Mahidharapura Kingdoms
The Mahidharapura Kingdoms were a group of ancient political entities under the control of the Mahidharapura dynasty from the 600s to the 17th century in the present-day Nakhon Ratchasima and Buriram provinces of Thailand. Its main chief centers were Vimayapura in modern Phimai and Kasitindrakama, near the Prasat Phanom Rung and Prasat Muang Tam in Buriram province; however, some speculate Kasitindrakama was probably in the present Sisaket province and Mahidharapura was in modern Mueang Buriram. The Mahidharapura house, led by Jayavarman VI, that subdued Yaśodharapura in the Tonlé Sap Basin in 1080, likely originated from Vimayapura. The most recent archaeological studies suggest its capital, Mahidharapura, was probably modern Sakon Nakhon.
Mahidharapura polities covered the area of the present-day Buriram province and the eastern part of Nakhon Ratchasima. To the south, it met the well-known Angkor and adjoined Dvaravati's Canasapura to the west. Bordered an unknown kingdom ruled by Sri Jayasimhavarmman to the north in the Kaset Sombun Valley; possibly part of Bhavapura. To the east and northeast, met a group of city-states of Wen Dan, which occasionally equated to Bhavapura, and adjoined Keoi Lau Mì of the Kuy to the southeast.
Previously, several scholars believed the Phimai region had been a vassal to the kings of Angkor since the beginning of the Angkorian period. Nonetheless, the Phanom Rung Inscriptions, dated 1050 CE, which outline the ancestry of the Mahidharapura dynasty, demonstrate the alliance between Mahidharapura and Yaśodharapura rather than a relationship of vassals and suzerains, at least before the specified period.
Following the decline of Angkor in the late 13th century, the Mahidharapura polities experienced limited population and vanished from the historical records, reappearing in the 15th century when it was vassalized by the Ayutthaya Kingdom. Intriguingly, a monarch with an identical regnal title, Mahīđharavarman, appears in the 13th-century Chinese text. He was enthroned as the king of a short-lived kingdom of Chen Li Fu in the western Menam Basin in 1204; however, was later overthrown by Phrip Phri's king Mahesvastidrādhirājakṣatriya in 1225. Songsiri proposes that Chen Li Fu probably had a close dynastic relation with Mahidharapura.
History
Pre-literate era: 500 BCE – 500 CE
The Phimai region entered the pre-literate Iron Age around 500 BCE – 500 CE. In the late prehistory, it is estimated that the population density on the upper Mun River alluvial plain may have been as high as 80 individuals per km2 with the lowest 14 per km2 in the uplands; however, this drastically reduced to less than 50 individuals per km2 during the Angkorian period. The settlements were densely situated along the river plains, and the size of settlements were larger when compared to the Angkorian-period-founded sites. David J. Welch posits that these domains experienced a population decline throughout the Angkor period, though not necessarily utter abandonment.The excavations at the Prasat Phanom Wan, located 10 kilometers northeast of the present-day Nakhon Ratchasima city, revealed prehistoric remains, including some Iron Age burials. As well, the Prasat Hin Phimai area, subsequently incorporated into Angkor around 1000 CE, exhibits substantial evidence of prehistoric habitation that persisted for several centuries before Angkor's emergence. Several sculptures from the upper Mun provide some of the earliest evidence for contact between Southeast Asia and India, such as a small bronze standing Buddha image found at Nakhon Ratchasima, which is in the southeastern Indian or Ceylonese Amaravati or Anuradhapura style and dates from 100 to 400 CE.
