Sanan Devahastin na Ayudhya (also spelled Thephasadin among other variants; Thai: สนั่น เทพหัสดิน ณ อยุธยา, RTGSSanan Thep-hatsadin Na Ayutthaya, pronounced [sā.nàn tʰêːp.hàt.sā.dīn náʔ ʔā.jút.tʰā.jāː]; 1 January 1877 – 1 February 1943), better known by his noble title Chaophraya Thammasakmontri (เจ้าพระยาธรรมศักดิ์มนตรี, pronounced [t͡ɕâːw.pʰrā.jāː tʰām.mā.sàk.mōn.trīː]), was an educator, writer and senior government officer of Siam/Thailand. He served as Minister of Public Instruction from 1915–1926, and was the first President of the National Assembly, serving from 28 June – 1 September 1932 and from 15 December 1933 – 26 February 1934.[1][2]

Thammasakmontri
เจ้าพระยาธรรมศักดิ์มนตรี
Speaker of the House of Representatives
and President of the National Assembly of Thailand
In office
15 December 1933 – 26 February 1934
MonarchPrajadhipok
Prime MinisterPhraya Phahon
Preceded byChaophraya Phichaiyat
Succeeded byPhraya Sorayuthaseni
In office
28 June 1932 – 1 September 1932
MonarchPrajadhipok
Prime MinisterPhraya Manopakorn Nitithada
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byChaophraya Phichaiyat
Minister of Public Instruction
In office
19 June 1916 – 3 August 1926
Preceded byChaophraya Phrasadet Surentharathibodi
Succeeded byPrince Dhani Nivat
Personal details
Born
Sanan Devahastin na Ayudhya

(1877-01-01)1 January 1877
Bangkok, Siam
Died1 February 1943(1943-02-01) (aged 66)
Bangkok, Siam
Alma materBorough Road College
HouseDevahastin
DynastyChakri

Personal life

edit

Sanan Devahastin na Ayudhya was born near the Hua Met Shrine, Saphan Han district, Phra Nakhon province, Bangkok, on 1 January 1877. When he was eight years old his father died and his life changed, although this misfortune proved providential in some ways to his future career as an educator, minister and key member of the court of King Rama VI. Despite being the son of a senior nobleman and a direct descendant of King Rama I, he helped mothers with gardening and trading, and was contracted to undertake buttonhole stitching from a young age. Through these enterprises, he learned to be hardworking, compassionate, and thrifty, and not to be discouraged by unforeseen drawbacks - all valuable lessons that enabled him to flourish in both his education and his later work as Minister of Public Instruction, a position similar to Minister of Education today.

Education and career

edit

Senan Devahastin Na Aydhaya studied at Wat Bophitphimuk School, Suankularb Wittayalai School and Sunanta School, followed by the Teacher Training School from 1892 - 1894, where he earned a teaching certificate and became one of the first graduates in the initial cohort of qualified schoolteachers in Thailand. He taught for approximately two years, and then on 4 May 1896, as a scholarship student with the Thai Ministry of Education, he left Thailand to continue his studies at Borough Road College in Isleworth, west London (later incorporated into Brunel University), under the direction of Sir Robert Laurie Morant.

After his studies in Britain and following a three-month study tour of India and Myanmar, he returned to Thailand and established the Thai education system based on the British school system. He was awarded the title Chaophraya Thammasakmontri and became Lord Chamberlain in the King's Court. Known as the father of modern Thai education, Chaophraya Thammasakmontri laid the foundations of contemporary learning in the country and was one of the forward-thinking educators who helped found and build Chulalongkorn University, the country's first higher education institution.

After resigning from government service, Chao Phraya Thammasakmontri collaborated with his eldest daughter, Chailai Thephasadin Na Ayudhaya, to convert his family home into Satree Chulanak School to promote education and provide scholarships for talented young students. A "reformist aristocrat and an early figure of public intellectual",[3] Chaophraya Thammasakmontri, also known as Khru Thep, "initiated the use of verse as a medium for political and social commentary".[4] A volume of his poems and writings has recently been published by Butterfly Book, an independent Bangkok publishing house set up by Chaophraya Thammasakmontri's late granddaughter, the best-selling Thai author Phakawadee Utamote, and author and publisher, Makut Onrutdee.

Residence

edit
 
Photo of Bangkok 1899, Ban Chao Phraya Thammasakmontri after renovation in 2018

Following his marriage to Lady Tawin Salak, the young couple were given a grand new home as a wedding present by the bride's father, Phraya Sriphuripricha [th], in the Nang Loeng neighbourhood in Pom Prap Sattru Phai district, part of Bangkok's old town. The prominent, Western-style Neoclassical mansion is an architectural showpiece and important legacy of Bangkok's historical and cultural heritage. Built in 1899, it was commissioned, designed and constructed by the Italian architect, Mario Tamagno, designer of the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall, Neilson Hays Library and Hua Lamphong Railway Station. The white house with green eaves on Nakhon Sawan Road, replete with imported white Italian marble, teak floors, delicate stucco designs and intricate patterns on the beams, arches and vents, reflects the Italian architect's style and the European influences of the time. Chaophraya Thammasakmontri's house, now owned by his descendants, recently reopened as an educational and cultural centre. Renamed "Bangkok 1899", both the house and its gardens opened to the public in February 2019 to promote the arts, cultural exhibitions and the arts in education, with a focus on sustainability. By reopening the house to the public as an art-space-cum-civic-centre, the Bangkok 1899 project commemorates the life and work of Chaophraya Thammasakmontri, and continues his idea of using education as a means of social, national, cultural and individual development. Creative Migration, a non-profit international arts organization based in Los Angeles and Bangkok with major support from The Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Motor Company Fund, spearheaded the restoration.

Death

edit

Chaophraya Thammasakmontri died from a heart attack on February 1, 1943, at his house in Nakhon Sawan Road, Bangkok. He was 67.

Royal decorations

edit

Chuan was awarded the following royal decorations in the Honours System of Thailand:

References

edit
  1. ^ "ประวัติย่อ". Archived from the original on 2017-07-31. Retrieved 2017-07-22.
  2. ^ "วันครู..คิดถึงครูเทพพาชมบ้านเจ้าพระยาธรรมศักดิ์มนตรี เสนาบดีกระทรวงธรรมการ".
  3. ^ Lords of Things: The Fashioning of the Siamese Monarchy's Modern Image, Maurizio Peleggi, University of Hawaii Press, 2002, page 96
  4. ^ South-East Asia: Languages and Literatures: a Select Guide, edited by Patricia Herbert and Anthony Crothers Milner; University of Hawaii Press, 1989, page 37