barni bringing Prajadhipok's ashes back to Thailand, 1949

Prajadhipok spent the rest of his life with Queen Rambhai Barni in England. At the time of abdication, the couple lived at Knowle House, in Surrey, just outside London. However, this house was not suitable considering his health, so they moved to a smaller house in Virginia Water (still in Surrey), but with more space. The house was named "Hangmoor", but wishing to give it a more pleasant name, he called it "Glen Pammant", an anagram of an old Thai phrase tam pleng nam.[citation needed] They remained there for two years. They moved again to Vane Court, the oldest house in the village of Biddenden in Kent.[12] He led a peaceful life there, gardening in the morning and writing his autobiography in the afternoon.

In 1938 the royal couple moved to Compton House, in the village of Wentworth in Virginia Water, Surrey.

Due to bombing by the German Luftwaffe in 1940, the couple again moved, first to a small house in Devon, and then to Lake Vyrnwy Hotel in Powys, Wales, where the former king had a heart attack.

The couple returned to Compton House, as he expressed his preference to die there. King Prajadhipok died from heart failure on 30 May 1941.

His cremation was held at the Golders Green Crematorium in north London.[13] It was a simple affair attended by just Queen Ramphai and a handful of close relatives. Queen Ramphaiphanni stayed at Compton House for a further eight years before she returned to Thailand in 1949, bringing the king's ashes back with her.[14]

Legacy edit

Historian David K. Wyatt writes that Prajadhipok was "a hard-working, effective executor" who was "intellectually equal to the demands of his office", and whose main failing was to underestimate the Bangkok elite's growing nationalism, and that "[a]s late as his death in exile, many would have agreed with his judgement that a move towards democracy in 1932 was premature."[3]: 242  The idea that the 1932 revolution was premature is echoed in a common royalist sentiment that proliferated as the Thai monarchy regained status over ensuing decades. In this view, Prajadhipok is credited as the "father of Thai democracy",[15] who already intended to usher in democracy before the Khana Ratsadon prematurely carried out their revolution. Prajadhipok's abdication statement is often cited in support of this view.[16][17] Later historians have challenged it as a myth, citing evidence that Prajadhipok's political maneuvers leading up to his abdication had more to do with preserving the power and status of the declining monarchy than challenging the Khana Ratsadon's actual failures to uphold democratic ideals.[15][18]

Tributes to Prajadhipok edit

 
Royal Monogram of King Prajadhipok
Monarchs of
the Chakri dynasty
 Phutthayotfa Chulalok
(King Rama I)
 Phutthaloetla Naphalai
(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)

