Thailand's Victory Monument
By Paul Wilding
Thursday 19th February, 2009 | 418 words | Category: Bangkok | 19 feedbacks »

Affording some of the best views and photography opportunities in the city, Bangkok's Victory Monument had always been a mystery to me. Victory! In what war? Thailand hasn't fought any wars this century other than a few pot shots at Japan in the Second World War and some nurses in the trenches in World War One, the Thai army just isn't really designed for war, it's a well known fact the Thai army is painfully inefficient at killing foreigners. So this time round I was determined to find out a little about it.
The monument was built in 1941 by the Fascist dictator Field Marshal Plaek Phiboonsongram to celebrate a bit of barney Thailand had with some French colonies left undefended by the Fall of France. The monument itself has statues of a soldier, a sailor, an airman, a government officer and a policeman, representing the five heroic roles in the war, forgetting the contribution of medics and undertakers. Now Plaek and his wife who ruled Thailand between 1938 and 1957 were pretty remarkable people and virtually invented modern Thailand. Apart from famously changing the name from Siam to Thailand they made up much of what is sold to tourists as ancient Thai culture these days, they encouraged western dress, swapped the nation from chopsticks to spoon and fork and planted Thai flags and speakers blasting the national anthem everywhere.

The monument itself commands the sky in the area and even makes the Skytrain take an expensive detour, though it is probably not the prettiest object on any horizon as was pointed out by one of its disappointed builders. Around it is the bus hub of the northern part of the city, this most useful place for easy transport to anywhere in the city is noticeably devoid of tourists, thanks largely to the unspeakably difficult "Unusawreechaisamorapoom" you would need to say to the bus conductor to get there.
Victory monument is one of my favourite places in the city, it is well worth a visit for the views from the bridges spanning the roads around it. For anyone bored of the artificial environments of the World Trade Centre or Siam Paragon yearning to see how the locals shop, the hustle and bustle of the shops and stalls around provide a great opportunity for exploration. It is easily reached from Silom and Sukhumwit by Skytrain, from Khao San it is also an excellent staging post for anyone going to the Northern Bus Station, with plenty of buses heading there from Ratchadamnoen Road.
Do you have any questions about Thailand? Maybe you are planning a holiday or just want to learn more about Thai culture. Have all of your questions answered for free at ThailandQA.com. These forums are part of the family friendly Paknam Web Network.
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19 comments
For Thai food try the street or a food centre.
* The Grand Palace and Temple of the Emerald Buddha
* Jim Thompson House
* Chinatown & Banglamphu
* Temples: Wat Arun, Wat Po & the Marble Temple (Wat Benchamabophit)
* Ride along the Chao Phraya River in a long-tail boat
* Suan Lum Night Bazaar, Sunday Market & & other shopping venues.
Check out this nice shot of Bangkok's Victory Monument:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/eazy360/3084636318/in/photostream/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/eazy360/3084636318/in/set-72157612601311910/
cheers!
"Are these pics for real, did you take them yourself?"
"Sure" was the reply.
If Paul's got a stack of pics on his com like this, then we can enjoy the prospect of a lotta future great stuff.
On top of that, this is simple, but basicially great research, which most Thais don't have the foggiest info on.
Now, how many times did FM Plaek Phibulsongkram change the name Siam-Thailand-Siam-Thailand??
Oblivious to him the word Thai (as in Tai or T'ai) constitutes the entire Thai (T'ai) people from Northern Malaysia to Assam to Yunnan to Northern Vietnam. Plaek just didn't realize how diverse and located the T'ai people/culture were before changing the historically royal name of Siam to the more nationalistic "Thailand".
Paul: It's now more than 10 years or so since our buddy writer Tommy fled, where's he now?" Still living it up in Chiang Mai, or what?!!"
By the way Kalboz: Nice pics.
sparky, that's interesting, I thought it looked like an egyption needle.
steve, I read the name change to Thailand, apart from the obvious one, to send a message to Chinese immigrant, this is "Thai" land not Chinese, was that Phiboon was a Pan-Tai-ist. He considered the possibility of one grabbing Lao and the Shan state.
By the way, thank you all for your suggestions
If you disgree with what's been said criticise this, explain how it's wrong, and then tell us the correct version of Thai history.
I apologize, on behalf of all Siamese, for "Khon Thai"'s shameful attitude.
Umm, Yes,why not , you don't live in a vacuum, You live in the world. Foreigners are free to comment. I come across this 'superiourity' attitude a fair bit in Thailand.
You shouldn't celebrate ignorance and you should welcome alternate viewpoints.
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First arriving in LOS in 1991 and returning to live in Thailand and Lao a few years later. I Spent much of the nineties & noughties photographing the country and teaching the locals English and cynicism in equal measure.
