Page 283 - A History of Siam
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A HISTORT OF SIAM                     267

         government of  Chiengmai any longer,  so  depleted  ahd im-
         poverished  had the  city  become. He retired to  Lampang,
         followed  by  most of the inhabitants of  Chiengmai,  and
         for            the once               of
            twenty years         mighty capital   King Mengrai
         was left as a lair for the beasts of the
                                            jungle.
           King  Taksin had no more trouble with Burma   during
         the rest of his        but        of it on  his  eastern
                         reign,     plenty
         frontier.  In  1777  the Governor of  Nangrong,  in K'orat
                           and threw in his lot with one Chao
         province, rebelled,                                 O,
         who ruled over  Champasak,  at that time an  independent
                       Chao       Chakri was sent to deal with
         principality.       P'ya
         the  rebel,  who was  quickly caught  and executed  ; but
         this led to hostilities with  Champasak,  and another  army,
         under Chao   P'ya Surasih,  had to be sent to the  east.
         The result was                     Chao O was
                         very satisfactory.              caught
         and  executed,  and all the  territory  on the bank of the
         Mek'ong,  as far south as  K'ong,  was added to   King
         Taksin's dominions.
           Chao  P'ya Chakri, on  returning  from this  expedition,
         was       the rank of a              with a title which
             given              Royal Prince,
                             "
         may  be translated as  Supreme  Warlord/'  1
           About this time  King  Taksin  began  to show  signs  of
         mental  derangement.   He  imagined  that he had dis-
         covered certain          resemblances between himself
                         physical
         and  Buddha,  and  indulged  in various other eccentricities.
         His        also          fierce and            On one
             temper      grew very          suspicious.
         occasion he was roused to  fury merely  because his hair
         had been             dressed on a ceremonial occasion,
                  imperfectly
         and when his  son,  Prince In  P'itak,  ventured to  say  a
         word in defence of the                 the unfortunate
                               offending servant,
         Prince was seized and most
                                   unmercifully flogged.
           1
           It was most unusual to confer princely rank on any person not related to the
         reigning King.  The only previous instance recorded was that of K'un P'iren
         (later King Maha T'ammaraja), who in 1549 was made a Prince by King Maha
         Chakrap'at, He was,, however, the King's son-in-law, and was a descendant of
         the Kings of Suk'ot'ai.
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