Infrastructure edit

Military ranks edit

Thai Honours edit

Foreign Honours edit

Ancestry edit

  1. ^ Thai: ประชาธิปก; RTGS: Prachathipok

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bhorombhakdi, Soravij. "HM King Prajadhipok". The Siamese Royalty A Personal Fascination. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Batson, Benjamin. (1984) The End of the Absolute Monarchy in Siam. Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ a b c Wyatt, David K. (1982) Thailand: A Short History. New Haven.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Terwiel, B.J. (2005) Thailand's Political History: From the Fall of Ayutthaya to Recent Times. River Books.
  5. ^ a b c Stowe, Judith A. (1990) Siam Becomes Thailand. Hurst & Company.
  6. ^ Sonthi Techanan (1976) Plans for Democratic Development in the Seventh Reign. Kasetsart University.
  7. ^ "ชิงสุกก่อนห่าม" วาทกรรมซัดกลับคณะราษฎร ในแบบเรียนประวัติศาสตร์ไทย
  8. ^ Vella, Walter (1955) The Impact of the West on Government in Thailand. University of California Press.
  9. ^ Thawatt Mokarapong. (1972) History of the Thai Revolution. Chalermnit.
  10. ^ Pridi Phanomyong (1974) Ma vie mouvementée. Paris.
  11. ^ a b c d e f ใจจริง, ณัฐพล (2013). ขอฝันใฝ่ในฝันอันเหลือเชื่อ: ความเคลื่อนไหวของขบวนการปฏิปักษ์ปฏิวัติสยาม (พ.ศ. 2475-2500) (in Thai) (1 ed.). ฟ้าเดียวกัน. ISBN 9786167667188.
  12. ^ Lawrie, Sam (August 2023). "£5.5m country estate and former home of King of Siam for sale in Biddenden, near Ashford". Kent Online. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  13. ^ "อัญเชิญพระบรมอัฐิร.7 จากลอนดอนกลับสยาม แรกบรรจุใน "หีบ" ก่อนใช้พระโกศให้สมพระเกียรติ". 31 May 2021.
  14. ^ "พระมหากษัตริย์ผู้ไม่มีงานออกพระเมรุ พระบาทสมเด็จพระปกเกล้าเจ้าอยู่หัว (ร.7)". 30 October 2017.
  15. ^ a b Ferrara, Federico (2012). "The legend of King Prajadhipok: Tall tales and stubborn facts on the seventh reign in Siam". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 43 (1): 4–31. doi:10.1017/S0022463411000646. ISSN 0022-4634. S2CID 153723441.
  16. ^ Baker, Chris; Phongpaichit, Pasuk (2005). A History of Thailand. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 232.
  17. ^ อิ๋วสกุล, ธนาพล (25 June 2018). "The Third Emergence of the People's Party". The 101 World. Retrieved 30 August 2022.
  18. ^ ก้องกีรติ, ประจักษ์ (2013). และแล้วความเคลื่อนไหวก็ปรากฏ (in Thai). ฟ้าเดียวกัน. pp. 415–421. ISBN 978-616-7667-25-6.
  19. ^ [bare URL PDF]
  20. ^ [bare URL PDF]
  21. ^ [bare URL PDF]
  22. ^ Jørgen Pedersen (2009). Riddere af Elefantordenen, 1559–2009 (in Danish). Syddansk Universitetsforlag. p. 470. ISBN 978-87-7674-434-2.
  23. ^ Mémorial du centenaire de l'Ordre de Léopold. 1832–1932. Bruxelles, J. Rozez, 1933.
  24. ^ https://journaldemonaco.gouv.mc/var/jdm/storage/original/application/c87adfd3158c152aa679116218662f23.pdf [bare URL PDF]

External links edit

Prajadhipok
Born: 8 November 1893 Died: 30 May 1941
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Siam
1925–1935
Succeeded by

