Phan Reuang (พันเรือง)
Thai. ‘Thousand
Glows’. 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 the head of
Bang Rajan
village that the Burmese plundered, stealing rice and fish, and
bullying the villagers, who as a result escaped and took refuge
in a local temple that was protected by two moat-like canals
that surrounded it. In order to destroy the Burmese camp Phan
Reuang asked the villagers to give up their brass and copper to
cast a cannon, and he collected enough metal to cast two guns.
However, the cannons weren't skillfully made and didn't fire
properly. Hence, the attack on the Burmese camp failed and in
his attempt to flee from the alerted Burmese soldiers, he was
killed. In
iconography, he is usually
depicted holding a battle ax.
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