Dance in Thailand
Dance in Thailand (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA". or Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".) is the main dramatic art form in Thailand. Thai dance can be divided into two major categories, high art (classical dance) and low art (folk dance).
Etymology
The term nattasin (Template:Langx) means "art of the classical Thai dance, art of drama", and the term nattakam (Template:Langx) means "poetry, music drama and dance", according to The Thai Official Dictionary of Royal Institute 2545 BE. Both terms are derived from Sanskrit:
- naṭa (Template:Langx) Template:Arrow nata, which means "dancing, acting, a dance,"
- śilpa (Template:Langx) Template:Arrow sin, meaning "artistic work,"
- karma (Template:Langx) Template:Arrow kama[1]
The term for dance in Thai, also known as the Dance of the Four Regions, is as follows:
- Northern Thailand: The term fon (Thai: ฟ้อน) describes a category of traditional dance forms, such as Fon Khan Dok. Historical evidence, including stone inscriptions, engravings, and the Buddhist cosmological treatise Trai Phum Phra Ruang (Tribhumikatha Buddhist Cosmology) written in 1345 AD by King Li Thai (Maha Thammaracha I) of Sukhothai, shows the long-standing importance of this term within the broader Tai cultural area.[2][3] The development of fon dances in the Lanna region shows a unique cultural path that evolved alongside, rather than just borrowing from, other Tai states like Sukhothai.[4]
- Upper Northeastern Thailand: Traditional dances are classified using terms from Tai languages. The term fon (Thai: ฟ้อน) usually describes a graceful and classical style of dance. This type of dance features refined movements and elaborate costumes for ceremonies or artistic events. On the other hand, soeng (Thai: เซิ้ง) refers to a more energetic and vibrant dance form. It is often linked to communal celebrations, festivals, and folk traditions, marked by lively rhythms and frequently improvised movements.[5] Examples include Fon Oen Khwan, which is a welcoming or blessing dance, and Soeng Bang Fai, performed during the rocket festival.[6]
- Lower Northeastern Thailand: A region with deep historical and cultural ties to Khmer civilization, the word rueam (Thai: เรือม) describes traditional dances. It likely comes from the Old Khmer word rapaṃ (Khmer: របាំ), which means 'to dance'.[7] A notable example of these native dance forms is Rueam Kan Truem, commonly performed during local festivals and ceremonies.[8]
- Central Thailand and Upper Southern Thailand: Several terms describe different types of dance. The terms ram (Thai: รำ) and rabam (Thai: ระบำ) are commonly used as generic terms for many traditional Thai dances. In contrast, ten (Thai: เต้น) refers specifically to informal, lively, or energetic movements.[9]
- The etymology of these terms reveals a rich linguistic history. Ram and ten are thought to derive from Proto-Tai roots, respectively ram and ten meaning 'to dance', and showing cognates in related Tai languages such as Lao and Shan.[10] This demonstrates their deep historical presence within Tai-speaking cultures.
- The term rabam is derived from Old Khmer words, including rapaṃ, rapam, rpam, and raṃ (Khmer: រាំ, របាំ), signifying a historical borrowing from the ancient Khmer language.[11]
While the individual terms ten and ram have ancient Tai origins, their combination to form tenram (Thai: เต้นรำ) refers to social or ballroom dancing in contemporary Thai.[9] It is important to note that the concept of Western-style ballroom dance was introduced to Thailand much later, primarily during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, not in the early 14th century.[12]
However, the terms fon, ram, and rabam themselves were indeed present in various forms during the Sukhothai period. These terms evolved over time to encompass a wide array of Thai traditional dances, including classical forms like Ram Baht Sakunee and folk dances such as Ten Kam Ram Kiew.[13]
- Lower Southern Thailand: The term taree (Template:Langx) comes from the Malay word: tari.[14] Dances such as the Taree Kipas (Fan Dance) are an integral part of the cultural heritage of the Thai Malay community.[15]
The Thai term khon (Thai: โขน), which refers to a highly stylized masked dance-drama, is predominantly associated with performances of the Ramakien, the Thai national epic derived from the Indian Ramayana.[16] The precise etymology of the word "khon" remains a subject of academic discussion.
It is widely acknowledged that Thai performing arts, including Khon, have been significantly influenced by Indian cultural traditions and the epic narratives of the Ramayana. However, direct linguistic derivation from specific terms like the Tamil kōṉ (Tamil: கோன்), meaning "king or god," is not universally accepted among linguists and historians as the definitive origin of the Thai word "khon".[13][6] The evolution of Khon is understood as a complex interplay of indigenous artistic traditions and adaptations of foreign influences, particularly from India and other parts of Asia, culminating in a unique Thai art form.[16][17]
There are various hypothesis in which the Thai term lakon (also spelt: lakorn, lakhon) derives from. Scholarly consensus points to the Old Khmer term lakhon (Khmer: ល្ខោន) meaning “theatre, drama, play” which ultimately originated from the Pali/Sanskrit root lakkhaṇa/lakṣaṇa (Sanskrit: लक्षण) meaning “characteristic”.[18] This theory is more popularized amongst scholars due to the historical influence of ancient Khmer culture and linguistics on early Thai civilizations. Another theory is that the Thai term lakon derives from the Javanese word lakon [19] (Template:Langx), a derivation of lakuan, lagon and laku,[20] meaning "to walk, to act, to run". Following this theory, Thai historian Prince Damrong Rajanubhab hypothesized that the term lakon originated from the name of Nakhon Si Thammarat when Javanese culture during the Ayutthaya period was first introduced.[19]Template:Rp
History
Origin
Thai classical dance forms, like many performing arts in Southeast Asia, are heavily influenced by ancient Indian art.[21] These influences came through centuries of cultural exchange and trade. They include ideas from the Natya Shastra, an important Sanskrit text on the performing arts that describes basic dance poses and movements known as karanas.[22] The depiction of 108 karanas in temples like the Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram, India, shows these principles that resonated throughout the region.[23] However, Thai dance developed into a unique blend. It combined these outside influences with local traditions and innovations that grew from interactions with nearby cultures, especially the Khmer Empire.[4][24]
Archaeological evidence offers a glimpse into the early performing arts traditions that later shaped Thai classical dance. Stuccos and sculptures showing dance-like poses, dating back to the Dvaravati era (6th–11th century CE), have been found at sites like Khok Mai Den and Chansen in Nakhon Sawan, as well as Ban Khu Bua in Ratchaburi.[25] These Dvaravati artifacts show a clear influence from Indian culture in their iconography and artistic expression.[21] In addition, later archaeological discoveries from the Khmer period, highlighted by the detailed dance figures at Prasat Phimai in Nakhon Ratchasima (primarily 11th–12th century CE), were also important in the developing performing arts scene of the region.[23][26]
Over time, Thai dance grew through a steady blend of cultural influences. It transformed various elements into a unique artistic form. This evolution involved creatively using different cultural aspects, musical instruments, and storytelling traditions from India, China, the Malay world, Mon, Khmer, Myanmar, and local groups in the Chao Phraya River Basin.[4][24] Through this broad mixing and local adaptation, these varied influences were reshaped. This process helped create a distinct Thai dance identity that, while connected to its historical roots in neighboring cultures, developed its own aesthetic and performance styles.[4][27]
Nanzhao Period
