Tilokaraj

Tilokaraj
King of Lan Na
Reign 1441-1487
Predecessor Samfangkaen
Successor Yotchiangrai
Born 1409
Died 27 May 1487(1487-05-27) (aged 77–78)
House Mangrai
Religion Theravada Buddhism

Tilokaraj (Thai: พระเจ้าติโลกราช), also spelt Tilokarat and Tilokkarat, was the twelfth monarch of the Mangrai Dynasty.

Early life

According to the Chiang Mai Chronicle, he was the sixth child of King Sam Phraya (also known as Samfangkaen).[1] The 'lok' part of his name means sixth.

King of Lan Na

Map of Lan Na under King Tilokkarat

He became king in 1443 by deposing his father, and within a year had imposed control over Nan and Phrae. He also attacked Luang Prabang, Chiang Rung, and the Shan region several times but could not impose control. He faced several revolts. He had his favorite son, Bunruang, executed on suspicion of disloyalty. While clearly a warlike ruler, he was also a vigorous patron of Sri Lankan-style Buddhism, building several monasteries including Wat Chet Yot and Wat Pa Daeng, and enlarging Wat Chedi Luang to house the Emerald Buddha.[2]

See also

References

Citations

  1. Wyatt 1995, pp. 74–76
  2. Ongsakul 2005, pp. 77–81

Sources

Preceded by
Samfangkaen
King of Lanna
14411487
Succeeded by
Yotchiangrai
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.