By
John Hoskin
Chiang Rai hides its age
well. It is, in fact, thirty-five years older than Chiang Mai, northern
Thailand's largest and best known city.Founded in 1262, it was briefly the capital of King Mengrai's budding
Lanna kingdom, but history passed it by when, in 1297, Chiang Mai was
created as the North's permanent capital.
The characteristics seem
contradictory, but Bangkok is a huge paradox, at once wondrous and woeful.
For this it is one of the world's most distinctive cities, a place that
fascinates by making innumerable contradictions seem consistent. It
is at once chaotic and serene, ancient and modern, sacred and profane,
pandering to nouveau riche greed and proudly caring of traditional values...
the oddities are as endless as they are real.
The key to understanding
Bangkok is to realize that beneath its modern facade it remains unmistakably
Thai, traditional and essentially unchanging. Ultimately, the city is
simply itself and you have to accept it as such if you are ever going
to come to terms with it. The horrendous traffic congestion is perhaps
everyone's biggest complaint, but even for those who complain, cars
in Thailand are not firstly a means of transport, they are social cachets
which once obtained are not to be relinquished lightly.
Traffic congestion is
part and parcel of the Bangkok experience, and it is easier to accept
when you realize it is not going to change. Nor is it new. There never
were any halcyon days before the canals were filled in to make way for
paved roads. Here's Queen Victoria's envoy Sir John Bowring on the hazards
of Bangkok's then waterborne traffic: "Boats often run against one another,
and those within them are submerged in the water...The constant occurrence
of petty disasters seems to reconcile everybody to their consequences."
That was in the 1850s but the idea of being reconciled to the inevitable
hassles of city traffic remains true today.
Located on the banks
of the Chao Phraya River, a few kilometres upstream from its outflow
into the Gulf of Siam, Bangkok sprawls across a flat alluvial plain.
It is the capital in every sense of the word. It is where the Royal
Family resides, it is the seat of government and administration, and
it is the focal point for virtually all major industrial, commercial
and financial activity. It is the country's main port and home to more
than one-tenth of the Kingdom's population.
Such an all-important
role is reflected in the capital's proper name, Krung Thep. This translates
as "City of Angels" and is the first in a whole string of illustrious
titles that properly define the place -- and, incidentally, earn a listing
in the Guinness Book of Records as the world's longest place name. To
the Thais Bangkok is always Krung Thep, the spiritual and symbolic as
well as physical heart of the nation.
And yet Bangkok is a
comparatively young city. A riverine village and customs post until
the late 18th century, it was founded as the national capital in 1782
by King Rama I. Initially the city was intended to parallel the lost
glory of Ayutthaya, the previous capital destroyed by the Burmese, and
was accordingly developed as an island city with a web of canals. Palaces
and temples in classical architecture were the only substantial buildings;
houses and other structures were made of wood.
Change came in the mid
19th century when King Mongkut, Rama VI, ordered the building of the
first roads for wheeled traffic. In the same reign, Bangkok was embarked
on the path of commerce with the signing of international trade agreements.
A pattern of modernization and commercialization along largely Western
lines has been followed ever since.More