Traditional accounts and historical narratives suggest that early forms of martial dance emerged in kingdoms associated with Tai-speaking peoples in mainland Southeast Asia. One tradition, often linked to the historical kingdom of Nanzhao, which dates from the 8th century CE onwards, is known as Fon Joeng.[2][28] This art form, practiced by northern Thai peoples, combines ceremonial dance for rituals with martial movements for self-defense. It showcases both offensive and defensive fighting styles.[4] Fon Joeng features various drum rhythms and is traditionally believed to have been passed down through a lineage that includes the Ngoenyang and Lanna kingdoms. Its cultural influences extend to other Tai states like Sukhothai.[2][29] Today, Fon Joeng is still practiced in Thailand as a recreational dance and is recognized as a historical precursor to elements found in the martial art of Muay Thai.[24]
Sukhothai Period
Evidence from the Sukhothai period, particularly the famous inscription attributed to King Ramkhamhaeng, shows that public festivities and performing arts were present. The inscription describes the sounds of pipes and drums during a celebration, likely the Kathina festival. This suggests that music and festive activities played a role in community life.[30] While these records confirm the existence of performances, scholars point out that the evidence highlights communal, ritualistic, or festive events rather than structured, narrative drama, which arose in later periods.[31] The performing arts in the Sukhothai kingdom were part of a larger regional mix, combining various cultural influences from mainland Southeast Asia during that time.[32][31]
Early inscriptions indicate that public performances were festive. However, more structured dance-drama based on stories developed in the region due to a blend of cultures. The emerging states in the Chao Phraya basin, such as Sukhothai, interacted closely with the well-established Mon and Khmer civilizations.[31] The Khmer, especially, had a rich court culture at Angkor, filled with complex, Indian-influenced religious and theatrical traditions.[33] As Sukhothai gained power, it started to adopt and modify these respected Khmer performance styles, which focused on storytelling and graceful movement. This cultural blending played a key role in creating the classical dramatic arts later linked to Siamese courts, combining local traditions with the refined aesthetics of the Khmer.[31][33]
Further evidence of performance in this era comes from inscriptions and literature, although their details are often misunderstood. For instance, Sukhothai Inscription No. 8, dated 1357 CE, describes a royal pilgrimage marked by the sounds of horns, conches, drums, and other instruments. This creates a vivid image of ceremonial processions filled with music.[34][35] While this inscription confirms the importance of music in royal and religious events, it lacks specific verbs for dancing. A separate and influential literary work from the time, the Buddhist cosmological text Traibhumikatha (c. 1345), describes celestial beings (devas) in various heavens who entertain themselves by singing and performing. The text uses the general term len (Thai: เล่น), meaning "to play" or "to perform," to refer to these heavenly activities.[36] Together, these sources show that music and performance were recognized concepts, connected with both earthly ceremonies and heavenly joy. They provide a basis for the more complex dramatic forms that would emerge in later centuries.
Investigating the vocabulary of performance from this period offers insight into its various origins. Historical linguists point out that key Thai terms for dance have unique roots. For instance, the general verb ram (Thai: รำ) comes from Tai, while the term for a choreographed, often ceremonial group performance, rabam (Thai: ระบำ), is generally accepted as a loanword from Old Khmer (rapam).[37][38] This linguistic evidence aligns with art historical and archaeological findings that show significant Khmer cultural influence on Sukhothai. Although Sukhothai rulers managed to gain political independence from the declining Khmer empire, they also adopted important aspects of Angkorean court culture.[39] This included ideas of divine kingship, religious art, and state ceremony, which were the established standards of power and refinement in the area. Therefore, although Sukhothai created its own distinct artistic style, it was based on a deep connection to sophisticated Khmer aesthetic and performance traditions.[40]
Ayutthaya Period
Ayutthaya was a pre-existing city and home of Mon and later Siamese that aged older than the Sukhothai kingdom, prior to the establishment of the Ayutthaya Kingdom.[41]
Thai dance in the Ayutthaya period was influenced heavily by Indian cultures different from the Sukhothai period due to its being home to various ethnic groups. Simon de la Loubère recorded the society of Ayutthaya in his famous work, Du royaume de Siam, that there were forty different ethnic groups. The Moors alone have as many as 10 ethnic groups. Template:Ill also said more than one third of the Ayutthaya residents are foreigners; even the Palace Law Chulasakarat 720 (enacted in 1358) of the Ayutthaya royal court mentioned Indian, Khmer, Lao, Khom minorities in the Chao Phraya River basin, Burmese, HMong, Mon, Muslims, Jang, Chinese, Chams, Javanese, and all other ethnics.[42][43]
According to the Ayutthaya Royal Palace Law, under the entertainment chapter, stated that there were len, ram, rabam, ra-beng, kulati-mai, and Nang yai. Simon de la Loubère also mentioned three types of performances: dance (rabam), drama (lakhon), and masked drama-dance (khon).[44]Template:Rp
There are three genres of drama-dance: Lakhon chatri, Lakhon nok, and Lakhon nai, of which Lakhon chatri is the oldest form of Thai dance and closely related to the Menora. Ram and Rabam are forms of dance that have existed since the Sukhothai period, as appears in various Sukhothai inscriptions and literature. The Khon in the Ayutthaya period originated around the 11th century CE, which is modeled heavily on the Hindu epic, Ramayana, to the Thai version, Ramakien (Glory of Rama).[45][46]
Thai dance was later mixed with the Khmer culture after Ayutthaya sacked the Angkor Thom in 1431[47] in the reign of King Borommarachathirat II,[44]Template:Rp which integrated an influx of Khmer cultures—Hinduism−influenced into the Siamese court. In time passed, Thai dance in this period was created by combining various dance forms until it improved into Ayutthaya Royal Court dance. When considering the social context of that period, Thai dance in the Ayutthaya period is considered to be the main culture among ethnic diversity.[48] The Khmer culture of Angkor Thom was completely lost after Ayutthaya annexed Sukhothai in 1438 as a result.[48]
According to Surapone Virulrak, Thai performance art took shape during the Ayutthaya period. At this time, Chak nak Dukdamban, a "ceremony depicting the churning of the ocean to create the immortal spirit", was performed on special occasions.[49] This ceremony drew from the Indian epic of the Mahābhārata. Virulrak states, "These performing arts were gradually developed into Khon (masked play), lakhon nok (public dance drama) and lakhon nai (court dance drama) during the Late Ayutthaya Period (1456-1767)", adding, "this period also enjoyed various imported performing arts from neighbouring countries."[50] According to Paul Cravath, this ceremony performed by Khmer dancers is also depicted in bas-reliefs at Angkor Wat in Cambodia and could have been the forefather of Khon.[51]
Aside from folk and regional dances (such as southern Thailand's Indian-influenced Manora dance), the two major forms of Thai classical dance drama are Khon and lakhon nai. In the beginning, both were exclusively court entertainments and it was not until much later that a popular style of dance theatre, likay, evolved as a diversion for the common folk who had no access to royal performances.[52]
When considering historical evidence and various archaeological studies, together with the consideration of dance postures in the works of Prince Damrong Rajanubhab, The Dance Manual, it is found that Ayutthaya drama originated from Manora, which were popular in southern Ayutthaya. In particular, the Lakhon Chatri, which was influenced by Indian and Javanese cultures, was the origin in the South.[45] It was later classified as the Lakhon Nok and the Lakhon Nai. Even the term lakhon was borrowed from the Javanese, Lakon, (Template:Langx) perhaps the Malay, lakhan.[45][44]Template:Rp
