Nai Dok (นายดอก)
Thai. ‘Mr. Flower’. 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
fort in
Singburi
(fig.).
He lived in
Meuang Wisetchaichan (วิเศษชัยชาญ)
which was attacked, captured and destroyed by the Burmese,
prompting
Nai
Thong Kaew and the
other inhabitants to spilt up and escape to different villages,
fleeing the same time as
Nai Thong Kaew, who lived in
the same village. He
joined the battle with the villagers of Bang Rachan and he, together
with
Nai Choht (นายโชติ),
Nai Thong Hmen,
and
Nai Thong Kaew, led some 200 warriors
across a canal to attack the enemy in the back. As a result, the
Burmese were defeated and their General
Surin Chokhong was killed. Nai Dok
also died on the battlefield.
In
iconography, he is usually
depicted holding a curved panabas-like sword, with a thick blunt
tip and narrow near the hilt, reminiscent of a shakak thang,
thangjau, or nawi battle ax, and known in Thai as dahb hua tat
(ดาบหัวตัด). 回
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