Thonburi Palace
In Thai, it is known as
Phra Rachawang Deum, literally the
‘Former Palace’, but is usually translated as the ‘Old Palace’. It
was the royal residence
of King
Taksin,
located in
Thonburi,
adjacent to
Wat Arun
and today within
the compound of the naval base of the
Royal Thai Navy
at the old
Wichai Prasit
Fort (fig.).
After the fall of
Ayutthaya
in 1767, then
general Taksin
assembled an army (fig.)
to expel the Burmese from Siamese territory and
in 1768 founded Thonburi as the new capital, while also becoming
the new King of
Siam.
However, amidst a power struggle with
General
Chakri,
he was accused of megalomania,
put on trial, found guilty and executed in 1782,
whereupon General Chakri ascended the throne himself as King
Rama I.
He moved the
Siamese capital to the eastbank of the
Chao Phraya
River, where he had
Phra Rachawang,
i.e. the
Grand Palace
(fig.),
built as his residence and Thonburi Palace consequently became known
as the ‘Former Palace’. The complex includes
the Throne Hall,
i.e.
a venue which was
in the Thonburi used for holding court and important ceremonies;
Sala
Somdet
Phra Chao
Taksin
Maha Raj
(map
-
fig.),
a shrine that housed a statue of King Taksin holding a sword in one hand,
but which now has been relocated to the riverfront (map -
fig.);
Keng
Koo, a twin
residences in Chinese-style, which are referred to as the
Chinese-rooftop Twins (map
-
fig.); Phra Pin
Palace Building (map
-
fig.), which in the
Rattanakosin
Period served as the residence
of
Phra Pinklao,
the younger brother of
Rama IV,
who was the
Uparacha,
as well as the
former Royal Thai Naval
Academy (fig.),
which can be seen from the riverfront gate, that bears the
Naval Academy's emblem (fig.),
as well as a plaque commemorating the Academy's establishment in
1906 by King
Chulalongkorn
(fig.),
of which the text also appears on a postage stamp issued in 2006, to
mark the
Royal Thai Naval
Academy's 100th Anniversay (fig.).
See also POSTAGE STAMPS
and
MAP.
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