Before the
Tai
people's southward migration from
Guangxi
since the 4th century, the
Indochinese peninsula
had already been populated by
Australo-Melanesians
who by around 30,000 BP had spread into all sub-regions. They left traces of the first local culture - the
Hoabinhian
, a name assigned to an industry and cultural continuity of stone tools and flaked cobble artifacts that appears around 10,000 BP in caves and rock shelters first described in
Hoa Binh
,
Vietnam
, later also documented in
Terengganu
,
Malaysia
,
Sumatra
,
Thailand
,
Laos
,
Myanmar
,
Cambodia
and
Yunnan
, southern
China
.
[1]
[2]
Austroasiatic
Mon
and
Khmer
groups, who originate in North-Eastern India predominantly populated the riverine lowlands of Indochina since around 5000 years BP.
Austronesian
immigrants arrived at the coast of central modern Vietnam around 2500 BP.
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
The controversial
Two layer hypothesis
suggests the immigration of settlers arriving from the
Yangtze
River valley around 3,000 BP, who introduced wet-rice and millet farming techniques in Mainland Southeast Asia.
[9]
The site of
Ban Chiang
in North-eastern Thailand currently ranks as the earliest known center of copper and bronze production in Southeast Asia and has been dated to around 2,000 years BCE.
[10]
The oldest known records of a political entity in Indochina are attributed to
Funan
- centered in the Mekong Delta and comprising territories inside modern day Thailand.
[11]
Chinese annals confirm Funan's existence as early as the 1st century CE, but archaeological documentation implies an extensive human settlement history since the 4th century BCE.
[12]
The
Langkasuka
and
Tambralinga
kingdoms on the Malay peninsula appear in Chinese texts by the fifth century.
As well as Funan these polities are characterized as fully developed
Indianized kingdoms
, which after centuries of trade and socio-economic interaction with India had adopted and incorporated elements of Indian culture, religion, statecraft, administration, epigraphy, literature and architecture.
[13]
[14]
The
Mon
Dvaravati
principalities also appear during the middle of the first millennium in the lower Chao Phraya River valley of modern-day central Thailand.
[15]
Unlike Funan, Langkasuka and Tambralinga that were situated in the center of the
international trade network
Dvaravati remained relatively isolated. Although distinct, the sophisticated Mon-Dvaravati culture is based on Hindu cosmology. Its characteristic art style "such as the faceted miter sitting high on the forehead ... the facial features, especially the eyes″ has influenced Thai sculpture to this day.
[16]
Indigenous states theory
[
edit
]
Instead of the theory of the migration from southern China, some
[
who?
]
posit an Indigenous States theory. A number of indigenous states were able to absorb foreign political and cultural influences, and forge their own distinct cultural identity.
[17]
Previously, studies on the initial state of Thai history were confined to the preconception that both its origin and existence were the results of Indian influences alone. These influences were seen as being a significant cause of early Thai states becoming a unified state with territorial power covering areas of the Indochina peninsula.
[18]
Furthermore, the idea of a unified state extended to the belief that its citizens were all of
Mon
descent.
[19]
This theory ignored the fact that the indigenous groups already had their own political and cultural systems, although numerous and diverse, which were both individualistic and well developed.
[20]
They had contacted and exchanged between the groups and then established a common culture before the advent of Indian influences.
The development of
Suvarnabhumi
(Thai: U-Thong, Chinese: Chinlin
[21]
) and
Funan
[22]
from the communities to coastal centres was due to their economic and cultural interaction with seafarers from the
South China Sea
and the Indian Ocean.
[23]
They transported both new techniques and artefacts to the various settlements in Southeast Asia. They were the main force influencing the later development of populated centres into states. They were in contact with the seafarers of Maritime Southeast Asia and became coastal centres of the trade and the cultural activities during the 2nd to 6th centuries. Together with Suvarnabhumi and Funan, Chinese records mention the states of
Tun-Sun
,
Tan-Tan
,
Pan-Pan
[24]
and the later states such as
Chi Tu
,
Lang-Jia-Shu
,
To-Lo-Po-Ti
and
Lo-Hu
.
[25]
These records correlate with certain archaeological finds. The Roman lamp, copper coins of Victorius, atche beads, enamelled beads were found in this area.
[26]
These antiques were also firmly related to the trading which linked the Eastern and Western world.
[27]
Empire of the South Sea
[
edit
]
By the 6th century, mariners had learnt to use the prevailing
monsoons
and navigate through the
Straits of Malacca
, which helped to shorten the journey to East Asia.
[28]
This brought the Gulf of Thailand mariners into direct confrontation with their rivals, the seafarers of the
Java Sea
, who were already trading out of several important ports. About this time the importance of Suvarnabhumi lessened, whereas the importance of Malay Peninsula and the Indonesian archipelago appeared to grow, together with the importance of the “Empire of the South Sea”. The new network extended as far as the islands of
Sumatra
,
Java
and
Sri Lanka
. The area located among these land and islands became the commercial and economic base for
Srivijaya
as a maritime state.
[29]
The early coastal states continued to grow physically and spread inland, where they met up with more diverse cultures, which had already been through their own process of historical and cultural development. Their radiating power extended throughout the hinterland of
Chao Phraya
basin. There is evidence that the “Empire of the South Sea” had conquered the mainland once.