prajadhipok, this, article, about, king, aircraft, named, after, aircraft, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, so. This article is about the king For the aircraft named after him see Prajadhipok aircraft This article 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 Prajadhipok news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message Prajadhipok a 8 November 1893 30 May 1941 was the seventh king of Siam from the Chakri dynasty titled Rama VII His reign was a turbulent time for Siam due to political and social changes during the 1932 Siamese revolution He is to date the only Siamese monarch of the Chakri dynasty to abdicate PrajadhipokprachathipkKing Rama VIIFormal portrait c 1930sKing of SiamReign26 November 1925 2 March 1935Coronation25 February 1926PredecessorVajiravudh Rama VI SuccessorAnanda Mahidol Rama VIII Born 1893 11 08 8 November 1893Grand Palace Bangkok SiamDied30 May 1941 1941 05 30 aged 47 Virginia Water Surrey EnglandBurial3 June 1941Golders Green Crematorium London England UKSpouseRambai Barni m 1918 wbr HouseChakri dynastyFatherChulalongkorn Rama V MotherSaovabha PhongsriReligionTheravada BuddhismSignature PrajadhipokPrivy SealThai nameThaiphrabathsmedcphraprminthrmhaprachathipk phrapkeklaecaxyuhwRTGSPhrabat Somdet Phra Poramenthra Maha Prachathipok Phra Pok Klao Chao Yu Hua Contents 1 Early life 2 Last absolute monarch 3 Revolution of 1932 4 First constitutional monarch 4 1 King Prajadhipok s trip to Europe 5 Abdication 6 Life after abdication and death 7 Legacy 8 Tributes to Prajadhipok 8 1 Infrastructure 8 2 Military ranks 8 3 Thai Honours 8 4 Foreign Honours 9 Ancestry 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Young Prajadhipok and his mother Saovabha Phongsri Somdet Chaofa Prajadhipok Sakdidej Thai smedcecafaprachathipkskdiedchn was born on 8 November 1893 in Bangkok Siam now Thailand to King Chulalongkorn and Queen Saovabha Phongsri Prince Prajadhipok was the youngest of nine children born to the couple Overall he was the king s second youngest child of a total of 77 and the 33rd and youngest of Chulalongkorn s sons 1 Unlikely to succeed to the throne Prince Prajadhipok chose to pursue a military career Like many of the king s children he was sent abroad to study going to Eton College in 1906 then to the Woolwich Military Academy from which he graduated in 1913 He received a commission in the Royal Horse Artillery in the British Army based in Aldershot In 1910 Chulalongkorn died and was succeeded by Prajadhipok s older brother also a son of Queen Saovabha Crown Prince Vajiravudh who became King Rama VI Prince Prajadhipok was by then commissioned in both the British Army and the Royal Siamese Army With the outbreak of the First World War and the declaration of Siamese neutrality King Vajiravudh ordered his younger brother to resign his British commission and return to Siam immediately a great embarrassment to the prince who wanted to serve with his men on the Western front Once home Prajadhipok became a high ranking military official in Siam In 1917 he was ordained temporarily as a monk 2 30 as was customary for most Buddhist Siamese men In August 1918 Prince Prajadhipok married his childhood friend and cousin Rambai Barni a descendant of King Mongkut Prajadhipok s grandfather and his Royal Consort Piam They were married at Sukhothai Palace which was a wedding gift to the couple from Queen Saovabha 1 After the war in Europe ended he attended the Ecole Superieure de Guerre in France returning to Siam to the Siamese military During this time he was granted the additional title Krom Luang Sukhothai Prince of Sukhothai Prajadhipok lived a generally quiet life with his wife at their residence Sukhothai Palace next to the Chao Phraya River The couple had no children Prajadhipok soon found himself rising rapidly in succession to the throne as his brothers all died within a relatively short period In 1925 King Vajiravudh himself died at the age of 44 Prajadhipok became absolute monarch at only thirty two He was crowned King of Siam on 25 February 1926 Last absolute monarch edit nbsp King Prajadhipok on TIME magazine cover in 1931 nbsp Thai stamp of Rama VII s reign Relatively unprepared for his new responsibilities Prajadhipok was nevertheless intelligent diplomatic in his dealings with others modest and eager to learn 3 235 However he had inherited serious political and economic problems from his predecessor 2 30 The budget was heavily in deficit and the royal financial accounts were in serious disorder The entire world was in the throes of the Great Depression In an institutional innovation intended to restore confidence in the monarchy and government Prajadhipok in what was virtually his first act as king announced the creation of the Supreme Council of the State of Siam This council was made up of five experienced members of the royal family although to emphasise the break with the previous reign the selected five had all fallen out of favour with the previous monarch 2 31 The council thus comprised three of the king s uncles Prince Bhanurangsi Prince Naris and Prince Damrong Rajanubhab and two of his half brothers Prince Kitiyakon Prince Chantaburi and Prince Boriphat 4 253 Many of the Princes of