Dvaravati–Chenla period: 500s – 900s
The regions entered the Early Historic period around 300–500 CE. The archaeological evidence confirms the importance of Indian influences transmitted to the plateau from the 7th to 10th centuries. However, the record of the Phimai region during this period is very sparse. Its early chiefdoms were speculated to have been formed around the 500s – 590s, and were ostensibly influenced by Buddhist Dvaravati of the Mon people to the west and the Khmer Hindu-dominant Chenla to the south. The earliest inscriptions are in Sanskrit alone; later indigenous languages, like as Khmer and Mon, occur on certain inscriptions. Only later did Khmer texts become common. The cultural and political differentiation between the Mon and Khmer in northeastern Thailand, especially in the southern part, is likely unjustifiable until at least 1000 CE, when Dvaravati dissolved and Angkor rose. Some artifacts, dated 6th-7th centuries, are pre-Angkorian Cambodian styles, while some are found to resemble Dvaravati-style Buddha figures from central Thailand. Buddhist sculptures discovered at the Prakhon Chai hoard in modern Buriram province reveal the connection to Si Thep on the margins of the Khorat Plateau, which was once strategically located on a route linking the Mekong and Mun rivers with the Chao Phraya Valley. This interpretation is consistent with local textual tradition, which indicate that Prakhon Chai—referred to in these source as Talung —had been under the authority of Si Thep since the reign of Padumasuriyavamsa.During this period, the region contained several large settlements surrounded by circular or irregular earth walls and moats, which were probably the center of small political units. Most of the population lives in a cluster of villages of 1 to 1.5 hectares, some surrounded by moats, most unmoated, with cultivated rice fields lying beyond the moats. The reduction in average settlement size discovered in this period indicates the migration from fortified major villages to vulnerable little hamlets, which was due to the emergence of a singular political authority and the cessation of recurrent conflict in the Phimai region. In the late Dvaravati period, the western side of Mueang Sema has been identified as potentially acting as a second-tier settlement, known as the regional center, in the Dvaravati hinterland. At the same time, the eastern region continued to grow, creating multiple competing centers that waned in Dvaravati influence and then entered the pre-Angkorian period. Summarized data from several surveys found that in the present-day Nakhon Ratchasima and Buriram provinces, which were the regions under the house of Mahidharapura, there are 335 ancient settlements in total, with 97 Angkorian-style stupas, and 12 klints.
Dvaravati sphere: 500s – 900s
Several Sanskrit, Mon, and Khmer Inscriptions dating to the 6th century support the existence of early chiefdoms that developed along the Dângrêk Mountains. The Sanskrit Phimai Inscription No.1 founded at the Prasat Phimai, dated 7th–8th century, that mentions a Buddhist king called Sauryavarman, and the two mixed Mon–Khmer with Sanskrit script Hĭn K‘ôn Inscriptions, dated the 7th–8th centuries, discovered near an ancient in Nakhon Ratchasima, which mentions another Buddhist king identified as King Nrpendradhiphativarman, a son of another king with similar name, proves the existence of local polities in the region before the formation of Angkor to the south. After the influence of Si Thep waned—having exercised suzerainty over the Phimai–Prakhon Chai– region since the reign of Padumasuriyavamsa —the area, particularly the Phimai–Prakhon Chai zone, appears to have asserted political autonomy. This development is marked by the emergence of a new monarch, Mahidharavarman I, around 920. His royal house, later known as the Mahidharapura dynasty, came to rule the region and appears to have maintained closer political and cultural ties with Angkor to the south. Within this sphere, Prasat Phimai likely functioned as one of the most significant religious centers. The dynasty retained control over the region for several generations before extending its political authority southward into the Tonlé Sap Basin and eventually conquered Angkor in the 11th century.The Chinese Book of Sui, dated 598–618, and the largest Chinese leishu, Cefu Yuangui, mention the kingdom of Zhū Jiāng, whose royals established relations via royal intermarriage with Chenla to the southeast. Nonetheless, its identification remains uncertain; Briggs placed it in the upper Mun Valley, while a Chinese historian Chen Jiarong claims it to be one of the Dvaravati principlaities located in the Menam Basin. Some say it is the corrupted name of Zhū Bō in the New Book of Tang, which has been identified with the Pyu Kingdoms in Myanmar, or even placed it on the Mekong plains. Another polity, Bhavapura, which occasionally identified with Wen Dan, might be on the Korat plateau as well.