Evidence showing that Srivijaya culture spread from the Malay Peninsula to Chaiya (modern Nakhon Si Thammarat) and other regions, including the story of Inao (Thai version from Panji tales), Nang yai, and Likay into Ayutthaya from the southern region, is the Borobudur, built in the 9th century CE in the Srivijaya period.[44]Template:Rp
Since the Ayutthaya period, Thai dance evolved after being mixed with multiple cultures of the northern (Sukhothai) and southern (Chaiya) cities, the Khmer of Angkor Thom, and many local ethnic diversity; it evolved and improved both dance, drama, and Khon throughout the period to be more refined and beautiful until it became a unique culture of the Ayutthaya royal court, including traditions, local amusements, and even costumes. The clothing and accessories of Thai dance in the Ayutthaya period flourished greatly during the reign of King Borommakot. Many literary works and plays related to dance were created, such as Ramakien, Inao, and other dances outside and inside the royal court.[44]Template:Rp
In 1768, after the second fall of Ayutthaya, many Siamese actors and actresses for the Lakhon Nai drama disappeared. Most drama and the ramakien works were all lost in abundance when the Ayutthaya was sacked by the Burmese in 1767.[54] Some fled to cities that were not lost to the Burmese troops, e.g., Phitsanulok and Nakhon Sri Thammarat, while others were rounded up and taken to Myanmar. However, the Lakhon Nok that was widely performed outside the Ayutthaya court still remains in large numbers. There are still Siamese people who have witnessed Lakhon Nai drama in the Ayutthaya royal court, such as Princess Pinthawadi, the daughter of King Borommakot, who lived until the Rattanakosin period and was the one who transmitted ancient customs and royal ceremonies to the Rattanakosin royal courts.[44]Template:Rp
Hence, ramakien and khon in the Rattanakosin era were reproduced by King Rama I from the Ramayana versions of Hindi, Tamil, and Bengali, which are not the same version of Ayutthaya.[54]
In 1958 King Norodom Sihanouk explained the Thai dance costume, which mentioned in Ayutthaya period, to Malcolm John MacDonald, former Commissioner-General for Southeast Asia, that the Thais' idea of costume was different from that of the Khmers. Moreover, Thai court dance uniforms were gorgeous and, to their taste, infinitely superior to the flimsy simplicity of the Khmer corps de ballet, while the court of the ancient Khmer Empire dancers were lightly clad like the half-naked Apsara as sculptured friezes at Angkor Wat.[55]
Foreigner Record
The first detailed European record of Khon and other Thai classical dances was made during the Ayutthaya Kingdom. The tradition and styles employed are almost identical to the Thai traditions we still see today. Historical evidence establishes that the Thai art of stage plays was already perfected by the 17th-century. Louis XIV, the Sun King of France, had a formal diplomatic relation with Ayutthaya's King Narai. In 1687, France sent the diplomat Simon de la Loubère to record all that he saw in the Siamese Kingdom and its traditions. In his famous account Du Royaume de Siam, La Loubère carefully observed the classic 17th-century theatre of Siam, including an epic battle scene from a Khon performance, and recorded what he saw in great detail:[56]Template:RP
The Siamese have three sorts of Stage Plays: That which they call Cone [Khon] is a figure dance, to the sound of the violin and some other instruments. The dancers are masked and armed and represent rather combat than a dance. And though everyone runs into high motions, and extravagant postures, they cease not continually to intermix some word. Most of their masks are hideous and represent either monstrous Beasts or kinds of Devils. The Show which they call Lacone is a poem intermix with Epic and Dramatic, which lasts three days, from eight in the morning till seven at night. They are histories in verse, serious, and sung by several actors always present, and which do only sing reciprocally.... The Rabam is a double dance of men and women, which is not martial, but gallant ... they can perform it without much tyring themselves, because their way of dancing is a simple march round, very slow, and without any high motion; but with a great many slow contortions of the body and arms.
Of the attires of Siamese Khon dancers, La Loubère recorded that: "[T]hose that dance in Rabam, and Cone, have gilded high and pointed. It was introduced by Persian Lombok hat in King Naraya reign. but which hang down at the sides below their ears, which are adorned with counterfeit stones, and with two pendants of gilded wood."[56]Template:RP
La Loubère also observed the existence of muay Thai and muay Lao, noting that they looked similar (i.e., using both fists and elbows to fight), but the hand-wrapping techniques were different.[56]Template:RP
The accomplishment and influence of Thai art and culture, developed during the Ayutthaya Period, on neighboring countries was evident in the observation of Captain James Low a British scholar of Southeast Asia, during the early Rattanakosin Era:
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The Siamese have attained to a considerable degree of perfection in dramatic exhibitions — and are in this respect envied by their neighbours the Burmans, Laos, and Cambojans who all employ Siamese actors when they can be got.[57]
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Thonburi Period
In 1768–81, Thai dance was greatly revived by King Taksin and Thais.[44]Template:Rp There was evidence that there are still performances of Lakhon Nai and Lakhon Nok, both actors and actresses, in the capital and outside major cities, such as Nakhon Ratchasima, Chiang Mai, Fang or Sawangkhaburi (now Utaradit), and Phitsanulok during Taksin's reunification of Siam. There also were collections of dramatic compositions composed during the Ayutthaya period—more than 10 stories.[44]Template:Rp
In 1769, in the early period after the establishment of Thonburi Kingdom, King Taksin gathered many scattered actors and actresses. There were actors from Nakhon Si Thammarat sent by the governor of Pattani to King Taksin, and a Thai dance performance was organized at that time on the occasion of the consecration of the Buddha's relics at Wat Phra Mahathat in Nakhon Si Thammarat.[58] When King Taksin led his army to siege the assembly of Chao Phra Fang,[59] he organized a Thai dance performance in Fang and Phitsanulok to celebrate the cities after his victory.[44]Template:Rp
Prince Damrong Rajanubhap stated that the actors and actresses of Nakhon Si Thammarat were members of the Lakhon Nai who had fled from Ayutthaya.[60]
Throughout the reign of King Taksin, he composed five additional episodes (Four Folding-book manuscripts in total)[61] of the Thai version, Ramakien. He ordered the establishment of several royal drama theaters for training. There were performances of the Khon, Ramakien, Inao, and royal drama competitions in the Emerald Buddha celebration in 1782 near the end of the reign.[62]
Meanwhile, at the Burmese royal court, the royal family members of the Ayutthaya court and Thais who were taken to Burma brought the Thai dance to the Burmese court, resulting in Burmese dance being greatly influenced by the Ayutthaya. However, it was an opportunity to be able to revive Thai dance during the Thonburi period until the Rattanakosin period because Thai dance can be traced back to the Thai-Burmese multiculturalism in another way.[44]Template:Rp
Classical dance drama
Lakhon
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Lakhon features a wider range of stories than Khon, including folk tales and Jataka stories. Dancers are usually female who play both male and female roles and perform as a group rather than representing individual characters. Lakhon draws inspiration primarily from the Ramakien (Thai adaptation of Hindu epic Ramayana). Percussion instruments and piphat, a type of woodwind, accompany the dance.[63] Thai literature and drama draw great inspiration from Indian arts and legends.