the Supreme Council felt that it was their duty to make amends for the mistakes of the previous reign but their acts were not generally appreciated for the government failed to communicate to the public the purpose of the policies they pursued to rectify Vajiravudh s extreme financial extravagances 5 Gradually these princes arrogated power to themselves monopolising all the main ministerial positions and appointing their sons and brothers to both administrative and military posts By April 1926 almost the entire cabinet of ministry heads had been replaced with newly appointed Princes or nobles with only three former members being re appointed 4 254 While the family appointments brought back men of talent and experience they also signalled a return to royal oligarchy The king clearly wished to demonstrate a clear break with the discredited sixth reign and his choice of men to fill the top positions appeared to be guided largely by a wish to restore a Chulalongkorn type government 4 Unlike his predecessor the king read virtually all state papers that came his way from ministerial submissions to petitions by citizens 4 255 The king was painstaking and conscientious he would elicit comments and suggestions from a range of experts and study them noting the good points in each submission but when various options were available he would seldom be able to select the best one and abandon others He would often rely upon the Supreme Council to prod him in a particular direction 4 254 nbsp King Prajadhipok in Khrui carrying Krabi sword From the beginning of his reign King Prajadhipok was acutely aware that political change was necessary if the monarchy was to be preserved 2 130 He viewed his newly established Supreme Council as an institutional check upon the powers of an absolute monarch 2 130 During 1926 Prajadhipok experimented with using the Privy Council which had over 200 members at that time as a quasi legislative body 2 134 This large of an assembly proved too cumbersome and in 1927 Prajadhipok created the Committee of the Privy Council consisting of 40 members selected from the royal family or nobility 2 135 The committee was received positively by the press and was envisaged as a forerunner of a parliament or National Assembly 2 137 139 In practice however the committee remained relatively unimportant and sadly did not develop into a more powerful or representative body 2 137 In 1926 Prajadhipok wrote a lengthy memorandum to his American adviser Francis B Sayre titled Problems of Siam in which he set forth nine questions he felt were the most serious facing the nation The third question asked whether Siam should have a parliamentary system which Prajadhipok doubted The fourth question asked whether Siam was ready for representative government to which Prajadhipok answered my personal opinion is an emphatic NO 2 38 However the king did see a possibility to introduce reform at the local level as the next step in our educational move towards democracy 2 140 In 1926 he began moves to develop the concept of prachaphiban or municipality which had emerged late in the fifth reign as a law regarding public health and sanitation 6 Information was obtained regarding local self government in surrounding countries and proposals to allow certain municipalities to raise local taxes and manage their own budgets were drawn up The fact that the public was not sufficiently educated to make the scheme work militated against the success of this administrative venture Nevertheless the idea of teaching the Siamese the concept of democracy through a measure of decentralisation of power in municipalities had become in Prajadhipok s mind fundamental to future policy making 2 However Yasukichi Yatabe Japanese minister to Siam criticized the king s way and that it would not be accomplished in a hundred years time 7 nbsp State visit of Rama VII to Japan at Kōtoku in 1931 In September 1931 Britain abandoned the gold standard and devalued sterling by 30 percent 4 259 This created a crisis for Siam since most of its foreign exchange was held in sterling 2 195 The Minister of Finance kept Siam on the gold standard by linking the currency to the US dollar but debate about this policy raged within the government into 1932 2 195 196 One impact of this policy was that Siam s rice exports became more expensive than competitor exporters negatively impacting revenue 3 240 In mid October 1931 the king returned from a trip to Canada and the US and ordered Prince Devawongse Varoprakar the Minister of Foreign Affairs to prepare a constitution The task of drafting this document was given to the American Raymond B Stevens and Phaya Sri Wisarn Waja 2 148 In March the following year they submitted an Outline of Changes in the Form of Government together with their comments 2 149 Prajadhipok originally planned to announce the new constitution to the nation of 6 April at the opening of the Memorial Bridge to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Chakri dynasty 2 150 These proposals met strong opposition from Prince Damrong and other royal members of the Supreme Council and despite his own misgivings that to not proceed would result in a coup against his government the king ultimately did not