The most persuasive evidence for a significant early kingdom in the region is an 8th-century Buddhist settlement known as Sri Canasa or Sri Canasapura in the Bo Ika Inscription, discovered in the 10th-century temple ruin, which refers to Sri Canasa as a deserted domain outside Kambudesa, indicating that this community was once left abandoned before the 8th century. The line of five Canasapura's kings, beginning in 937, was later found in the relocated Sri Canasa Inscription. The earliest one was Bhagadatta, whose name ends with a "datta" suffix, which is a non-Indic title for the indigenous leader, similar to "pon" of the 7th–8th century Chenla polities and the Funanese "fan". The proto-"pon" familial system of Chenla might have originated in the upper Mun region, based on evidence from the extensive Iron Age grave site at near Phimai, dated 200 BCE to 300 CE. During Canasapura's declining period in the late 10th century, its Hindu neighbor named Khorakhapura was formed 6 kilometers to the southeast, shortened called Nakhon Raj, but little known about this polity. Several scholars speculate it was Mueang Rad, mentioned in the Sukhothai Inscription, and was said to be ruled by King Pha Mueang, son of who ruled the Sukhothai Kingdom from 1157 to 1182. An Inscription with 33 lines of text, engraved on 3 sides, was discovered in the temple ruins but has since been lost before being deciphered. The city was later relocated 25 kilometers to the east in the 14th century and evolved into the present-day Nakhon Ratchasima City.
The northern limit of Mahidharapura's influence might be the area around the upper Chi River basin, which is the present boundary of Chaiyaphum and Nakhon Ratchasima provinces as there was another polity ruled by King Jaya Singhavarman in the Kaset Sombun–Nong Bua Daeng valley in northern Chaiyaphum, according to the Monic K.404 Stèle de Phu Khiao Kao dating to the 7th–8th century. Some say he may have been the king of Bhavapura. To the east, there was another Dvaravati-influenced polity named Keoi Lau Mì, mentioned in the Chinese text Tang Huiyao, which is said to be the kingdom of the Kuy people in the area around the Dângrêk Mountains by a Thai scholar Thongtham Nathchamnong. Further east, a small polity named Sambuka or Sankhapura centered at the ruin of in modern Yasothon province was mentioned in the K.577 and K.1082 Inscriptions, also dated 7th–8th centuries. To the northeast, it met a group of polities in the lower Chi Basin, with key sites at Mueang Fa Daet Song Yang, Champasri, Roi Et, and others, which were more dominated by the Old Mon Inscriptions. Meanwhile, the easternmost 7th–century polities in modern Ubon Ratchathani province seem to have some connection with the settlements along the Mekong River in Champasak, Thala Borivat, and Sambor Prei Kuk areas.
