Taksin

  • Taksin the Great
  • พระเจ้าตากสินมหาราช
King of Ayutthaya
Statue of Taksin the Great at Hat-Sung Palace (Wat Khung Taphao), Uttaradit province
King of Thonburi
Reign28 December 1767 – 1 April 1782
Coronation28 December 1767
PredecessorEkkathat (as King of Ayutthaya)
SuccessorPhutthayotfa Chulalok (Rama I) (as King of Rattanakosin)
ViceroyInthraphithak
BornSin (Zheng Zhao)
(1734-04-17)17 April 1734
Ayutthaya, Ayutthaya
Died7 April 1782(1782-04-07) (aged 47)
Bangkok, Siam
Burial
Wat Intharam, Bangkok
Spouses
  • Batboricha (Son)
  • Boricha Phakdi (Chim)
  • Consort Prang
Issue21 sons and 9 daughters, including:
Regnal name
  • Borommaracha IV
  • Sanphet X
DynastyThonburi
FatherYong Saetae (Zheng Yong)
MotherNok-lang (later Princess Phithak Thephamat)
ReligionTheravada Buddhism
Military service
AllegianceAyutthaya Kingdom
Thonburi Kingdom
Battles/wars

Taksin the Great or the King of Thonburi (17 April 1734 – 7 April 1782) was a Thai Chinese general who became the only King of Thonburi that ruled Siam from 1767 to 1782.

Taksin had been an aristocrat in the Ayutthaya Kingdom and then was a major leader during the liberation of Siam from Burmese occupation after the Second Fall of Ayutthaya in 1767, and the subsequent unification of Siam after it fell under various warlords. He established the city of Thonburi as the new capital, as the city of Ayutthaya had been almost completely destroyed by the invaders. His reign was characterized by numerous wars; he fought to repel new Burmese invasions and to subjugate the northern Thai kingdom of Lanna, the Laotian principalities, and threatening Cambodia.

Although warfare occupied most of Taksin's reign, he paid a great deal of attention to politics, administration, economy, and the welfare of the country. He promoted trade and fostered relations with foreign countries. He had roads built and canals dug. Apart from restoring and renovating temples, the king attempted to revive literature, and various branches of the arts such as drama, painting, architecture and handicrafts. He also issued regulations for the collection and arrangement of various texts to promote education and religious studies.

He was taken in a coup d'état and executed in 1782, and succeeded by his long-time friend Maha Ksatriyaseuk, who then assumed the throne, founding the Rattanakosin Kingdom and the Chakri dynasty, which has since ruled Thailand. In recognition for his deeds, he was later awarded the title of Maharat (the Great).