Page 170 - A History of Siam
P. 170

162           A HISTORT OF SIAM

                 under the command of Yamada, who was in
         palace,
                      and bore the title of                1
         high favour,                     P'ya Senap'imuk.
           The  year  1612 was a  noteworthy  one in another  respect.
         The first  English  commercial establishment in Siam was
         opened  in that  year.  Dutch merchants had   opened  a
                 a few
         factory       years previously.
           The   first  British     the         anchored  in the
                              ship,     Globe>
         harbour of Patani on the  23rd  of  June,  1612.  She was
         commanded    by Captain Anthony Hippon,    and had on
         board Peter Williamson    Floris and other merchants.
         A  factory  was  opened  at  Patani,  and the Globe then went

         on to  Ayut'ia, arriving  there on the  I5th  of  August.
           On   September lyth, 1612,  the  English  factors were
         received in audience  by  the  King,  and  presented  to him a
         letter from  King James  I.  The Siamese monarch was
                             and       to each of the factors a
         extremely gratified,     gave
         little  golden cup  and a  piece  of  clothing.  The East
         India  Company   founded   factories  at  Ayut'ia  and  at
         Patani before the end of that
                                      year.
           Foreign   traders  British,  Dutch,  Portuguese  and
         Japanese   were  very  active  in Siam  throughout  this
         reign.  King Songt'am deserves,  in  fact,  to be  regarded
         as the first  King  of modern  Siam,  for it was under him
         that the habit of free intercourse with         Powers
                                                 foreign
         became well established.  The         thus
                                        policy      inaugurated
         by  him has been adhered to   by  all the rulers of Siam
         down to the
                     present day.
           1
            Prince Damrong has suggested the following very probable explanation
         of the favour shown to the Japanese, in spite of their excesses.  There were a
         number of peaceable Japanese settlers in Siam, from among whom the body-
                                                         "
         guard was recruited.  There was also a gang of more or less piratical  birds of
         passage."  These were the people who attacked King Songt'am's palace.  They
         were prooably expelled from the Kingdom, doubtless with the aid of their more
         loyal fellow-countrymen.
          At that time Japanese pirates were a pest all over the Far East.  In December
         1605 the English navigator, John Davis, lost his life in a fight with Japanese
         pirates off Patani.  In the same year, and again in 1610, the King of Cambodia
         complained to the Shogun of Japan of the acts of piracy committed by Japanese
         traders in his realm.
   165   166   167   168   169   170   171   172   173   174   175