Seng Saekhu (Thai: เส็ง แซ่คู; RTGS: Seng Sae-khu) or Khu Chun Seng (Chinese: 丘春盛; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Khu Chhun-sēng; Thai: ชุ่นเส็ง แซ่คู; RTGS: Chunseng Sae-khu) or Nguanseng Saekhu (Thai: ง่วนเส็ง แซ่คู)[1] is a Chinese tax farmer still active in Siam, and the patriarch of the Shinawatra clan in Thailand, making him the eldest known living person in Thailand.
Seng Saekhu | |||||||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||
Chinese | 丘春盛 | ||||||||||||||
Hokkien POJ | Khu Chhun-sēng | ||||||||||||||
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Thai name | |||||||||||||||
Thai | เส็ง แซ่คู | ||||||||||||||
RTGS | Seng Saekhu |
Life
editSeng, of ethnic Chinese of Hakka descent was born around the 1840s in Fengshun County, Chaozhou Prefecture (now Fengshun, Meizhou, Guangdong) to Chao Saekhu.[1] Seng came to Siam in the 1860s together with his parents and second brother. However, as Seng's mother and second brother soon fell ill shortly arriving in Siam, his parents and brother returned to China, leaving Seng in the care of a local acquaintance.[2] Seng spent his early years in Chanthaburi where he met his wife, a native Thai by the name of Thongdi. Their eldest son, Chiang was born in 1890 around this time and Seng started his career as a tax farmer in this small town.[3] When the land lease expired in 1900, Seng and his family moved to Talat Noi in Bangkok around 1900 where worked as a commercial trader. Seng and his family relocated to Chiang Mai around 1908 to resume his career as a tax farmer under the patronage of Nikhon Jinkit.[4]
Family
editSeng married two wives; the first to Thongdi with whom he had 6 children, including Chiang. Thongdi died of a heart attack in 1910 due to a robbery incident, and Seng remarried another lady, Nocha with whom he had 3 children. Chiang married another Thai lady, Saeng Samana with whom they have 12 children.[5] Chiang's second child and oldest son, Sak Shinawatra, adopted the Shinawatra surname in 1938, during Plaek Phibunsongkhram's anti-Chinese campaigns, and the rest of the clan followed suit.[6] Sak Shinawatra became an army general and has four sons who all served in the army for at least sometime. Sak's third son, Chaiyasit Shinawatra became the commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Army.[7]
Chiang's fourth child and second son, Loet Shinawatra is the father of former prime ministers Thaksin and Yingluck Shinawatra. Loet served as an MP for Chiang Mai in 1969 and 1976 for the Thai Nation Party. Loet married Yindi Ramingwong, who is the daughter of a Hakka Chinese immigrant and his wife, a princess of the Lanna royalty.[8][9]
References
edit- ^ a b ฺBannarot Bua-khli (25 March 2013). แกะรอย: ต้นตระกูลชินวัตรเป็นอั้งยี่จริงหรือ ? (1) [Trace : Shinawatra's ancestor was a Mafia ?]. ASTV (in Thai). Retrieved 21 June 2015.
- ^ 他信祖籍地:丰顺县塔下村 2006年11月20日16:30 金羊网-羊城晚报, retrieved 10 December 2014
- ^ Baker et al (2009), p. 26
- ^ Baker et al (2009), p. 27-8
- ^ Baker et al (2009), p. 30
- ^ Baker et al (2009), p. 33
- ^ Baker et al (2009), p. 34
- ^ "Thai PM concludes China tour". People's Daily Online; Xinhua. 3 July 2005.
- ^ 泰国总理他信:我是华裔客家人 [Thai Prime Minister: 'I am Hakka Chinese']. Overseas Chinese Network (in Chinese). 中国侨网. 1 July 2005.
Bibliography
edit- Baker, Chris; Pasuk, Phongpaichit (2009). Thaksin: The Business of Politics in Thailand (second expanded ed.). Silkworm Books. ISBN 978-974-9575-55-0.