Khon
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Khon is the most stylized form of Thai dance. It is performed by troupes of non-speaking dancers, the story being told by a chorus at the side of the stage. Choreography follows traditional models rather than attempting to innovate. Most Khon performances feature episodes from the Ramakien. Costumes are dictated by tradition, with angels, both good and bad, wearing colored masks.
Fon
Fon (Template:Langx; Template:Rtgs) is a form of folk dance accompanied by the folk music of the region. The first fon originated in the northern region of Thailand. It was designed and taught by Chao Dararasami of Chiang Mai. Since then, a variety of fon came into practice, featuring the music and style of each province, such as the fon lep (Template:Langx; Template:Rtgs) fingernail dance from Chiang Mai and the fon ngiew from Chiang Rai, which was influenced by Burmese music and costume.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Fon is divided into three types:
- Fon lep (fingernail dance): A northern Thai dance style. Each dancer wears six-inch-long brass fingernails. The long fingernails accentuate the finger movement of each dancer. Dancers wear their hair in a chignon-style with a yellow jasmine flower tiara.
- Fon tian (candle dance): A performance consists of eight dancers, each carrying candles. Dancers are in pairs, one pair to each side. They wear full-length sarongs and jackets with a matching shoulder cloth. This dance is always held at night.
- Fon ngiew (scarf dance): A dance performed at a happy event. The dance is similar to the fon lep but the dance is faster and more fun. Each dancer wears a yellow flower tiara, jong kra bane, and sabai.
Connections between Thai classical dance and the neighbouring countries
Myanmar
The two golden periods of Burmese literature were the direct consequences of the Thai literary influence. The first transmission happened during the two-decade period (1564–83), in which the Toungoo Dynasty briefly managed to subject Siam as its vassal state. This conquest incorporated many Thai elements into Burmese literature. the most evident ones were the yadu or yatu (Script error: No such module "Lang".), an emotional and philosophic verse and the yagan (Script error: No such module "Lang".) genre. The next transmission of Thai literary influence to Burma happened in the aftermath of the fall of Ayutthaya Kingdom in 1767. After the second conquest of Ayutthaya (Thailand), many Siamese royal dancers and poets were brought back to the court of Konbaung. Ramakien, the Thai version of Ramayana (Script error: No such module "Lang".), was introduced and was adapted in Burmese where it is now called Yama Zatdaw. Burmese literature during this period was therefore modelled after the Ramayana, and dramatic plays were patronised by the Burmese court.[64]
Cambodia
Template:See Template:External media
Template:Multiple image Following the collapse of the Khmer Empire in the 15th century, Cambodian dance and music incorporated influence from Thailand and Vietnam.[66] The earliest mention of Classical Cambodia dance appeared in the 17th century CE in a Sanskrit inscription.[67] In the Khmer empire (802–1431 AD), their court performers style was very sensual during Khmer rule, complete with swinging hips and bare breasts.[68]
After the Siamese herded thousands of people from Angkor Wat to the Ayutthaya Kingdom in 1421. It resulted in a cultural fusion between these two kingdoms.[69][70] Thais claim that the Siamese Royal Ballet is an adaptation of Thai ballet, and Cambodians claim that it was based on the ancient Angkor ballet as it was before the Ayutthaya Kingdoms sacked the Angkor Wat.[69][71] Meanwhile, after the second fall of Ayutthaya in the Burmese–Siamese War (1765–1767), almost all of the royal court dances of the Ayutthaya period were completely lost. From the Thonburi and Rattanakosin eras, a lot of Siamese verses and dramatic compositions were reproduced and recomposed again in the period of King Taksin and King Rama I.[72] On the contrary, the ancient Khmer dance disappeared almost four centuries ago[73] and was reintroduced only by the Siamese from the Rattanakosin era[74] with Siamese chorus, Siamese postures, and Siamese troupe. Therefore, the Cambodian Royal Ballet these days is so strongly infused with Siamese influences.[73]
In 19th century, the Khmer court dance began to be restored by Thai dancers led by Saweewath Pramoj and, under the patronage of King Ang Duong, who came to the throne in 1841, retaining many of Thai-acquired elements more elaborate and heavy costumes than had been traditional Khmer court dance.[75] The King is known to had taken refuge in the court of Siam which influenced his decision to set a new standardization for his own court dance, following the styles and manners of Thai classical dance.[76] The modern costumes and crowns used by the Royal Ballet of Cambodia are also elaborately clothed[74] showing an unmistakable Siamese influence[69] which is different from the bas-reliefs on the Angkor Wat that portray the scenes of ritual and life of the ancient Khmer ballerinas that were half-naked apsaras and nude dancers performing a sort of grand battement.[55][73]
In 1860–1904, although Cambodia was colonized by France, the Royal Ballet of Cambodia still performed Siamese repertoires[77] due to King Norodom of Cambodia (Ang Voddey) generally importing his dancing girls and concubines aged 13 to 14 years old from Siam.[78] The French scholars also recorded over 300 Siamese female artists remaining in the Cambodian royal court. Some of the songs, musical instruments, and plays had Thai names, and some of the lyrics were composed imitating a Thai style.
In 1868–1910, Aunt Chawiwat, also known as Princess Chawiwat Pramoj, daughter of Siamese Prince Vorachak Tharanubhab, took the Siamese Royal dance and Siamese troupe of Template:Ill [a high-ranking Siamese court lady], with all accessories, and the Siamese Piphat ensemble to court of the Norodom Palace in the Fifth Reign of King Rama V.[79][80]
In Cambodia history—Le Royaume du Cambodge (1883) by Jean MOURA (1827–85), a French administrator,[81] it is mentioned that Siamese females provided recruits of Siamese dancers to the ballet corps of King Norodon's palace:
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(Translation): The Siamese women were generally attractive, tall, and beautiful. They assisted in recruiting young Siamese female dancers for the ballet troupe to perform in the palace of King Norodom, and the Siamese took upon themselves the responsibility of taking the errand at their own risk to bring the shipload of dancers back to Bangkok with a charge.
