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==Relations with China== |
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Following the embassy from the [[Xiān]] of [[Phrip Phri]] to China 1282, |
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==Warfare== |
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Latest revision as of 15:45, 12 September 2025
King of Siam from 1289 to 1301
Suvarnaraja (Thai: สุวรรณราชา), the seventh king of Xiān at Ayodhya, succeeded to the throne upon the death of his adopted father, Jayasena, who was also his uncle.[2] His reign from 1289 to 1301 was marked the military campaign of the invasion of the Melayu and Angkor.
Suvarnarāja was the son of Jayadatta (ชัยทัตต์), an elder prince of Phrip Phri, who, according to the Northern Chronicle, engaged in a clandestine relationship with his cousin, the only daughter of Uthong II. This transgression ultimately led to Jayadatta’s execution at the hands of Uthong II. When it became known that the princess was pregnant, the younger Phrip Phri prince, Jayasena, was compelled to marry her. Jayasena succeeded his father-in-law in 1253 and reigned until 1289. Following the death of his own father, Thonglanraj (ท้องลันราช), king of Phrip Phri, in the same year, Jayasena abdicated the throne of Ayodhya in favor of his adopted son, Suvarnarāja, and returned to govern Phrip Phri.
Suvarnarāja reigned at Ayodhya from 1289 to 1301. He had two daughters, Princess Kalyādavī (กัลยาเทวี) and Princess Sunandhadevī (สุนันทาเทวี). Kalyādavī was married to Prince Dhammaraja, and Sunandhadevī to the younger, Prince Boromraja—both princes under King Dhammatrilokthi of Si Satchanalai. Upon Suvarnarāja’s death in 1301, Dhammaraja ascended the throne of Ayodhya and ruled until 1310, after which his brother Boromraja reigned from 1310 to 1344.
Relations with China
[edit]
Following the embassy from the Xiān of Phrip Phri to China 1282,
- ^ According to the Yonok Chronicle of Lan Na, Ayodhya during this period is referred to as Guru Rath (กุรุรัฐ; lit. ‘Country of Guru‘) and is reported to have been ruled by King Guru Wongsa or Guruwamsa (กุรุวงศา; lit. ‘Family of Guru‘).[1]


