Phaulkon-Tachard conspiracy

Thai history
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Date:
1685 - 1688

Phaulkon-Tachard conspiracy, (1685–88), in Thai history, an unsuccessful attempt to establish French control over Siam (Thailand). Two main conspirators in this attempt were Constantine Phaulkon, a high-level royal adviser to Siam’s King Narai, and Gui Tachard, a French Jesuit missionary.

A Greek by birth, Phaulkon had worked with the British East India Company in Java and then entered the service of the Siamese king, rising to the position of virtual prime minister. Tachard, who arrived at Ayutthaya, the Siamese capital, in 1685, hoped to convert the Thais to Christianity and to extend French influence, and he enlisted Phaulkon’s aid for these purposes. A treaty was drafted with the support of Narai and the French king, Louis XIV, allowing the French military to station troops in the country and granting France advantageous trading privileges. However, after Narai fell seriously ill in 1688, Phaulkon’s fortunes changed, and the affair ended with his overthrow and execution by an anti-French faction. Following the episode, Thai kings favoured isolationist policies for more than a century.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Lorraine Murray.