Nai Chan Nuad Khiao (นายจันหนวดเขี้ยว)
Thai. ‘Mr.
Chan Fanged
Mustache’. Name of one
of the eleven heroic leaders who in 1767,
at the end of the
Ayutthaya period,
fought the invading
Burmese in defence of the
Bang Rajan
camp in
Singburi
(fig.).
He was originally from Bang Rajan and initially his name was just
Chan, but he liked wearing a mustache of which he curled up the
ends so they looked like fangs, giving him the nickname Nuad
Khiao, i.e.
‘Fanged
Mustache’.
His peers described him as brave and skilled in fighting, and he
was like a village teacher for young people. When the Burmese
soldiers invaded the village, he went out to help the villagers
and fought the Burmese. One day, when large troop movements were
reported, he sent out a reconnaissance team into the enemy camp
to find out their numbers. When he realized that they had been
exposed and being chased, he took control of 100 men, divided
them into 2 groups and attacked the camp of the Burmese general Akha Bankhayih (อาคา บัญคญี),
who was killed in the ensuing battle. Nai Chan Nuad Khiao was
eventually also killed on the battlefield.
In
iconography, he is usually
depicted holding two swords.
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