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Also, George Groslier (1987–1945), a French civil servant who studied Cambodia's traditional dance art and had access to royal dancers and teachers connected to the king Sisowath’s court, wrote:
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(Translation): The Cambodian dancers were so well out of their unfortunate country (after the sack of Angkor) that the last Khmer kings, up to Norodom, had almost entirely Siamese troupes. All the teachers of the five hundred 'lokhon' of Norodom were Siamese. At his death, there were more than three hundred Thai actresses in the palace of Phnom Penh. Even today (under the reign of H. M. Sisowath) all the teachers, minus two, are Siamese! ….[82][83]
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In 1952–57, the Cambodian government requested the Thai government to send Thai dance masters to help revive the Royal Ballet of Cambodia. There were six Thai dance masters, and a Siamese troupe went to Cambodia upon their request. However, after teaching for only a few times, Thai dance masters were banned by an official of the Fine Arts Department of Thailand.[84]
In 1958, King Norodom Sihanouk propounded the theory of Cambodian performers' costumes to Malcolm MacDonald in that their dancer dresses remained an alien importation copied from the Thais.[55] In the Legend of Inao drama, works of Prince Damrong Rajanubhab, recorded during the Siamese Invasion of Cambodia and Southern Vietnam (1833–1834), the Siamese nobleman, Chaophraya Bodindecha, brought the Siamese dance troupes to teach the Cambodian dancers at Oudong in the reign of King Ang Duong and recorded the Royal Ballet of Cambodia, which was first introduced by the Siamese Prince, Krom Luang Thepharirak.[85]
During the Khmer Rouge led by Pol Pot, the Royal Ballet of Cambodia was almost destroyed, and Princess Norodom Buppha Devi of Cambodia left for France urgently[86] for years until she returned to Cambodia in 1991. Cambodian dance masters joined the princess to help re-establish the Cambodia dance.[87]
On July 25, 2008. H.R.H. Princess Norodom Buppha Devi said of Khmer classical dance influenced a lot of by Thai court:-
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From the period of Oudong with King Ang Duong to the period of Chatomuk with Kings Norodom and Sisowath, there was a lot of Thai influence because we lacked teachers. Thai masters came to the Khmer court, while Khmer masters sometimes went to the Thai court. This period was a cultural exchange the Thai and Khmer courts. It was a real mixture![88]
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Nevertheless, in Thailand, the main theory suggests the contrary. For instance, Fédéric Maurel, a French historian working for Prince of Songkla University (Thailand) notes:
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From the close of the eighteenth century and through the nineteenth century, a number of Khmer pages, classical women dancers, and musicians studied with Thai Ajarn (masters or teachers) in Cambodia. The presence of these Thai elite in Cambodia contributed to the development of strong Thai cultural influence among the Khmer upper classes. Moreover, some members of the Khmer royal family went to the Thai court and developed close relations with well-educated Thai nobility, as well as several court poets. Such cultural links were so powerful that, in some fields, one might use the term Siamization in referring to the processes of cultural absorption at the Khmer court at that time.[89]
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The Nirat or Siamese tradition of parting poetry was emulated by Khmer poets, and many Thai stories, such as Ka Kee, were translated from the Siamese source into the Khmer language.Template:Sfn One Thai study on comparative literature argues that Cambodia's current version of Ramayana (Reamker) was translated directly from the Thai source, almost stanza by stanza.[90] The Cambodian royal court used to stage Thai lakhon dramas in the Thai language during King Norodom of Cambodia's reign.Template:Sfn
Folk dance
Folk dance forms include dance theater forms like likay, numerous regional dances (ram), the ritual dance ram muay, and homage to the teacher, wai khru. Both ram muay and wai khru take place before all traditional muay Thai matches. The wai is also an annual ceremony performed by Thai classical dance groups to honor their artistic ancestors.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram wong (Template:Langx) reflects the characteristics of the dance: a type of partner dance in a circle.
- Ram muay (Template:Langx) is the ritualized dance that takes place before Southeast Asian kickboxing matches such as muay Thai.
- Wai khru (Template:Langx) Wai khru ram muay is a ritualized form of dance meant to pay respect to or homage to the khru, or teacher. It is performed annually by Thai classical dance institutions as well as before muay Thai matches.
Regional dances
Central Thailand
- Ram si nuan (Template:Langx): A typical dance of central Thailand. Its great popularity is due to the choreography and the sweetness of the music that accompanies it. The lyrics and music evoke the sweet nature of Thai girls. The dance is also an expression of the yearning of a young man won over by such great charm.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram thoet thoeng (Template:Langx, 'drum dance'): The teut-teung drum, an instrument used in Thai folk music, is played throughout the country to accompany the parades held at traditional festivals. It is said that the modern style of the teut-teung dance was created by some music teachers.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Rabam chao na (Template:Langx, 'farmers' dance'): This is a modern dance created by the Thai Ministry of Culture. The dancers wear the rice growers' traditional costume, and the dance itself enacts the daily activities of these workers who are the backbone of the nation. The ballet opens with the farmers as they come to plough and sow the fields. When they are sure that the rice is growing well, they gather together to pray to Mae Po Sop, the goddess who protects rice-growing. Lastly, the harvest is celebrated with songs and dancing.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram krabi krabong (Template:Langx): These dances are inspired by types of combat that were typical of Thailand, in which either sticks or swords are used. The skillful use of the short stick depends on the agility of the fighter, who must attack and always remain close to his opponent, while the combatant who takes up the long stick must maintain a critical distance from his rival to use his weapon effectively. The art of sword fighting has been practiced in Thailand since the beginning of time, and, traditionally, a ceremonial dance is performed prior to combat.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Central Thailand dances
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Thoet thoeng dance
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Krabi krabong practitioners
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Krabi krabong practitioners with Thai swords (daab)
Northeast Thailand
- Serng kratip khoa: This dance is performed during traditional celebrations. Usually, the word serng is added to the name of the domestic object used on stage by the dancers. In the case of the serng kratip, the dancers carry typical rice baskets, known as kratip. Their movements imitate those of the women who bring food to the men working in the fields. The choreography is accompanied by music with a lively rhythm. The instruments used are a long drum, charb (cymbals), grab (a kind of castanet), mong (gong), and the kahen (similar to an old-fashioned syringe).Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Serng Isan: This folk dance is generally performed at traditional festivals. The choreography is entrusted to the dancers, who wear brightly colored costumes and express all the joy of the celebration.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Fon Phu Thai: This dance is part of a propitiatory ceremony performed by the Phu Thai tribe, who live in the northeast. The music that accompanies it is played on typical instruments like the gong ching (a tribal drum), along with other drums and pipes. The gong ching plays a fundamental part because it sets the rhythm for the dance.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Serng krapo ('coconut dance'): Krapo is the word for 'coconut' in the Isan language. The dance illustrates the activities of a group of nubile girls from the southern part of the region, known as Isan. The dancers hold two coconut shells, with which they execute complex choreographic movements, shaking them, tossing them, or tapping them lightly. This dance is often accompanied by the sound of the pong lang, a kind of upright xylophone made of strips of wood arranged according to the musical scale.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Isan bantheong ('the happiness of Isan'): This is a series of folk dances usually performed on festive occasions. The swift, harmonious movements are accompanied by folk songs associated with the northeast region.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Northeast Thailand dances
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Dancers at a Yasothon festival
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A folk dance in the Rocket Festival parade in Yasothon
Northern Thailand
