Ban Kuti Jihn Museum
Museum in
Thonburi,
named after the
community in which it
is located (fig.)
and which in turn is named after the
epithet given to the
Santa Cruz Church
in 1835,
after the original
church made of wood
(fig.)
was rebuilt
in a design resembling Chinese
edifices called
Keng
(fig.),
and which
was subsequently nicknamed
Kuti Jihn
(กุฎีจีน), i.e.
‘Chinese
dwelling’.
The small family-run
museum is housed in a building that used to be the home of a
Catholic family in the Kuti Jhin Community and has a cosy garden, a
coffeeshop and a souvenir shop, and is dedicated to the history,
culture and traditions of this old Portuguese-Thai community,
especially the historical events in the period immediately
after the fall of
Ayutthaya in 1767,
i.e. the battle by General
Taksin
that drove the
Burmese out of
Siam,
his instatement as the new King, and the establishment of Thonburi
as the new Siamese capital. Earlier, in 1516, Portugal had signed a
treaty with Ayutthaya to supply firearms and ammunition. With this treaty came the rights for the Portuguese to reside,
trade and practice their religion in the Kingdom.
In recognition of
their support against the Burmese in the form of supply of
cannons and muskets, as well as Portuguese mercenaries,
King Taksin
(fig.)
on 14
September 1769 granted the Portuguese a plot of land near his royal residence,
now known as the
Thonburi Palace
(fig.),
in order to build a church, in the area today known as
Kuti Jihn.
In Thai,
the museum is known as
Phiphithaphan Ban
Kuti
Jihn and in English its
name is also transcribed
Baan Kudichin Museum.
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