Chenla invasions: 590s – 630s
To the south on the lower Mekhong Basin, the brothers Bhavavarman I and Mahendravarman founded the new capital of Chenla in 580 CE near Sambor Prei Kuk and then expanded political influence northward beyond the Dângrêk Mountains to the modern lower northeastern Thailand around the early 7th century by conquering several polities in the region, as mentioned in several Citrasena–Mahendravarman Inscriptions, which the northernmost one was discovered at the ancient Dong Mueang Aem in modern Khon Kaen province. Prior interpretations proposed that Chenla administered this subjugated territory as a form of vassalage. However, this political or military influence stood for a short period, as Chenla faced a power struggle and finally fell into pieces in the late 7th century, during the reign of Jayadevi, and those inscriptions only represents a mere exclamation of triumph, without suggesting a lasting dominion over the territory. According to Vickery, none of the inscriptions demonstrate direct authority or control beyond the Dong Rek Mountain; these expeditions or exploratory ventures appear to have had little lasting political impact, as regional inscriptions for several subsequent centuries make no reference to rulers from the Tonlé Sap Basin following the period associated with Mahendravarman. It is estimated that Chenla probably began to penetrate the Phimai region around the late 6th century during the reign of Bhavavarman I, and significantly expanded northwest during the reign of Isanavarman I.There was a polity known as Bhīmapura that was subjugated by Isanavarman I during his northwestward territorial expansion. Its precise identification, however, remains uncertain. Lawrence P. Briggs suggested that Bhīmapura was probably located beyond Amoghapura—another Chenla vassal in what is now Battambang Province—and more specifically identified it with Vimayapura in the Phimai region of the upper Chi–Mun Valley. In the first half of the 8th century, this region, together with Si Thep, was likely incorporated into Wen Dan, and subsequently came under the authority of Padumasuriyavamsa of Indaprasthanagara, followed by the lineage of Bhagadatta of Chanasa. By the 920s, a new ruler, Mahidharavarman I, had emerged in the Phimai region.
Pierre Dupont proposed that the polities in the Mun-Chi Basin, that known as Wen Dan, broke away from the united Chenla in 707, while George Cœdès gave the date earlier at the ended of Jayavarman I' reign, that is 681.
Angkorian period: 900s – 1300s
During this period, the region experienced a population decline, but not complete abandonment. In contrast, the city of Vimayapura was twice its original size. Some large settlements were abandoned, but numerous small hamlets were established. This shift suggests the formation of a single site hierarchy at Vimayapura and of an integrated political and economic system in the region. The settlement pattern during this period was shifted to rectangular walls and moated sites, rectangular reservoir or baray, and rectangular temple enclosures, enclosing laterite, brick, and stone structures, and was smaller when compare to the late prehistoric settlements. The number of sites in the southern Phimai region on the uplands, which links Vimayapura and Angkor, significantly increased; however, the population remains more dense in the alluvial plain.Early era: Mid-10th century – 1080
After Jayavarman II declared independent from Java and established Kambujadesa in 802, he moved the capital northward to Hariharalaya and Yaśodharapura in the mid-9th century, and then formed allies with several city-states in the Mun-Chi river basin, including Wen Dan and Phimai region, to counter Si Thep's strength in the Pa Sak River basin to the west. Following the internal political conflict in Angkor that concluded in the mid-10th century, Angkorian influence over the Phimai region appears to have intensified, as a new royal house under Mahidharavarman I assumed control of the region from Si Thep in 920. However, the people in this region potentially shifted to speak Khmer earlier, around the late 9th century, but was yet to be integrated into the Angkor. The information provided in the Phanom Rung Inscription, dated 1050 CE, clearly states that Mahidharapura clan had ruled the territory autonomously and was in alliance with the kings of Angkor rather than as vassals, even though there were several religious and political exercises of the pre-1000s Angkorian kings in the Mahidharapura area.Mahidharavarman I, who was believed to be the father of the Mahidharapura's king, Hiranyavarman, was once served as a high official at the court of the two Angkorian brothers, Harshavarman I and Ishanavarman II, which their reigns marked a period of tumultuous, chaotic, and power struggles with their maternal uncle, Jayavarman IV, who set up his capital about 100 km away at Koh Ker in 921, causing Ishanavarman II's reign to be confined to Angkor and the area around Battambang to the west. Mahidharavarman also built the Prasat Kravan to the east of Angkor in 921 CE. According to the Prasat Khna Inscription, dating to 891 CE, the line of Mahidharapura began with a princess who was a descendant of the Śreshthapura House and became a consort of the Angkorian king Jayavarman V from the Bhavapura House. Her elder brother received the title of Rajapativarman, which identifies him as the governor of Khorakhapura, while the other brother received the title of Narapativiravarman, which indicates that he was the ruler of Lavo. Moreover, Jayavirahvarman, who ruled Angkor from 1002 to 1006 and was overthrown by Suryavarman I, potentially was from the Mahidharapura area. The Phanom Rung Inscriptions No. 1–9, engraved in Sanskrit language with Old Khmer script, dated to the mid-12th century, provide the political structure in the region that was ruled by the Sūryavaṃśa and centered at Kasitindrakama, which identified as the area around Phanom Rung, with Vimayapura as the grand prince city.
