Historical and cultural connections between India and Thailand
As part of his visit to Thailand for the ninth India-Thailand joint commission meeting, External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar visited a temple in Bangkok.
Why in news?
The temple is the Royal Brahmin Office of the Thai Royal Court and is the official centre of Hinduism in Thailand
It highlights the long history of cultural contacts between India and Thailand
Making of 'Greater India' in Southeast Asia.
India and the Southeast Asia region share a long history of cultural and commercial relations.
The classical Sanskrit and Pali texts from India carry references of the region using various names such as Kathakosha, Suvarnabhumi (the land of god) or Suvarnadvipa (the golden island), indicating that this was a region that attracted Indian merchants.
Trade in spices, aromatic wood and most importantly gold is known to have flourished
In more recent times, European and Indian scholars have referred to Southeast Asia as 'Farther India', 'Greater India', or 'Hinduised or Indianized states'
What one mean by 'Farther India'
The first person to do an in-depth study of the process of 'Indianisation' in Southeast Asian countries was a French scholar named George Coedes
He coined the term 'Farther India' to refer to those states that experienced "the civilizing activity of India'
Geographically, it refers to Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar and the Malay states
The Sanskrit, Buddhist, and Jain texts indicate that interactions between the two regions go back more than two thousand years ago, mainly through sea voyages and that trade played an important role.
They were also accompanied by Brahmin priests, Buddhist monks, scholars and adventurers and all of them played an important role in the transmission of Indian culture to the natives of Southeast Asia
Some of the merchants and Brahmin priests married the local girls and were often employed by the local rulers
Limitations to Indian influence
Indian expansion into Southeast Asia cannot be compared to European colonization since Indians were not complete strangers to the population of Southeast Asia and had pre-existing trade relations
In the early 20th century, the nationalist historians of India frequently referred to the ancient Indian kingdoms in Southeast Asia as its 'colony'
Historian RC Majumdar noted that the Hindu colonists brought with them the whole framework of their culture and civilization
This was transplanted in its entirety among the people who had not emerged from their primitive barbarism
More recently the colonization theory has been rejected on the ground that there is very little evidence of conquest or direct political influence in the ancient Southeast Asian kingdoms
Visible cultural influence
The first Indian kingdom to come up in Southeast Asia was Funan, which is the predecessor of modern Cambodia and Lin-yi in southern Vietnam, both of which came up in the second century CE
Contemporary Southeast Asian society carries several pieces of evidence of the cultural impact of these interactions
Many local languages in the region, including Thai, Malay, and Javanese contain words of Sanskrit, Pali and Dravidian origin in significant proportions
The Thai language is written in script derived from Southern Indian Pallava alphabet
Perhaps the most important influence of India on Southeast Asia was in the field of religion and how Shivaism, Vaishnavism, Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism and later Sinhalese Buddhism came to be practised in the region
The political and administrative institutions and ideas, especially the concept of divine authority and kingship, are largely shaped by the Indian practices
For example, the Thai king is considered as an incarnation of Vishnu
The episodes of Ramayana and Mahabharata are regularly featured in puppet shows and theatre events
In terms of architecture, monuments like Borobodur Stupa in Java, the Angkor Vat temple in Cambodia, My Son temple in Vietnam are some of the best examples of Indian influence in the region
India's religious links to Thailan
In the early centuries of the Common Era, Thailand, which was historically known as Siam, was under the rule of the Funan Empire
Following the decline of the Funan Empire in the sixth century CE, it was under the rule of the Buddhist kingdom of Dvaravati
In the 10th century, the region came under Khmer rule, which is also known to have links with India
A Tamil inscription found in Takua-pa testifies to trade links between the Pallava region of South India and southern Thailand
A mercantile corporation of South Indians called Manikarramam had established a settlement here and built its own temple and tank, and lived as a 'self-contained' colony
It is important to note that Brahmanism and Buddhism existed alongside each other in Thailand in the pre-Sukhothai period of the 13th century.
Culture of Ram
The Ramayana known in Thailand as Ramakriti (the glory of Rama) or Ramakien (the account of Rama) has provided an outlet of cultural expression in Thailand for both the elite and the common man
Episodes from the epic are painted on the walls of Buddhist temples and enacted in dramas and ballets
Although there is no archaeological evidence of the story of Rama in Thailand, certain towns in the country have legends related to Rama's life connected with them
For instance, Ayutthaya in Central Thailand, which emerged in the 10th century CE, is derived from Ayodhya, birthplace of Lord Rama
Desai writes that "from the 13th century onwards, several Thai kings assumed the title Rama, which has become hereditary during the present dynasty. "
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