- Fon sao mai ('silk weaving dance'): Fon is a type of dance in northern and northeastern Thailand. It is performed in groups and has very slow, graceful, and almost meditative movements. Fon sao mai depicts a traditional profession of northern Thai women in silk weaving. The dance imitates different processes of silk-weaving. For generations, silk production is one of the top home industries in northern and northeastern Thailand and Laos.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Dance of the Nantha-peri and Pu-cha drums: The nantha-peri is a drum characteristic of northern Thailand, which is used for two purposes: to spur on warriors prior to battle and to pay homage to the Buddha in religious ceremonies. The pu-che, on the other hand, is a type of drum used by the tribes that live in the north: the Tay Yai, the Tai Lue and the Tay Yan. It is used to accompany various dances including, the sword dance, and the kai lai and king ka lai dances.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Sword Dance: This dance is inspired by an ancient martial art that requires tremendous courage and strength and excellent reflexes. The dancers balance a number of swords on different parts of their bodies while fighting off their rival with a sword sheath.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ka-lai dance: Beginners learn to execute graceful and balanced movements through the choreography of this dance.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- King-ka-la dance: The hand movements and steps of the female dancers, who wear spectacular fan-shaped costumes, evoke the movements of a bird.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- The Sounds of the Mountains: The music that accompanies this dance is played on wind instruments characteristic of three tribes in North Thailand: the pi hom (a gourd pipe) of the Tai Lue, the pi joom of the Tay Yuan and the kan nam tao (a gourd flute) of the Li Saw.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Candle Dance: Typical of the Thai Kheun tribe, this dance is performed in honor of the Buddha. The female dancers pay homage to the divinities that protect the eight cardinal points of the Earth, asking them to pass through the candlelight in homage to the Buddha.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Khan Dok Dance: The striking choreography of this dance of blessing expresses the calm, serene temperament of the northern peoples.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Choeng Tua Auk-son Dance: This dance, performed in the Buddha's honor, is characterized by a complex choreography inspired by the calligraphy of the ancient alphabets of the northern regions and by the movements used in martial arts.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- The Sounds of Lanna, the Ancient Kingdom of the North: This music is played on two instruments typical of this region. The phin-phia is a stringed instrument whose body is made from a coconut shell. When he plays it, the musician rests the shell on his bare chest, then moves it or presses it to achieve the desired tonality. In the past, the phin-phia was the instrument used by youths to court the maidens of their village. Few musicians still play it. The sueng is a stringed instrument made of teak or hardwood. It is played by plucking the two metal or brass strings with a horn plectrum.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Northern Thailand dances
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A dancer in Chiang Mai
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Thai dancers in Laplae wearing Khmer-style dresses and crowns
Southern Thailand
- Nora: Nora is a traditional dance of southern Thailand (called the Chatri in southern Thai ). Its origins lie in various legends, which there are different versions of. The choreography of Nora varies from region to region, but it is generally composed of 12 positions and 17 movements.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Nora tua oon: This more refined version of Nora often requires greater interpretive skills and experience. Nora tua oon is often studied from a very young age so that the body can achieve the flexibility necessary to execute the dance's complicated movements. Female Nora tua oon dancers follow a demanding exercise regime and strict discipline.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram taeng kae: Ram taeng kae is an elaborate Nora dance that requires great interpretative skills. In the dance, the protagonist launches a harpoon at a crocodile, whose back, lit by candles, is made from the trunk of a banyan tree. A female dancer moves around the writhing crocodile, poised to pierce its head at the right moment.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram Nora son ram: This dance consists of a basic posture, which is executed by concentrating on hand, arm, and shoulder movements, as well as on the equilibrium and movement of various parts of the body. Ram Nora son ram is accompanied by long lyrics.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram kien pral / yieb louk manao / ram ko soet: This advanced level of Nora is usually performed during competitions between two groups of dancers. To intimidate the rival group, a male dancer strikes an effigy. In the yieb louk manao version, the female protagonist stamps on three lemons, symbolizing the hearts of the rivals. The dance is performed as a sign of victory. Afterward, the female protagonist asks the pran, a comical hunter, to give her a headdress as a symbol of her victory. This is a ceremonial ritual carried out to dishonor rivals and to encourage the members of the group. The dance is characterized by a certain sacredness.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram Nora bot pratom: The choreography of ram Nora bot pratom uses a basic posture in which hand, arm, and shoulder movements are synchronized with head movements.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram ooak pran: In a Nora performance company, the pran, or hunter, plays the part of the fool. He usually wears a hunter's mask or headdress, and the movements are often amusing and designed to make the audience laugh. Each position is in harmony with the dynamic rhythm of the music.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram Nora klong Hong: This advanced level of Nora is performed only on important occasions. The female protagonist plays the role of Hong or kinnaree, a legendary creature who is half woman and half bird. According to a celebrated Nora teacher, ram Nora klong Hong is partly based on the legend of Prasuton-Manora: the seven kinnaree play in the lake in the middle of a wood. Struck by their beauty and lightheartedness, pran Boon, the hunter, chases the maidens in an attempt to catch the youngest. The lively, harmonious movements perfectly evoke pran Boon's pursuit of the kinnaree as the youngest tries to escape.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Ram Nora tam bot / ram ooak pran: In this dance, the hand movements evoke the beautiful scenery of Songkhla Province in South Thailand. The verses of the song are accompanied by a lively rhythm.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Rabam Srivichai / rabam Sevichai: This is one of the so-called "Thai archaeological dances". It is a reinvented dance that represents the kingdom of Srivijaya, an 8th to 13th-century Buddhist maritime empire that encompassed present-day Indonesia, Malaysia, and south Thailand. The choreography and dance costumes are based on images carved as a bas-relief on the stupa of Borobudur in central Java and other artifacts of the Srivijaya period. The musical melody is composed in Javanese style, while its colors, black, red, and green, are characteristic of southern Thailand. The dance headdress is called a krabang naa. Some of the movements, poses, and stances are based on classical Javanese and Balinese dance traditions.[91]
- Southern Thailand dances
See also
References
External links
- Khon Masks of Thailand
- Khon, classic theatre and dance
- Template:Usurped
- Patravadi theatre presents Chalawan The Likay Musical.
- Banramthai website (in Thai and English)
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- ↑ Shimladka V. (2021). Desa kala Emerging Trends in Performing Arts and Indic Studies. Raleigh, NC: Lulu Publication. p. 54. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ a b c d e Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Mohd. Anis Md. Nor. (1993). Zapin, Folk Dance of the Malay World. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 72. Template:ISBN
- Santaella, M. A. (2023). Performing Arts and the Royal Courts of Southeast Asia Vol. I: Pusaka as Documented Heritage. Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV. p. 8. Template:ISBN Template:Catalog lookup linkScript error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".
- ↑ Ruangnarong P. (1984). On folklore of Muslims in Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat Provinces, southern Thailand สมบัติไทยมุสลิมภาคใต้การศึกษาคติชาวบ้านไทยมุสลิมจังหวัดปัตตานี ยะลา และนราธิวาส (in Thai). (2nd Ed.). Bangkok: Charoenwit Kanphim. p. 115.
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b Mattani M. R., Higashi Y., Bunka A., and Senta K., Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies for UNESCO, Japan. (1993). Dance, Drama, and Theatre in Thailand; The Process of Development and Modernization. Tokyo: CEACS. Template:ISBN.
- ↑ Scheltema J. F. (1912). Monumental Java: with Illustrations, and Vignettes after Drawings of Javanese Chandi Ornament by the Author. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services. p. 170. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b c H. L. Smith, "The Development of Thai Dance," in Essays on Thai Folklore, Bangkok, Thailand: Duang Kamol, 1987, pp. 101–120.
- ↑ M. L. E. P. T. S. Diskul, Art in Thailand: A Brief History. Bangkok, Thailand: Amarin Printing Group, 1995.
- ↑ H. I. Jessup, Sculpture of Angkor and Ancient Cambodia: Millennium of Glory. London, UK: Thames & Hudson, 2004.
- ↑ B. P. Groslier, Indochina: Art in the Melting-Pot of Races. London, UK: Methuen, 1962.
- ↑ S. Pallegoix, Description of the Thai Kingdom or Siam. Bangkok, Thailand: White Lotus Press, 2000. (Originally published in French in 1854, often cited for historical customs).
- ↑ C. Keyes, The Golden Peninsula: Culture and Change in Mainland Southeast Asia. Honolulu, HI, USA: University of Hawaii Press, 1995.
- ↑ J. C. Eade, Ed., The Ramkhamhaeng Inscription: A New Translation and Analysis. Canberra: Australian National University, 1991.
