Thepsingh
Thepsingh
| |
|---|---|
| King of Lanna | |
| Reign | 1727 |
| Predecessor | Nga Ngo (Burmese governor) |
| Successor | Ong Kham |
| Born | ? Khun Yuam |
| Died | 1727 Chiang Mai |
Thepsingh (Northern Thai : ᨴᩮᨻᩛ᩼ᩈᩥᨦ᩠ᩉ᩼) was the king of Lanna who liberated Chiang Mai from Burmese rule.
During the reign of Burmese governor Nga Ngo, the Burmese officials imposed heavy taxes on Lanna people. Thepsingh was resentful of the long-standing trampling and oppression by the Burmese. He gathered his followers to plundered Chiang Mai at night. He defeated, captured and killed Nga Ngo and later became the ruler of Chiang Mai in 1727. After taking control of Chiang Mai, Thepsingh declared that he would exterminate all Burmese people in Chiang Mai. Some Burmese fled to Chiang Saen and some pledged allegiance to Ong Kham.[1][2]
After Thepsingh had ruled Chiang Mai for about a month, the Burmese in Chiang Mai sought help from Ong Kham who had been a monk. Ong Kham led the Burmese to successfully oust Thepsing from Chiang Mai. Thepsingh then sought help from Thammapanyo, the ruler of Nan. Thammapanyo raised forces to attack Chiang Mai, but was defeated decisively. Thammapanyo died on the battlefield, and Thepsingh disappeared. Ong Kham was subsequently declared himself King of Chiang Mai in 1727. However, the Burmese refused to accept Ong Kham as king, so Ong Kham turned against the Burmese and expelled them from Chiang Mai.[3][4]
References
[edit]- ^ Kirigaya, Ken (2015). "Lan Na under Burma: A "Dark Age" in Northern Thailand?" (PDF). The Journal of the Siam Society. 103: 283–284. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2024-02-10. Retrieved 2024-05-01.
- ^ Ongsakul, Sarasawadee (2005). History of Lan Na. Silkworm Books.
- ^ Penth, Hans (1995). The Chiang Mai Chronicle.
- ^ Veidlinger, Daniel (2006). Spreading the Dhamma: Writing, Orality, and Textual Transmission in Buddhist Northern Thailand. University of Hawaii Press.