Tambralinga
invaded
Lavo
or
Kingdom of Dvaravati
in 903. References to the kings of
Haribhunjaya
,
King Bakaraj
(Drabaka), King
Ujajitachakravard
, and
Javaka Raja
of Tambralinga, were mentioned in these records. According to the
Song
's chronicle describes that
San-Fo-Shih
sent tribute to Chinese court by the command of
King Che-Li-Wu-Ye
in 961. The envoy reported the name of their kingdom was
Xian-Lo-Gua
.
Economy
[
edit
]
The import of new techniques and the growth of the initial Thai state affected agricultural production. The
water buffaloes
were introduced as beasts of burden instead of the oxen.
[30]
This method was ideally suited for wet rice farming. Rice production increased and became an economic base for the development of the community. The people were able to develop their own economic system based on rice until they gained economic and political power over all others states in this region.
Although the international trade through the Strait of Malacca had been favoured since the 6th century, the overland routes from the coastal towns in Southern Myanmar to the port towns of central Thailand were favoured until the early
Rattanakosin
period. Together with the rice commerce,
Sukhothai
,
Ayudhya
and Rattanakosin became one of the trans-peninsula routes parallel with the Strait of Malacca.
Population
[
edit
]
The result of population movements and migrations certainly affected cultural traditions and lifestyles found among the peoples who are to populate the kingdom of Thailand. Therefore, the Thai / Sama / Sayam /
Siam
is the various indigenous peoples, Proto Malayu, Mon,
Khmer
,
Champa
, as well as to immigrants from India. In addition, the population also consisted of coastal peoples, some mariners, Chinese, and a host of other minority groups. This important characteristic is “The great variety” of Thai people.
Thai society and culture covered an area wider than that ruled by the state. Tai peoples refers collectively to the ethnic groups of southern China and Southeast Asia, stretching from
Hainan
to eastern India and from southern
Sichuan
to Thailand, that speak the
Tai languages
and share similar traditions and festivals, including
Songkran
. Despite never having a unified nation-state of their own, the peoples also share or historically shared a vague idea of a "Siam" nation, corrupted to
Shan
or
Assam
in some places, and most self-identify as "Tai". A far more comprehensive list is available in Thai only for this term. For example, 29 ethnic groups & languages are identified as "Tai" in the
Thai language
version in People's Republic of China alone. Tai peoples include:
- The Lao of
Laos
and Northeast Thailand
- The Northern Thai (
Lanna
or Thai Yuan) of Thailand
- The Thai of Thailand (Tai Noi or Little Tai)
- The
Shan
(Thai Yai or Big Tai) of
Burma
- The
Zhuang
of China
- The
Buyei
of China
- The
Thai Lue
of Laos and China (also called "Dai")
- The
Nung
of China, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam
- The
Black Tai
(Tai Dam) of Laos and Vietnam
- The
Red Tai
(Tai Daeng)
- The
White Tai
(Tai Kao)
- The
Tai Dom
people of present-day North Vietnam
- The various tribes in Yunnan, China.
Society
[
edit
]
The initial Thai society, the basic division was that between the rulers and the ruled. During this formative period, there were radical changes in the local political system. The original system of chiefdom is led by a
chief
was changed to a system of
divine kingship
based on Indian models.
[31]
The king and the royal
aristocracy
together with the bureaucratic
nobility
wielded full economic and power. Next was the upper class consisting of statesmen and high officials who supervised the carrying out of state and royal duties. There were also community leaders who interacted closely with the populace.
Beneath these strata were the masses, the great majority of whom were either free men or
slaves
. Within this hierarchical system, each individual had a fixed status with clear-cut responsibilities and rights toward individuals above and below him. The ordinary people consisted of several groups. Every free man was the client or retainer of a person in the upper strata, while every slave was the property of an elite individual or family.
[32]
The great majority of the free men were agriculturalists, townsmen and traders emerged as a result of the state being located on both continental and seafaring trading routes. The fact that it was one of the most important commercial centres in Southeast Asia can clearly be seen from the multitude of archaeological evidence found.
Religion
[
edit
]
The growth of the initial Thai states gradually came into a
Buddhist
culture instead of
Shamanism
. Buddhism became the core faith of early Thai society, linking up and unifying the various lifestyles and beliefs found in this region, and also played a part in determining the form of the political system. The Buddhist faith was recognised by both the state and the people. Buddhism also played an important part in the affairs of the ruling classes it was accepted in early Thai society that the king was not only the royal patron of Buddhism but also the
Dharmikaraja
whose duty was to spread the faith through following the righteous path as well as through the domination and subjugation of other peoples through the waging of war.
[33]
The monks partook in religious duties which were more related to the needs of the ordinary people. They taught the people how to
read and write
, as well as giving lessons concerning the Buddhist doctrine. While the
brahmins
had a direct relationship with the royalty through their ceremonial duties, the
hermits
and
mendicants
took refuge in the deep jungle, although some enjoyed various degrees of influence over politically powerful persons.
The development of Buddhism during the early Thai state period formed the basis for a Buddhist society and state in this area and provides the historical basis and origins for the later development of the kingdom of Thailand.
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
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