Phetracha

king of Ayutthaya
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Also known as: Bedraja, P’ra P’etraja, Petracha
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Bedraja or Petracha
Also called:
P’ra P’etraja
Born:
1633?
Died:
1703, Ayutthaya [Thailand]
Also Known As:
Petracha
P’ra P’etraja
Bedraja

Phetracha (born 1633?—died 1703, Ayutthaya [Thailand]) was the king of the Tai kingdom of Ayutthaya, or Siam (ruled 1688–1703), whose policies reduced European trade and influence in the country and helped preserve its independence.

Phetracha was the foster brother of King Narai, whose patronage helped him rise to become head of the Elephant Department and a leading general in the kingdom. He led the coup that toppled the Greek adventurer Constantine Phaulkon from ministerial office and expelled a French expeditionary force from Ayutthaya in 1688. In that year he seized the throne himself and determined to drastically reduce foreign power and influence. To this end he persecuted Christians and harassed Western traders, while encouraging more easily controlled Asian traders.

Phetracha’s 15-year reign was one of frequent revolts. His reorganization of his country’s civil and military administration was overshadowed by his authoritarianism and by the intemperance, cruelty, and depravity that reportedly characterized his military ventures. His equally tyrannical son, King Sua, “Tiger,” succeeded him.

Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon in Coronation Robes or Napoleon I Emperor of France, 1804 by Baron Francois Gerard or Baron Francois-Pascal-Simon Gerard, from the Musee National, Chateau de Versailles.
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This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.