Nai Thaen (นายแท่น)
Thai. ‘Mr. Pedestal’. 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 was a native from Sri Bua Thong (ศรีบัวทอง) village in
Singburi, who was brave and skilled in planning battles. He was
a general who had led his troops in several victorious battles
against the Burmese. In his 4th campaign against this arch
enemy, in which he commanded 200 men of the royal army, he had
been able to kill the Burmese General
Surin Chokhong, but had himself
suffered a knee injury and after being carried back to the camp,
he soon died due to a poisonous infection caused by this wound.
In
iconography, he is usually
depicted yielding two swords. 回
|