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The three great chedis of Wat Phra Si Sanphet at Ayutthaya Historical Park, Thailand

Ayutthaya

พระนครศรีอยุธยา1350 CE – 1767 CE
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Interest

MedievalEarly ModernAyutthaya Kingdom

Founded

1350 CE by King Ramathibodi I

Destroyed

1767 by Burmese army after 14-month siege

Peak population

Estimated 1 million — among the largest cities in the world

Trade partners

China, Japan, Persia, Portugal, Netherlands, France

Duration

417 years as capital (1350-1767)

UNESCO

World Heritage Site 1991

Ayutthaya was one of the great cosmopolitan cities of the early modern world — a place where Thai, Khmer, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Persian, Portuguese, Dutch, and French merchants and diplomats lived side by side.”

Overview

Ayutthaya stands on an island formed by the confluence of three rivers in the central plain of modern Thailand. Founded in 1350 by King Ramathibodi I, it became the capital of a powerful Thai kingdom that absorbed the legacy of the Khmer Empire and grew into one of the most prosperous and cosmopolitan cities in Asia. At its peak in the 17th century the city had a population estimated at one million — larger than Paris or London at the time — and hosted trading communities from China, Japan, India, Persia, Portugal, the Netherlands, France, and England.

The city was renowned for its elaborate ceremonial architecture. Hundreds of Buddhist temples (wats) adorned with gilded spires (prangs), white chedis, and vast Buddha images were built across the island. The royal palace at the centre was described by European visitors as a place of extraordinary splendour. Diplomatic missions from Louis XIV of France and other European monarchs were received here in the 17th century, and Ayutthaya's rulers collected Greek and Persian advisors alongside its Asian merchants.

In 1767 a Burmese army under King Hsinbyushin besieged and sacked Ayutthaya after a 14-month siege, looting its gold, melting its Buddha images, and systematically destroying the palace and temples. The capital never recovered and was permanently relocated to Bangkok. The ruins visible today — truncated prangs, decapitated Buddha statues, shattered walls rising from the rice paddies — are among the most evocative archaeological landscapes in Southeast Asia. UNESCO inscribed Ayutthaya Historical Park in 1991.

Why It Matters

Ayutthaya was one of the great cosmopolitan cities of the early modern world — a place where Thai, Khmer, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Persian, Portuguese, Dutch, and French merchants and diplomats lived side by side. Its nearly four-century history shaped the culture, religion, law, and artistic traditions that define Thailand today. The ruins of Ayutthaya are a direct archaeological record of what was lost in 1767: an entire civilisation's architectural, artistic, and political achievements destroyed in a single siege. The decapitated Buddha statues — taken by looters who melted the gold from the heads — have become one of the iconic images of cultural destruction in Asian history. Studying Ayutthaya means confronting both the heights of Siamese civilisation and the catastrophic fragility of even the most powerful cities.

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Evidence & Interpretation

Distinguishing what is well-established from what remains debated.

Well-Established Facts

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  • Thai royal chronicles (Phongsawadan) and foreign accounts (Dutch VOC records, French diplomatic dispatches) document Ayutthaya's founding in 1350, its trade network, and its destruction in 1767 in considerable detail.
  • The ruins of over 400 temples and numerous palaces survive across the Ayutthaya island, datable by inscriptions, art-historical analysis, and radiocarbon dating to the 14th-18th centuries.
  • Foreign trading quarters (Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch, English) have been confirmed by both documentary evidence and archaeological excavation of trade goods, ceramics, and structural remains.

Scholarly Inferences

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  • The population estimate of one million is based on extrapolation from the area of the city and the density of its documented trading activities; no direct census survives, and modern estimates range from 300,000 to over one million.

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Location

Sources

  • Thailand: A Short HistoryWyatt, David K. (2003)
  • A History of ThailandBaker, Chris & Phongpaichit, Pasuk (2014)

Research Papers

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Ayutthaya located?

Ayutthaya is located in Thailand.

How old is Ayutthaya?

Ayutthaya dates to approximately 1350 CE – 1767 CE.

Which civilizations are associated with Ayutthaya?

Ayutthaya is associated with the Ayutthaya Kingdom.

Why is Ayutthaya important?

Ayutthaya was one of the great cosmopolitan cities of the early modern world — a place where Thai, Khmer, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Persian, Portuguese, Dutch, and French merchants and diplomats lived side by side.

Is Ayutthaya a UNESCO World Heritage Site?

Yes — Ayutthaya is inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.