Asian Geographic – Special Edition 2017-2018

(Darren Dugan) #1
A Step Back

in Time

SUKHOTHAI OFFERS A TASTE
OF ANCIENT THAI CIVILISATION,
AGRARIAN LIVING, AND LOCAL
HOSPITALITY

Text and Photos Alex Campbell

IMAGE © SHUTTERSTOCK

Sukhothai translates to “dawn
of happiness” our guide, Tong, tells us
with an appropriately wide grin as we
pull out of the airport on a steaming,
cloudless day in February. It’s the
end of the dry season, and a milky
Thai iced tea (Cha Yen ชาเย็น) – a shock
of saccharine, foamy orange – goes
down a treat. The lazy yawns I've
been stifling since the early morning
wake-up are swiftly substituted
with a caffeine and condensed
milk-induced buzz.
It’s my second time to the north
of Thailand, and a lot has changed
since. Back in 2011, I was making my
way to Chiang Mai through swamped
floodlands, and the late King Bhumibol
was ruler; evidence of the former
devastation has vanished, but the
legacy of the latter lines the streets
in silky swaths of black mourning
banners. The beloved sovereign’s
portrait flanks that of his son, newly
crowned King Maha Vajiralongkorn
Bodindradebayavarangkun, or Rama X.
Sleepy Sukhothai offers a reprieve
from the throngs of tourists that
descend on the gritty city of Bangkok.

The quiet old town, while still host to
all the conveniences that the modern
traveller has come to expect, has not
succumbed to touts and excess in the
wake of tourist interest. The agrarian
lifestyle of this community is still active
and widely visible: Sluggish water
buffalo amble by the roadside; rice
farmers wade through lush paddies
under the shade of their iconic, conical
hats; and fruit sellers brandish banana
bunches and bags of rambutans with
an auctioneer’s enthusiasm.
It comes as little surprise, then,
that Sukhothai is surrounded by
water – 175 ponds, to be exact.
The system of reservoirs provides
the surrounding agricultural heartlands
with a steady supply of irrigation –
and keen photographers with the
perfect mirror for capturing dramatic
temple reflections.
However, the original construction
of this labyrinth of waterways was for
protection against invading enemies:
Sukhothai stood as the capital of
the first Kingdom of Siam in the
13th and 14th centuries (1248–1439
AD), followed by Ayutthaya (around
1350–1767), Thonburi (1767–1782)
and Bangkok, which claimed the
title in 1782, and holds it today. Beyond
the moats’ more militant purpose, they
also provide meuang gòw – the “old
city” – with a picturesque home for

{ thailand }


A monk prays at Wat Si Chum
in the Sukhothai Historical Park
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