make the planned announcement On 20 January 1932 with the country deep in depression the king convened a round table meeting to discuss the many competing arguments and to agree on how to tackle the crisis 2 204 From this meeting it was agreed to make large cuts in government spending and implement a retrenchment programme Two weeks later on 5 February the king addressed a group of military officers and spoke at length about the economic situation In this speech he remarked I myself know nothing at all about managing finances and all I can do is listen to the opinions of others and choose the best If I have made a mistake I believe I really deserve to be excused by the people of Siam 2 204 No previous monarch had ever spoken so honestly 2 205 The speech was widely reported and many interpreted his words not as a frank appeal for understanding and cooperation but as a sign of weakness and proof that the system of rule of fallible autocrats should be abolished 8 Revolution of 1932 editMain article Siamese Revolution of 1932 This section cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help providing page numbers for existing citations March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Sesquicentennial celebrations of The Revolution in 1932 A small group of soldiers and civil servants began secretly plotting to overthrow absolute monarchy and bring a constitutional government to the kingdom Their efforts culminated in an almost bloodless revolution on the morning of 24 June 1932 by the self proclaimed Khana Ratsadon People s Party khnarasdr 4 262 While Prajadhipok was away at Klai Kangwon Palace in Hua Hin the plotters took control of the Ananda Samakhom Throne Hall in Bangkok and arrested key officials mainly princes and relatives of the king 4 262 The People s Party demanded Prajadhipok become a constitutional monarch and grant Thai people a constitution In the event of a negative response they reserved the right to declare Siam a republic The king immediately accepted the People s Party s request and the first permanent constitution of Siam was promulgated on 10 December 4 263 Prajadhipok returned to Bangkok on 26 June and received the coup plotters in a royal audience As they entered the room Prajadhipok greeted them saying I rise in honour of the Khana Ratsadorn 9 10 It was a significant gesture because according to previous royal rituals monarchs were to remain seated while their subjects made obeisance this showed that Prajadhipok was acknowledging the changed circumstances 5 First constitutional monarch edit nbsp King Prajadhipok signs The Constitution of the Siam Kingdom 1932 clarification needed on 10 December 1932 In the early stages of the constitutional monarchy the King and the royalists seemed to be able to compromise with Khana Ratsadon The constitutional bill which was drafted by Pridi Banomyong and intended to be a permanent one was made temporary The new constitution restored some of the monarch s lost power and status Among them were introduction of unelected half of the House of Representatives and royal veto power The country s first prime minister Phraya Manopakorn Nititada was a conservative and royalist nobleman The compromise broke down quickly He did not contest when his interpretation of Pridi s economic plan which also aim on land reform and seizure of royal land was released with his signature The king played a role in the coup d etat of April 1933 where the House was ordered to close by the Prime Minister He signed an order to execute Khana Ratsadon leaders But Khana Ratsadon s military wing leader Phraya Phahol Phonphayuhasena ousted the government and restored its power He played an active role in an anti revolutionary network which also aimed to assassinate Khana Ratsadon s leaders 11 27 In October 1933 the maverick Prince Boworadej a former minister of defence led an armed revolt against the government In the Boworadet Rebellion he mobilised several provincial garrisons and marched on Bangkok occupying the Don Muang aerodrome Prince Boworadej accused the government of being disrespectful to the monarch and of promoting communism and demanded that government leaders resign However the rebellion ultimately failed The king did not directly support the rebellion but there was a cheque from the treasury to Boworadej 11 11 The insurrection diminished the king s prestige When the revolt began Prajadhipok immediately informed the government that he regretted the strife and civil disturbances The royal couple then took refuge at Songkhla in the far south The king s withdrawal from the scene was interpreted by the Khana Ratsadorn as a failure to do his duty By not throwing his full support behind government forces he had undermined their trust in him 2 In 1934 the Assembly voted to amend civil and military penal codes The king vetoed the changes to the separation between personal and royal assets as he did not want to pay tax and protested an amendment to diminish the king s consideration of death sentence over the courts 11 34 5 After many losses to Khana Ratsadon the king seemed to change his stance and expressed support for democracy and blamed Khana Ratsadon for being anti democratic 11 35 6 However Phibul later discussed