- ↑ a b c d P. A. Skilling, "The Texts of the Ratanabimbavamsa," Journal of the Pali Text Society, vol. 27, pp. 153-194, 2002.
- ↑ C. F. Keyes, "The Case of the Purloined Lintel: The Politics of a Khmer Shrine as a Thai National Treasure," in National Identity and Its Defenders: Thailand, 1939-1989, C. F. Keyes, Ed. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 1991, pp. 261–292
- ↑ a b S. Van Beek, The Arts of Thailand. Hong Kong: Periplus Editions, 1991.
- ↑ A. B. Griswold and P. na Nagara, "The Inscription of Khao Sumanakūt (Sukhothai Inscription No. 8)," Epigraphic and Historical Studies No. 12, The Siam Society, Bangkok, 1974.
- ↑ C. M. Wilson, "The Pali Sumanakūṭavaṇṇanā and the Sukhothai Inscription #8," Journal of the Siam Society, vol. 99, pp. 91-106, 2011.
- ↑ F. E. Reynolds and M. B. Reynolds, trans., Three Worlds According to King Ruang: A Thai Buddhist Cosmology (Traibhumikatha). Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982.
- ↑ P. J. N. Jenner, A Dictionary of Old Khmer. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, 2009.
- ↑ S. Premsrirat, "Khmer-Thai Language Contact and Language Change," in The Tenth Conference of the Southeast Asian Linguistic Society, M. E. Macken, Ed. Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University, Program for Southeast Asian Studies, 2000, pp. 245–262.
- ↑ D. K. Wyatt, Thailand: A Short History, 2nd ed. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003.
- ↑ H. W. Woodward, Jr., The Art and Architecture of Thailand: From Prehistoric Times to the Thirteenth Century. Leiden: Brill, 2003.
- ↑ Phiromanukul, Rungrot. (2024). Ayōthayā kō̜n Sukhōthai ton kamnœ̄t Ayutthayā [Ayodhaya before Sukhothai, the origin of Ayutthaya] อโยธยาก่อนสุโขทัย ต้นกำเนิดอยุธยา (in Thai). Bangkok: Matichon. pp. 68, 295–296. Template:ISBN Template:Catalog lookup link
- ↑ Champaphan, Kamphon. (2023). Downtown Ayutthaya tāngchāt tāng phāsā læ lōkāphiwat rǣk nai Sayām-ʻUsākhanē [History of ethnic neighborhoods in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya, Thailand and the Kingdom of Ayutthaya and its relationship with foreign countries] ต่างชาติต่างภาษาและโลกาภิวัตน์แรกในสยาม-อุษาคเนย์ (in Thai). Bangkok: Matichon. p. 7. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Turpin, F. H. and Cartwright, B. O. (1997). A History of the Kingdom of Siam and of the Revolutions that have caused the Overthrow of the Empire up to 1770. Bangkok: White Lotus Press. p. 3. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j Dhanit Yupho, Montri Tramote, Arkhom Sayakham, Suwannee Chalanukrao, and Jamriang Putpradap, The Fine Arts Department of Thailand. (1973). Silapa Lakhon Ram Rue Khue Mue Nattasin Thai [The Art of Thai Drama and Classical Dance or Handbook of Thai Classical Dance] ศิลปละคอนรำหรือคู่มือนาฏศิลปไทย (in Thai). H.R.H. Prince Chalermpol ordered to be printed on the occasion of the 5th birthday anniversary on 29 April 1973. Bangkok: Siwapon Ltd,. Part. Template:Catalog lookup link
- ↑ a b c Rubin, Don et al. (2001). "THAILAND," The World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre: Asia/Pacific. London: Francis Group. pp. 437–438. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Ingkhaphatthanakun, Wasin. (2005). Kānʻanurak singwǣtlō̜m, thammachāt læ mō̜radok thāng watthanatham [The Protection of Environmental and Cultural Resources] การอนุรักษ์สิ่งแวดล้อมธรรมชาติ และมรดกทางวัฒนธรรม (in Thai). Nakhon Pathom: Silpakorn University. p. 302. Template:ISBN "โขนเป็นนาฏศิลป์ชั้นสูงอย่างหนึ่งของไทย มีกําเนิดมาตั้งแต่พุทธศตวรรษที่ 16 ซึ่งสันนิษฐานจากลายแกะสลักเรื่อง "รามายณะ" (ภาพที่ 11-2)"
- ↑ Vickery M. (1977). "The 2/K.125 Fragment, A Lost Chronicle of Ayutthaya," Journal of the Siam Society, 65(1):10–11, 12–13.
- ↑ a b Thai Khadi Research Institute, Thammasat University and The College of Dramatic Arts, The Fine Arts Department of Thailand. (1991). Seminar Documents: Seminar Project of Thai Dance Demonstration in Honor of H.R.H. Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn on the occasion of the 3rd Cycle Birthday Anniversary on 2 April 1991, 14–15 March 1991, Thammasat University Auditorium (เอกสารประกอบการสัมมนา โครงการสัมมนาสาธิตเรื่องนาฏศิลป์ไทย เฉลิมพระเกียรติสมเด็จพระเทพรัตนราชสุดาฯ สยามบรมราชกุมารี ฯ). Bangkok: Thammasat University. p 11.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Tiwary, Shiv Shanker, and Kumar, Rajeev. (2009). Encyclopaedia of Southeast Asia and Its Tribes Vol. 2. New Delhi: Anmol Publications. p. 100. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Leonowens, A. H. (1873). "SIAMESE LITERATURE AND ART", The English Governess at the Siamese Court: Being Recollections of Six Years in the Royal Palace at Bangkok, Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870 by, Fields, Osgood, & Co., in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. Boston: James R. Osgood and Company. p. 176. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b Velder, Christian. "Notes on the Saga of Rama in Thailand," Journal of the Siam Society 56(1)(1968): 35–37.
- ↑ a b c MacDonald, Malcolm John. (1959). ANGKOR. (2th ed.). New York: Praeger. pp. 32–33. Template:ISBN Template:LCCN
- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ The Fine Arts Department of Thailand. (1989). Wannakam samai Thonburi lem neung [Literature in Thonburi Period Vol. 1] วรรณกรรมสมัยธนบุรี เล่ม 1 (in Thai). Bangkok: The Fine Arts Department of Thailand. p. 129. cited in the Records of the Memory of Princess Narinthewi of Siam about the events from the fall of the Ayutthaya Kingdom up to the reign of King Rama I of Bangkok.
- ↑ Chaophraya Thiphakorawong, (Kham Bunnag), Flood, C. K., and Flood, Thadeus. (1990). The Dynastic Chronicles, Bangkok Era, the First Reign: Annotations and commentary. Tokyo: Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies. p. 58.
