Phuket Island has
a long recorded history, and remains dating back to
A.D. 1025 indicate that the island's present day name
derives in meaning from the Tamil manikram, or crystal
mountain. For
most of history, however, it was known as Junk Ceylon,
which, with variations, is the name found on old maps.
The name is thought to have its roots in Ptolemy's
Geographia, written by the Alexandrian geographer in
the Third Century A.D. He mentioned that in making a
trip from Souwannapum to the Malay Peninsula it was
necessary to pass the cape of Jang Si Lang.
Phuket was a way station on the route between India
and China where seafarers stopped to shelter. The
island appears to have been part of the Shivite empire
(called in Thai the Tam Porn Ling) that established
itself on the Malay Peninsula during the first
Millenium A.D. Later, as Muang Takua-Talang, it was
part of the Srivichai and Siri Tahm empires. Governed
as the eleventh in a constellation of twelve cities,
Phuket's emblem, by which it was known to others in
those largely pre-literate times, was the dog.
During the Sukothai Period Phuket was associated
with Takua Pa in what is now Phang-nga Province,
another area with vast tin reserves. The Dutch
established a trading post during the Ayuthaya Period
in the 16th Cent.
The island's northern and central
regions then were governed by the Thais, and the
southern and western parts were given over to the tin
trade, a concession in the hands of foreigners.After Ayuthaya was sacked by the Burmese in 1767 there
was a short interregnum in Thailand, ended by King
Thaksin, who drove out the Burmese and re-unified the
country. The Burmese, however, were anxious to return
to the offensive. They outfitted a fleet to raid the
southern provinces, and carry off the populations to
slavery in Burma.
This led to Phuket's most memorable
historic event. A passing sea captain, Francis Light,
sent word that the Burmese were en route to attack.
Forces in Phuket were assembled led by the two
heroines, Kunying Jan, wife of Phuket's recently
deceased govern or, and her sister Mook, After a month's
siege the Burmese were forced to depart on 13 March,
1785. Kunying Jan and her sister were credited with
the successful defense.
In recognition King Rama I bestowed upon Kunying
Jan the honorific Thao Thep Kasatri, a title of
nobility usually reserved for royalty, by which she is
known today. Her sister became Thao Sri Sunthon.
During the Nineteenth Century Chinese immigrants
arrived in such numbers to work for the tin mines that
the ethnic character of the island's interior became
predominantly Chinese, while the coastal settlements
remained populated chiefly by Muslim fishermen.
In Rama V's reign, Phuket became the administrative
center of a group of tin mining provinces called
Monton Phuket, and in 1933, with the change in
government from absolute monarchy to a parliamentary
system, the island was established as a province by
itself.
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