in the House that unelected parliamentary members were the king s wish 11 17 8 and another House member criticized the king for being unbearable 11 36 Prajadhipok whose relations with the Khana Ratsadon had been deteriorating for some time went on a tour of Europe before visiting England for medical treatment He continued to correspond with the government regarding the conditions under which he would continue to serve He tried to retain some of the royal powers such as power to veto law with no possible override Other disagreements were on royal assets and royal benefits After the government did not comply on 14 October Prajadhipok announced his intention to abdicate unless his requests were met King Prajadhipok s trip to Europe edit nbsp King Prajadhipok and Adolf Hitler at Berlin Tempelhof Airport in Nazi Germany 1934 nbsp King Prajadhipok and Queen Rambhai Barni with Konstantin von Neurath in Nazi Germany 1934 nbsp King Prajadhipok and Queen Rambhai Barni with British Premier Ramsay MacDonald at Number 10 Downing Street 1934 nbsp King Rama VII and Queen Rambhai Barni after an audience with Pope Pius XI at Vatican City 1934Abdication edit nbsp Prajadhipok looking outside a train c 1930 The People s Party rejected the ultimatum and on 2 March 1935 Prajadhipok abdicated to be replaced by Ananda Mahidol Prajadhipok issued a brief statement criticising the regime that included the following phrases since often quoted by critics of Thailand s slow political development I am willing to surrender the powers I formerly exercised to the people as a whole but I am not willing to turn them over to any individual or any group to use in an autocratic manner without heeding the voice of the people The former king had good grounds for complaint 4 Reaction to the abdication was muted Stowe wrote that the absolutism of the monarchy had been replaced by that of the People s Party with the military looming in the wings as the ultimate arbiter of power 5 Life after abdication and death edit nbsp Queen Rambhai Barni bringing Prajadhipok s ashes back to Thailand 1949 Prajadhipok spent the rest of his life with Queen Rambhai Barni in England At the time of abdication the couple lived at Knowle House in Surrey just outside London However this house was not suitable considering his health so they moved to a smaller house in Virginia Water still in Surrey but with more space The house was named Hangmoor but wishing to give it a more pleasant name he called it Glen Pammant an anagram of an old Thai phrase tam pleng nam citation needed They remained there for two years They moved again to Vane Court the oldest house in the village of Biddenden in Kent 12 He led a peaceful life there gardening in the morning and writing his autobiography in the afternoon In 1938 the royal couple moved to Compton House in the village of Wentworth in Virginia Water Surrey Due to bombing by the German Luftwaffe in 1940 the couple again moved first to a small house in Devon and then to Lake Vyrnwy Hotel in Powys Wales where the former king had a heart attack The couple returned to Compton House as he expressed his preference to die there King Prajadhipok died from heart failure on 30 May 1941 His cremation was held at the Golders Green Crematorium in north London 13 It was a simple affair attended by just Queen Ramphai and a handful of close relatives Queen Ramphaiphanni stayed at Compton House for a further eight years before she returned to Thailand in 1949 bringing the king s ashes back with her 14 Legacy editHistorian David K Wyatt writes that Prajadhipok was a hard working effective executor who was intellectually equal to the demands of his office and whose main failing was to underestimate the Bangkok elite s growing nationalism and that a s late as his death in exile many would have agreed with his judgement that a move towards democracy in 1932 was premature 3 242 The idea that the 1932 revolution was premature is echoed in a common royalist sentiment that proliferated as the Thai monarchy regained status over ensuing decades In this view Prajadhipok is credited as the father of Thai democracy 15 who already intended to usher in democracy before the Khana Ratsadon prematurely carried out their revolution Prajadhipok s abdication statement is often cited in support of this view 16 17 Later historians have challenged it as a myth citing evidence that Prajadhipok s political maneuvers leading up to his abdication had more to do with preserving the power and status of the declining monarchy than challenging the Khana Ratsadon s actual failures to uphold democratic ideals 15 18 Tributes to Prajadhipok edit nbsp Royal Monogram of King Prajadhipok nbsp A Statue of the king in Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University Nonthaburi nbsp King Rama VII statue at Parliament House of Thailand Monarchs of the Chakri dynasty nbsp Phutthayotfa Chulalok King Rama I nbsp Phutthaloetla Naphalai King Rama II nbsp Nangklao King Rama III nbsp Mongkut King Rama IV nbsp Chulalongkorn King Rama V nbsp Vajiravudh King Rama VI nbsp Prajadhipok King Rama VII nbsp Ananda Mahidol King Rama VIII nbsp Bhumibol Adulyadej King Rama IX nbsp Vajiralongkorn King Rama X vte Infrastructure edit Sukhothai