- ↑ Damrong Rajanubhab. (2003). Lakhō̜n fō̜nram: prachum rư̄ang lakhō̜n fō̜nram kap rabam ramtēn : tamrā fō̜nram tamnān rư̄ang lakhō̜n ʻInao tamnān lakhō̜n dưkdamban [A collection of writings on the history of traditional Thai dance drama] ละครฟ้อนรํา: ประชุมเรื่องละครฟ้อนรํากับระบํารําเต้นตําราฟ้อนรํา ตํานานเรื่องละครอิเหนา ตํานานละครดึกดําบรรพ์ (in Thai). Bangkok: Matichon. p. 330. Template:ISBN Template:Catalog lookup link
- ↑ Duangphattra, Chakkrit. (1996). Botlakhō̧n wēthī bǣp stylization rư̄ang sī phǣndin læ sū sī thai hao: datplǣng čhāk botpraphan khō̧ng Sō̧. Phon Trī Khưkrit Prāmōt [Stylisation Stage Plays of the Four Reigns and Empress Dowager Cixi: Adapted from the novel by Kukrit Pramoj] บทละครเวทีแบบ Stylization เรื่อง สี่แผ่นดิน และซูสีไทเฮา: ดัดแปลงจากบทประพันธ์ของ ศ.พลตรี คึกฤทธิ์ ปราโมช (in Thai). Bangkok: Ban Wannakam. p. 13. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Taksin, Dhanit Yupho, and Preeda Srichalalai. (1941). Bhot lakhon ramakien phraratchaniphon Somdej Phrachao Krung Thonburi [Ramakien Composition, work of King Taksin] บทละครรามเกียรติ์ พระราชนิพนธ์สมเด็จพระเจ้ากรุงธนบุรี, เล่าเรื่องหนังสือรามเกียรติ์โดยธนิต อยู่โพธิ์ และเรื่องงานสร้างชาติไทยโดยปรีดา ศรีชลาลัย (in Thai). Printed and distributed at the funeral of Mr. Akhom Inthayothin on November 23, 1931 at the crematorium of Wat Debsirindrawas Ratchaworawihan. Bangkok: Phrachan; reprinted version at the Fine Arts Department of Thailand. pp. 232-233. Template:Catalog lookup link cited in the record of the Emerald Buddha Celebration, 1782.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ The Asia Society, ASIA 2(1) (May–June 1979): 19.
- ↑ Amrahs, H. (2023). "Chapter 23. Cambodia Dance and Music", Khmer Culture: A Cultural Exploration of Cambodia (eBook). n.p.: Mahesh Dutt Sharma.
- ↑ Osnes, M. B., and Gill, S. (2001). "Lakon Kbach Boran: Cambodia", Acting An International Encyclopedia of Traditional Culture. Santa Barbara, CA: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 188. Template:ISBN cited in Brandon, James R. (1974). Theatre in Southeast Asia. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.; Brandon, James R. (1976). Brandon's Guide to Theatre in Asia. Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii.; Groslier, G. "Royal Dancers of Cambodia.", Asia 22, 1(1922):47-53, 74.; Meyer, C. "Cambodian Dances.", Nokor Khmer 3(1970):2–27.
- Liu, S. (2016). "Cambodia", Routledge Handbook of Asian Theatre. Oxon: Routledge, imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group. p. 172. Template:ISBN
- Hinchey, J. (2018). "The Arts: Dance", Cambodia: Discover the Country, Culture and People. Frenchs Forest, NSW: Redback Publishing. p. 15. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Osnes, M. B., and Gill, S. (2001). "Lakon Kbach Boran: Cambodia", Acting An International Encyclopedia of Traditional Culture. Santa Barbara, CA: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 188. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b c Munson, Frederick P., et al. (1968). Foreign Area Studies, The American University: Area Handbook for Cambodia. Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 128.
- ↑ Fletcher 2001, p. 306
- ↑ Miettinen, Jukka. "Parallelisms of Theatre and the Visual Arts in Thailand and Cambodia," Journal of SPAFA Digest 7(2)(1986): 28. Template:Catalog lookup linkScript error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".
- ↑ Abdul Hakim bin Haji Mohd. Yassin, Awang Haji, ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information. (2000). Traditional Literature of ASEAN. Bandar Seri Begawan: ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information. p. 235. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b c Walker, George B. (1955). ANGKOR EMPIRE. Calcutta: Signet Press. p. 57.
- ↑ a b Zadrozny, Mitchell G.; Androsky, Albert; Ginsburg, Norton S., and Eggan, Fred. (1955). Area Handbook on Cambodia. Chicago, IL: The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF), University of Chicago. p. 348.
- ↑ Whitaker, Donald P., et al. (1973). Area Handbook for the Khmer Republic (Cambodia). Research and writing were completed July 1972, prepared by Foreign Area Studies (FAS) of The American University. Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Template:LCCN
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Sasagawa, Hideo. "Post/colonial Discourses on the Cambodian Court Dance," Southeast Asian Studies, 42(4)(March 2005).
- ↑ X, Jacobus and Carrington, Charles. (1900). Untrodden Fields of Anthropology: Observations on the Esoteric Manners and Customs of Semi-civilized Peoples; Being a record of thirty years' experience in Asia, Africa, America and Oceania by a French Army-Surgeon Vol. I. New York: American Anthropological Society. p. 196.
- ↑ Cravath, Paul. (2007). Earth in Flower: The Divine Mystery of the Cambodian Dance Drama. Holmes Beach, FL: DatAsia, Inc. pp. 118–119. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Rutnin, Mattani Mojdara. (1996). Dance, Drama, and Theatre in Thailand: The Process of Development and Modernization. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books. p. 56. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Corfield, Justin. (2009). "WORLDWIDE INTEREST IN ANGKOR," The History of Cambodia. Westport, CT: Greenwood; ABC-Clio. pp. 32–33. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Paetzold, Anina. (2023). Musikkulturen im Fokus - 4: Imaginierte Traditionen Eine diachrone Ethnographie über das Bewahren performativer Künste in Kambodscha [Musical Cultures in Focus - 4: Imagined Traditions A Diachronic Ethnography on the Preservation of Performative Arts in Cambodia]. (in German). p. 70. Berlin: Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH. Template:ISBN cited in GROSLIER, G. (1913). Danseuses Cambodgiennes Anciennes et Modernes.
- ↑ "ชาวเน็ตโพสต์ปกป้อง "นาฏศิลป์ไทย" เผยแม่เป็นคนช่วยฟื้นฟูศิลปะรำกัมพูชา" [Netizens to protect "Dance in Thailand". A Thai heir reveals that his mother is the one who helped revive the Cambodian Royal Ballet.] (in Thai). (2023, 10 March). TNN Thailand. Retrieved on 10 November 2024.
- ↑ Damrong Rajanubhab. (1921). Tamnan rueng lakhon Inao [The Legend of Inao drama] ตำนานเรื่องลครอิเหนา ของพระเจ้าบรมวงศ์เธอ กรมพระยาดำรงราชานุภาพ แต่งถวายพระนางเจ้าสุขุมาลมารศรี พระราชเทวี ในงานฉลองพระขัณษาซายิด เมื่อปีระกา พ.ศ. ๒๔๖๔ (in Thai). Bangkok: Rong Phim Thai. pp. 128–129.
- ↑ Mehta, Harish C. (2001). Warrior Prince Norodom Ranariddh, Son of King Sihanouk of Cambodia. Singapore: Graham Brash. p. 115. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Phim, Toni Samantha and Thompson, Ashley. (1999). Dance in Cambodia. Kuala Lampur: Oxford University Press. p. 44. Template:ISBN
- ↑ Prum Mésa, P. and Suppya, Bru-nut H. (2012). Interview with HRH Princess Norodom Buppha Devi: Khmer dance project, 2008-07-25. The Khmer Dance Project comprises 60 videos filmed between 2008 and 2010. Jerome Robbins Dance Division. The New York Public Library. Retrieved on 16 May 2024.
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