Online Encyclopedia

AYUTHIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 78 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AYUTHIA  , a

city of Siam, now known to the Siamese as Krung Kao or " the Old Capital," situated in 100° 32' E., 14° 21' N . Pop. about 1o,000 . The
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river Me Nam, broken up into a network of creeks, here surrounds a large island upon which stand the ruins of the famous city which was for more than four centuries the capital of Siam . The bulk of the inhabitants live in the floating houses characteristic of
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lower Siam, using as thorough-fares the creeks to the edges of which the houses are moored . The ruins of the old city are of
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great archaeological
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interest, as are the relics, of which a large collection is housed in the
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local museum . Outside the
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town is an ancient
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masonry enclosure for the capture of elephants, which is still periodically used . Ayuthia is on the
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northern main
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line Di the state
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railways, 42 M. from
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Bangkok . Great quantities of paddi are annually sent by river and
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rail to Bangkok, in return for which
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cloth and other goods are imported to supply the wants of the agriculturist peasantry . There is no other trade . Ayuthia is the chief town of one of the richest agricultural provincial divisions of Siam and is the headquarters of a high
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commissioner . The government offices occupy spacious buildings, once a royal summer retreat; the government is that of an ordinary provincial division (Monton) . Historically Ayuthia is the most interesting spot in Siam .

Among the innumerable ruins may be seen those of palaces, pagodas, churches and fortifications, the departed glories of which are recorded in the writings of the

early
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European travellers who first brought Siam within the knowledge of the West, and laid the
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foundations of the
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present
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foreign intercourse and trade . The town was twice destroyed by the Burmese, once in 1555 and again in 1767, and from the date of the second destruction it ceased to be the capital of the country .

End of Article: AYUTHIA
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PIERRE HYACINTHE AZAIS (1766-1845)

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