To the west, Canasapura, which was potentially governed by the Candravaṃśa Bhavapura dynasty, disappeared from the historical record. It possibly allied with Yaśodharapura during the reign of Rajendravarman II, from the same dynasty. The old settlement at was abandoned after the 970s, and the people relocated to the newly founded Hindu polity named Khorakhapura, 6 kilometers to the southeast. The noble named Driḍhabhakti Simhavarman, appearing in the K.1141 Muang Sema Inscription, dated 970 CE, was probably King Narapatisimhavarman in the K.949 Śri Canāśa Inscription, whose role was reduced after pledging allegiance to Rajendravarman II. To the northeast, Wen Dan disappeared, giving way to the emergence of the polities known as the Kuruntha kingdoms, which have been associated with Lao-related populations. These formations are generally regarded as characteristic of the so-called “Java period” of the Chi River Basin and other Lao mueang, spanning from the 9th century until the establishment of the Lan Xang Kingdom in the 14th century.
At Yaśodharapura to the south, since the reign of Candravaṃśa's Jayavarman V of the Bhavapura house, the aristocratic families dominated the royal court. The throne then fell into his maternal nephew, Udayadityavarman I, whose brother, Jayavirahvarman, was believed to be the prince of Tambralinga. During his reign, the Tonlé Sap basin was divided into two fractions: the western region and the upper Korat Plateau were controlled by Tambralingan Udayadityavarman I at Yaśodharapura, whereas the eastern region with the strongholds in Sambor and Kratié was under Suryavarman I, who was supported by the house of the previous king, Bhavapura. Suryavarman I later span influence westward to Kampong Thom and finally took over Yaśodharapura. After failing to reclaim the throne, Udayadityavarman I would-be successor, Jayavirahvarman, evacuated to Battambang and then to his power bases, Vimayapura. Suryavarman I then launched an attacking campaign of the Khorat Plateau and Chao Phraya basin, several polities were destroyed, which included Vimayapura and Tambralinga's vassal, Lavapura. After the wars, Vimayapura was merged into Angkor, the elite Khmer culture then permeated the Phimai region, especially at the central level and other major settlements. Suryavarman I's invasion of Tambralinga's Lavo and overthrown two Tambralinga princes, Udayadityavarman I and Jayavirahvarman, triggered the conflict between these two kingdoms and led to the 1025–1026 Tambralinga/Srivijiya–Ankorian/Chola Wars.
