SynonymsBot
Synonyms for king_mongkut_rama or Related words with king_mongkut_rama
king_vajiravudh_rama
sālote_tupou
krishna_raja_wadiyar
king_prajadhipok_rama
sanpet
mongkut_rama
queen_sālote_tupou
maharaja_sayajirao_gaekwad
queen_salote_tupou
aggabodhi
king_bhumibol_adulyadej_rama
pragmulji
artashir
pharaoh_ramesses
sultan_muhammad_shamsuddeen
tupua_tamasese_lealofi
ananda_mahidol_rama
asashio_tarō
borommaracha
akhenaten_amenhotep
chalukya_vikramaditya
pont_alexandre
yaxun_alam
benigno_simeon_aquino
ichikawa_somegorō
antipope_victor
vvvh
salote_tupou
pharaoh_ramses
hatshepsut_thutmose
vijaya_bahu
nii_okwei_kinka_dowuona
ramón_berenguer
avignon_pope_clement
mangkunegara
nag_hammadi_codex
dasan_std
bhuvanaikabahu
popmatters_journalist_maçek
madhav_varma
ptx_vol
te_heuheu_tukino
pope_callistus
egyptian_pharaoh_ramesses
pharaoh_amenhotep
sigmund_snopek
mansa_mahmud
maharaja_krishnaraja
fran_mirabella
ottoman_sultan_mehmed
Examples of "king_mongkut_rama"
Unakan Ananta Norajaya (; ; 20 February 1856 – 29 March 1873) is a son of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) and consort Piam Sucharitakul
The Dhamma Studies examination system was introduced by H.M.
King
Mongkut
Rama
IV during the time he was ordained as a monk
Officially the first flag was created in 1855 by
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV), showing a white elephant (a royal symbol) on red ground, as the plain coloured flag was not distinct enough for international relations.
Phrabat Somdet Phra Pinklao Chaoyuhua () (September 4, 1808 – January 7, 1866) was the Vice King of Siam. He was the younger brother of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) who crowned him as a monarch with equal honor to himself.
As the Burney Treaty did not adequately address commerce, that aspect was elaborated in the Bowring Treaty, signed by
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) on 18 April 1855, that liberalized trade rules and regulations.
Princess Kanchanakara (; ; 8 June 1863 - 20 September 1932) was a Princess of Siam (later Thailand She was a member of Siamese royal family was a daughter of
King
Mongkut
Rama
IV of Siam and Chao Chom Manda Sangwal.
After the time of King Narai, Lavo had been abandoned, until
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) of Rattanakosin kingdom had it restored to be used as an inland royal city.
He played a significant role in fostering relationships between Singapore and the Colonial Government on the one hand, and Siam and its ruler
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) on the other.
Princess Srinaga Svati (; ; 14 July 1855 – 7 August 1913) was a princess of Siam (later Thailand). She was a member of Siamese royal family is a daughter of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) of Siam and Chao Chom Manda Tieng.
Sukhothai story was narrated into Thailand's "national history" in late 19th century by
King
Mongkut
,
Rama
IV, as a historical work presented to the British diplomatic mission. King Mongkut is considered as the champion of Sukhothai narrative history, based on his find of the Number One Stone Inscription, the 'first evidence' telling the history of Sukhothai.
During the reign of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV), the Chao Phraya riverside area south of Khlong Phadung Krung Kasem, just outside the boundaries of the city proper, was settled by members of the European expatriate community. Numerous consulates were established here, and Charoen Krung Road, completed in 1864, was built to serve the area.
Sunanda Kumariratana (; , 10 November 1860 – 31 May 1880) was a queen consort of Siam. She was a daughter of Siamese
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) and Princess Consort Piam. She was the half-sister and first wife of King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) of Siam (now Thailand). The kings's other two wives were her full-sibling younger sisters, Queen Savang Vadhana and Queen Saovabha Bhongsi.
Sukhumala Marasri (; ; 10 May 1861 – 9 July 1927) was a daughter of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) and his concubine, Samli (เจ้าคุณจอมมารดาสำลี). Her given name was Princess Sukhumala Marasri (พระองค์เจ้าสุขุมาลมารศรี). She was later one of the four consorts of King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) and was also his half-sister.
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) of Siam signed the Bowring Treaty granting extraterritorial rights to Britain in 1855. Sir Robert Hermann Schomburgk, British Consul-General from 1859 to 1864, gives an account of his judicial training and responsibilities in a letter to his cousin dated 6 September 1860. Unequal treaties were later signed with 13 other European powers, as well as Japan.
The dominant religion is Theravada Buddhism. The Buddhist clergy, or Sangha, consists of two main schools, which are governed by the same ecclesiastical hierarchy. Monks belonging to the older Mahanikaya school far outnumber those of the Dhammayuttika school, an order that grew out of a 19th-century reform movement led by
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV).
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) felt the need to create a Royal standard to distinguish his royal barge from other vessels during his many travels around the Kingdom and to fly above the Grand Palace in Bangkok when he is in residence. In 1855 a Royal Standard was created called the 'Thong Chom Klao' (ธงจอมเกล้า).
The district was established in 1914. It is named after a Buddhist temple Wat Pathum Wanaram (literally meaning "lotus forest temple") and the nearby Sa Pathum Palace (means "lotus pond palace"). Both were built on the order of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV) and so-named because of an abundance of lotus in Khlong Saen Saep during his reign.
Christianity was brought to what is now Thailand as early as the sixteenth century. The Protestant faith came with British traders and American missionaries who reached Bangkok in the early years of the 19th century, but made little progress until the country opened to the West during the enlightened reign of
King
Mongkut
Rama
IV (1851-1868).
Wan Waithayakon (full title: His Royal Highness Prince Vanna Vaidhayakara, the Prince Naradhip Bhongseprabhan), known in the West as "Wan Waithayakon" (1891-1976), was a Thai diplomat. He was elected President of the Eleventh Session of the United Nations General Assembly (1956-1957), while serving as Thailand's Permanent Representative to the United Nations. He was a grandson of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV).
The town was first mentioned during the reign of
King
Mongkut
(
Rama
IV), when it was a minor "mueang" under Takua Pa and part of the Nakhon Si Thammarat Kingdom. During the "thesaphiban" administrative reforms in the 1890s it became a district within the province Chaiya, present day Surat Thani.