Thammathirat University Phra Pok Klao Bridge Bangkok Prajadhipok Road Bangkok Prapokklao Hospital Chanthaburi Province Military ranks edit Field Marshal Admiral of the Fleet 19 20 21 Thai Honours edit nbsp The Most Illustrious Order of the Royal House of Chakri nbsp The Ancient and Auspicious Order of the Nine Gems nbsp Knight Grand Cordon of the Order of Chula Chom Klao nbsp Ratana Varabhorn Order of Merit nbsp Knight Grand Commander of the Order of Rama nbsp Knight Grand Cordon of the Order of the White Elephant nbsp Knight Grand Cordon of the Order of the Crown of Thailand nbsp Dushdi Mala Pin of Service to the Nation Civilian nbsp Chakra Mala Medal nbsp King Rama V Royal Cypher Medal First Class nbsp King Rama VI Royal Cypher Medal First Class nbsp King Rama VII Royal Cypher Medal First Class nbsp Rajini Medal Foreign Honours edit nbsp Japan nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum nbsp Denmark nbsp Knight of the Order of the Elephant 8 February 1926 22 nbsp Netherlands nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion nbsp UK nbsp Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath GCB nbsp Belgium nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold 1926 23 nbsp France nbsp Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour nbsp Kingdom of Italy nbsp Knight of the Supreme Order of the Most Holy Annunciation nbsp Sweden nbsp Knight of the Order of the Seraphim nbsp Monaco nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Charles 1 March 1934 24 nbsp Hungary nbsp Grand Cross of the Hungarian Order of Merit nbsp Czechoslovak Republic nbsp Order of the White Lion First ClassAncestry editAncestors of Prajadhipok8 12 King Buddha Loetla Nabhalai Rama II of Rattanakosin4 6 King Mongkut Rama IV of Siam9 13 Princess Bunrot of Rattanakosin2 King Chulalongkorn Rama V of Siam10 Prince Siriwongse Prince Matyabidhak5 Princess Ramphoei Sirivongse11 Noi1 King Prajadhipok Rama VII of Siam12 8 King Buddha Loetla Nabhalai Rama II of Rattanakosin6 4 King Mongkut Rama IV of Siam13 9 Princess Bunrot of Rattanakosin3 Princess Saovabha Phongsri of Siam14 Taeng Sucharitakul Luang Asasamdaeng7 Piam Sucharitakul15 Nak Thao Sucharitthamrong Thai prachathipk RTGS PrachathipokSee also editKing Prajadhipok Museum Siamese coup d etat of 1932 History of Thailand 1932 1973 List of covers of Time magazine 1930s References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prajadhipok a b Bhorombhakdi Soravij HM King Prajadhipok The Siamese Royalty A Personal Fascination Retrieved 20 October 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Batson Benjamin 1984 The End of the Absolute Monarchy in Siam Oxford University Press a b c Wyatt David K 1982 Thailand A Short History New Haven a b c d e f g h i j Terwiel B J 2005 Thailand s Political History From the Fall of Ayutthaya to Recent Times River Books a b c Stowe Judith A 1990 Siam Becomes Thailand Hurst amp Company Sonthi Techanan 1976 Plans for Democratic Development in the Seventh Reign Kasetsart University chingsukkxnham wathkrrmsdklbkhnarasdr inaebberiynprawtisastrithy Vella Walter 1955 The Impact of the West on Government in Thailand University of California Press Thawatt Mokarapong 1972 History of the Thai Revolution Chalermnit Pridi Phanomyong 1974 Ma vie mouvementee Paris a b c d e f iccring nthphl 2013 khxfnifinfnxnehluxechux khwamekhluxnihwkhxngkhbwnkarptipksptiwtisyam ph s 2475 2500 in Thai 1 ed faediywkn ISBN 9786167667188 Lawrie Sam August 2023 5 5m country estate and former home of King of Siam for sale in Biddenden near Ashford Kent Online Retrieved 2 August 2023 xyechiyphrabrmxthir 7 caklxndxnklbsyam aerkbrrcuin hib kxnichphraoksihsmphraekiyrti 31 May 2021 phramhakstriyphuimminganxxkphraemru phrabathsmedcphrapkeklaecaxyuhw r 7 30 October 2017 a b Ferrara Federico 2012 The legend of King Prajadhipok Tall tales and stubborn facts on the seventh reign in Siam Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 43 1 4 31 doi 10 1017 S0022463411000646 ISSN 0022 4634 S2CID 153723441 Baker Chris Phongpaichit Pasuk 2005 A History of Thailand New York Cambridge University Press p 232 xiwskul thnaphl 25 June 2018 The Third Emergence of the People s Party The 101 World Retrieved 30 August 2022 kxngkirti pracks 2013 aelaaelwkhwamekhluxnihwkprakt in Thai faediywkn pp 415 421 ISBN 978 616 7667 25 6 1 bare URL PDF 2 bare URL PDF 3 bare URL PDF Jorgen Pedersen 2009 Riddere af Elefantordenen 1559 2009 in Danish Syddansk Universitetsforlag p 470 ISBN 978 87 7674 434 2 Memorial du centenaire de l Ordre de Leopold 1832 1932 Bruxelles J Rozez 1933 https journaldemonaco gouv mc var jdm storage original application c87adfd3158c152aa679116218662f23 pdf bare URL PDF External links editKing Prajadhipok s Institute Prajadhipok s coronation at YouTube by the Thai Film Archive Newspaper clippings about Prajadhipok in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW PrajadhipokHouse of ChakriBorn 8 November 1893 Died 30 May 1941 Regnal titles Preceded byVajiravudh King of Siam1925 1935 Succeeded byAnanda Mahidol Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prajadhipok amp oldid 1220185740, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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