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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ThephamatThephamat - Wikipedia

    Krom Phra Thephamat ( Thai: กรมพระเทพามาตย์, died 1774), also known as Iang ( เอี้ยง) or Nok-iang ( นกเอี้ยง ), was a royal woman of the Thonburi dynasty, Siam. She was the mother of Taksin, the founder of Thonburi kingdom. She was of Mon -Thai descent.

  2. 35,000. The Siamese conquest of Lan Na (1774–1775) was a military conflict between the Konbaung dynasty of Burma (now Myanmar) and the Thonburi Kingdom of Siam (now Thailand ). After about two hundred years of Lan Na kingdom under Burmese rule, the Siamese armies under King Taksin of Thonburi led an expedition to the northern city of Chiang ...

    • November 1774-January 1775
    • Siamese victory
    • Lan Na
  3. Chao Fa Krom Khun Inthra Phithak (Thai: เจ้าฟ้ากรมขุนอินทรพิทักษ์, ?–1782), born Chui (จุ้ย), was a prince of the Thonburi Kingdom. He was the son of Taksin and his spouse, Princess Batboricha. He was appointed the Front Palace or Maha Uparaj, the title of the heir.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TaksinTaksin - Wikipedia

    Taksin was born on 17 April 1734, in Ayutthaya. [clarification needed] Taksin had Chinese Teochew, Tai -Chinese and Mon ancestry. His father, Yong Saetae ( Thai: หยง แซ่แต้; Chinese: 鄭鏞 Zhèng Yōng ), who worked as a tax-collector, [7] was of ethnic Teochew descent from Chenghai District, Shantou, Guangdong, China.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Yong_SaetaeYong Saetae - Wikipedia

    Later, he became a tax-collector,: 770 and married a wealthy royal woman Nok-lang (later Princess Phithak Thephamat), who later gave birth to Taksin. References

  6. Phraya Phichai was a Siamese general serving under King Taksin. After the fall of Ayutthaya in 1767, Phraya Phichai and Chao Phraya Chakri (who later become the first King of Chakri dynasty) followed Phraya Taksin in repelling the Burmese and reuniting Siam. They were considered Phraya Taksin's left and right hands.

  7. Sources. Mạc Thiên Tứ ( chữ Hán: 鄚天賜, pinyin: Mò Tiāncì, Khmer: ម៉ាក់ ធានទឺ, December 12, 1699 or December 16, 1705 or January 01, 1718 – June 18, 1780), also known as Mạc Thiên Tích ( 鄚 天 錫) or Mạc Tông ( 鄚 琮, Khmer: ម៉ាក់ តុង [1] ), was a Vietnamese leader who ruled Hà Tiên from 1735 to 1771 and from 1773 to 1777.