Pan-Thaiism

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Map of the History of Thailand's Boundary
, 1940, showing claimed lost territories. Versions of the map were widely distributed to advance the Pan-Thaiist ideology.

Pan-Thaiism (otherwise known as Pan-Taiism, the pan-Thai movement, etc.) is an ideology that flourished in

Laos into a greater Thai state, sometimes referred to as the Great Thai Empire (Thai
: มหาอาณาจักรไทย, Maha Anachak Thai)

Prior to the revolution of 1932, which replaced the absolute monarchy with a constitutional one, the Thai government had pursued good relations with the imperial powers, Britain and France, that ruled its neighbours: Burma, Malaya, Cambodia and Laos. Anti-colonial sentiment had been actively discouraged. The military government that came to power in 1938 under Plaek Phibunsongkhram, however, actively sought to restore "lost" territories. It also aggressively promoted pan-Thaiism.[1] The intellectual architect of the new Thai nationalism was Wichit Wathakan. The country officially changed its name from Siam to Thailand. The word "Thai" was interpreted in an idiosyncratic way. It did not refer only to speakers of Central Thai (Siamese) or even Tai languages generally, but to all those who had once been under the Ayutthaya and Rattanakosin kingdoms.[2]

During

Governor-General of Indochina Jean Decoux, but this was mainly used to dampen the appeal of Pan-Thaiism and strengthen Lao cooperation within the French colonial system rather than develop any sense of Lao separatist nationalism.[3][4][5] Nonetheless, a counter-irredentism indeed emerged among Lao nationalists who aimed to bring much of northern Thailand under Lao rule. Few of Thailand's new subjects identified as "Thai" in any sense. The war ended in Thailand's defeat and the overthrow of the military government. Thailand returned to its pre-war borders as last adjusted in the Anglo-Siamese Treaty of 1909.[2]

References

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  2. ^ a b Paul Kratoska and Ben Batson, "Nationalism and Modernist Reform", in Nicholas Tarling (ed.), The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia, Volume 2, Part 1: From c. 1800 to the 1930s (Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 305.
  3. S2CID 146208659
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