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Anurak Devesh

Siamese prince and military leader (1746–1806)


Summary

Siamese prince and military leader (1746–1806)

FieldValue
titlePrince Anurak Devesh
imageAnurak Devesh.jpg
captionPortrait at Wat Amarindraram
name
successionDeputy Viceroy of Siam
reign– 20 December 1806
reign-typeTenure
coronationPhutthayotfa Chulalok (Rama I)
cor-typeAppointer
predecessorBorommakot (Phon) (as Deputy Viceroy of Ayutthaya)
successorNo successor until 1885, when the deputy viceroyalty was abolished
regentMaha Sura Singhanat
reg-typeViceroy
birth_date
birth_placeAyutthaya, Ayutthaya
death_date
death_placeBangkok, Siam
spouses
issue35 sons and daughters
dynastyChakri
fatherPhra Intraraksa (Seam)
motherThepsuthavadi
religionTheravada Buddhism

| reign-type = Tenure | cor-type = Appointer | reg-type = Viceroy

Somdet Phra Chao Lan Ther Chaofa Thong-In Krom Phra Rajawang Boworn Sathan Phimuk (, lit: His Royal Highness Prince Thong-In, the Deputy Viceroy of Siam) (28 March 1746 – 20 December 1806) was a Siamese prince and military leader. A nephew of King Phutthayotfa Chulalok (Rama I) the founder of the Chakri dynasty, he was appointed Deputy Viceroy or Rear Palace, the 3rd highest position in the kingdom. He was the only person to hold that title during the Rattanakosin Kingdom (1782–1932).

Life

Thong-In (ทองอิน) was born on 28 March 1746 to an Ayutthayan aristocrat Phra Intraraksa (Seam) and Sa (later Princess Sister Thepsuthavadi; the eldest child of Thongdee and Daoreung). Sa was also the elder sister of Thong Duang, later Chao Phraya Chakri and in 1782 King Phutthayotfa Chulalok. Thong-In was the eldest child and had two younger brothers and one sister.

For a time Thong-In served in the army under King Taksin of Thonburi under the name Luang Ritnaiwair (หลวงฤทธิ์นายเวร). In 1780 he was raised to the rank of Phraya Suriyaphai (พระยาสุริยอภัย) and was appointed governor of Nakhon Ratchasima.

When his uncle ascended to the throne as King of the new Rattanakosin Kingdom in 1782, Thong-In was elevated to the rank of Chaofa (most senior rank of Prince). Soon he was appointed to the title of Krom Phra Rajawang Boworn Sathan Phimuk, or the Rear Palace, the Thai interpretation of the position of (Deputy Uparaja). This position made him the third most powerful individual in the Kingdom behind the Front Palace and the King. When the new capital was built at Bangkok, Prince Anurak Devesh built his residence (the actual Rear Palace) in Thonburi, directly across the Chao Phraya River from the Front Palace. Today the site is occupied by Siriraj Hospital.

After becoming the Rear Palace, he fought alongside King Rama I during the Nine Armies War in 1785 against King Bodawpaya of Burma. He personally accompanied the King during the recapture the city of Phitsanulok.

Death

Anurak Devesh died on December 20, 1806, at the age of 60. After his death, King Rama I decided not to appoint anyone to succeed him as Rear Palace and left the office vacant. This custom was followed by subsequent kings until the official abolishment of the title in 1885 by King Chulalongkorn, thus making Anurak Devesh the only Rear Palace of the Chakri Dynasty.

The Prince had 35 children. Six were borne by his consort Thongyu, while the remaining 29 were borne by concubines. The six children from Thongyu (four sons and two daughters) received the title of Phra Ong Chao (the middle rank of Princes). The rest (borne with concubines) received the title of Mom Chao (the most junior rank of Princes). Additionally, during the reign of King Mongkut (Rama IV), all 35 children were given the additional title of "Royal Cousins" (พระสัมพันธวงศ์เธอ or Phra Samphan Wong Ther).

References

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Wikipedia Source

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