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Southeast Asia has been inhabited for more than half
a million years. Recent archaeological studies suggest
that by 4000 B.C. communities in what is now Thailand
had emerged as centers of early bronze metallurgy. This
development along with the cultivation of wet rice provided
the impetus for social and political organization. Research
suggests that these innovations may actually have been
transmitted from there to the rest of Asia including
to China.
The Thai are related linguistically to groups originating
in southern China. Migrations from southern China to
Southeast Asia may have occurred in the 6th and 7th
centuries. Malay Mon and Khmer civilizations flourished
in the region prior to the arrival of the ethnic Thai.
Thais date the founding of their nation to the 13th
century. According to tradition in 1238 Thai chieftains
overthrew their Khmer overlords at Sukhothai and established
a Thai kingdom. After its decline a new Thai kingdom
emerged in 1350 on the Chao Praya River.
The first ruler of the Kingdom of Ayutthaya King Rama
Thibodi made two important contributions to Thai history:
the establishment and promotion of Theravada Buddhism
as the official religion (to differentiate his kingdom
from the neighboring Hindu kingdom of Angkor) and the
compilation of the Dharmashastra a legal code based
on Hindu sources and traditional Thai custom. The Dharmashastra
remained a tool of Thai law until late in the 19th century.
Beginning with the Portuguese in the 16th century Ayutthaya
had some contact with the West but until the 1800s its
relations with neighboring nations as well as with India
and China were of primary importance.
After more than 400 years of power in 1767 the Kingdom
of Ayutthaya was brought down by invading Burmese armies
and its capital burned. After a single-reign capital
established at Thonburi by Taksin a new capital city
was founded in 1782 across the Chao Phraya at the site
of present-day Bangkok by the founder of the Chakri
dynasty. The first Chakri king was crowned Rama I. Rama's
heirs became increasingly concerned with the threat
of European colonialism after British victories in neighboring
Burma in 1826.
The first Thai recognition of Western power in the
region was the Treaty of Amity and Commerce with the
United Kingdom in 1826. In 1833 the United States began
diplomatic exchanges with Siam (as Thailand was called
until 1938). However it was during the later reigns
of Rama IV (or King Mongkut (1851-1868)) and his son
Rama V (King Chulalongkorn (1868-1910)) that Thailand
established firm reapprechment with Western powers.
The Thais believe that the diplomatic skills of these
monarchs combined with the modernizing reforms of the
Thai Government made Siam the only country in South
and Southeast Asia to avoid European colonization.
In 1932 a bloodless coup transformed the Government
of Thailand from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy.
King Prajadhipok (Rama VII) initially accepted this
change but later surrendered the kingship to his 10-year
old nephew. Upon his abdication King Prajadhipok said
that the obligation of a ruler was to reign for the
good of the whole people not for a select few. Although
nominally a constitutional monarchy Thailand was ruled
by a series of military governments interspersed with
brief periods of democracy from that time until the
1992 elections. Since the 1992 elections Thailand has
been a functioning democracy with constitutional changes
of government.
As with the rest of Southeast Asia Thailand was occupied
by the Japanese during the Second World War. Since Japan's
defeat in 1945 Thailand has had very close relations
with the United States. Threatened by communist revolutions
in neighboring countries such as Burma Vietnam Cambodia
and Laos Thailand actively sought to contain communist
expansion in the region. Recently Thailand also has
been an active member in the regional Association of
South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
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