
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION - WAR BACKGROUND STUDIES NUMBER EIGHT - SIAM—LAND OF FREE MEN
CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION FEBRUARY 5, 1943
SIAM—LAND OF FREE MEN
(WITH 8 PLATES)
GEOGRAPHY
PEOPLES
PREHISTORY
KINGDOM OF SUKHOTHAI-SAWANKHALOK
KINGDOM OF AYUTHIA
KINGDOM OF TONBURI
This work offers a sweeping portrait of the lands that stretch between India and China, exploring how centuries of migration, conquest, and trade forged a complex tapestry of peoples and kingdoms. From early Mongol incursions to the arrival of European powers in the sixteenth century, the narrative traces the shifting balance of influence among the Mon, Khmer, Lao, Burmese, Shan, Malay, and Siamese societies. The author weaves together political history with the natural contours of the region, showing how rivers, mountains, and fertile valleys shaped the lives of its inhabitants.
Readers are guided through the four main geographic zones—Northern, Central, Eastern, and the Peninsular—each described with vivid detail of its rivers, highlands, and agricultural heartlands. The book also examines the surge of nationalist sentiment in the early twentieth century, highlighting how aspirations for a unified nation influenced Thai policy during a turbulent era. Illustrated with eight plates, the study balances scholarly insight with accessible storytelling, inviting listeners to picture a land where diverse cultures and landscapes intersect.
Language
en
Duration
~52 minutes (50K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-01-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1906–1968
An American ornithologist best remembered for his work on the birds of Thailand, he turned years of field experience in Southeast Asia into research that bird scholars still cite. His career joined hands-on collecting, careful taxonomy, and museum work at the Smithsonian.
View all books
by Richard Ligon

by Albert Schweitzer

by Surendranath Dasgupta

by comte de Arthur Gobineau

by Hilaire Belloc

by A. D. Bayne

by Waheenee, Gilbert Livingstone Wilson

by José Rizal