Rise of Mahidharapura: 1080 – 1200s
After expelling Jayavirahvarman of the Sūryavaṃśa Mahidharapura clan in 1006, Suryavarman I of the Candravaṃśa Shailendra was enthroned as the new king. His two sons, Udayadityavarman II and Harshavarman III, succeed him. During the reigns of the two brothers, several attempted rebellions occurred, and also faced the invasion of Champa. Harshavarman III was not able to battle out and finally lost the throne to an usurper, Jayavarman VI, a prince of Sūryavaṃśa Mahidharapura from Vimayapura. Jayavarman VI dedicated his reign, characterized by diminishing central authority, to quelling all remnants who remained loyal to the legitimate line of the previous king. After his reign, the line split into the Vimayapura seat, which was ruled by his elder brother, Dharanindravarman I, and the Yaśodharapura seat of his heir, Nripatindravarman. However, Coedes proposes Nripatindravarman was instead an elder brother of Vijayendralakshmi, queen consort of the brothers Jayavarman VI and Dharanindravarman I. He additionally asserts that Jayavarman VI never reigned at Yaśodharapura, and Nripatindravarman was probably a son of Udayadityavarman II and engaged in Jayavarman VI campaign against Harshavarman III. During the reign of the brothers, Jayavarman VI and Dharanindravarman I, the seat was actually at Vimayapura.In 1113, Hiranyavarman's great-grandson, Suryavarman II, overthrew Nripatindravarman at Yaśodharapura to the south. He then assassinated his great-uncle Dharanindravarman I in the battle, and brought Vimayapura under Yaśodharapura rule by moving the seat to the southern conquered city. However, it appears that he spent a significant amount of time in the Mun region. During his reign, Dvaravati's Lavo, which had closed dynastic relations with the upper Mun's polities, was directly governed from Yaśodharapura. After his reign, a weak rule and feuding period began, and several vassals broke away. His cousin, Dharanindravarman II, succeeded him, and probably married Sri Jayarajacudamani, daughter of Harshavarman III of the previous dynasty. Nonetheless, Sūryavaṃśa Hiranyavarman never claimed that his dynasty had any link to the King Suryavarman I’s Candravaṃśa nor any other lines of Angkorian kings.
The house of Mahidharapura, which originated from the Korat plateau, ruled Angkor for about half of the 500 years of the Angkorian era. During this period, the Mahidharapura center on the plateau was gradually shifted from Kasitindrakama to Vimayapura, which served as an Angkorian's major administrative center in the Phimai region since the late 13th century. Another significant regional center was the Prasat Phanom Wan area. The last king of the dynasty, Jayavarman IX, was overthrown in 1336 by an usurper, Trasak Paem of the Trasak Paem house. Angkor then began to decline. Under the rule of Mahidharapura dynasty, several temples were constructed, notably the Dharmacalas or "rest houses" along the route that connected Yaśodharapura to Kasitindrakama and Vimayapura. Some stone temples from the 12th century were discovered to be erected on the locations of prior brick temples, including Prasat Phanom Rung, which was built over a site formerly occupied by a series of 7th–8th-centuries brick temples, and the 11th-century-built Prasat Phanom Wan, where some brick structures of the 7th–9th centuries were discovered.
Decline of Angkor: after 1200s
Traces of Angkor influence on Vimayapura began to disappear after the reign of Jayavarman VII. Several vassals began to break away. After the house of Mahidharapura, which originated from Vimayapura and ruled Angkor for more than 250 years, was overthrown, the weak rule period began during the reign of the Trasak Paem house. Angkor's power waned and entered the Dark Age around the 15th century. During this period, reliable sources about both the Phimai region and Cambodia are very rare. Phimai, as well as other polities in the Khorat Plateau, were very sparsely populated.To the west, after losing Angkor to Sūryavaṃśa Mahidharapura in 1006, there was no record regarding the Candravaṃśa Bhavapura, neither in the Tonlé Sap Basin nor at the Khorakhapura or Nakhon Raj in the westernmost Mun Basin. Several Thai scholars identified Mueang Rad of King Pha Mueang, mentioned in the Wat Si Chum Inscription, with Khorakhapura. The city played a major role in the formation of the Sukhothai Kingdom as the father of Pha Mueang, named, enthroned as the King of Sukhothai-Si Satchanalai from 1157 to 1182, succeeding a Tai–Mon monarch, whose chief center has been shifted to Lavapura of Lavo since 1106, and the former center Si Satchanalai was considered their northern fortress. After losing Sukhothai-Si Satchanalai, Lavo nobles successfully overthrew Srinaonamthum in 1182, which caused Pha Mueang to join forces with the King of Mueang Bang Yang named Si Inthrathit and retook Sukhothai in 1238. King Pha Mueang and Srinaonamthum were reportedly linked to the Lavo monarchs, likely during the era preceding the ascendancy of the Tai-Mon dynasty of Chaliang over Lavo. Some believed Pha Mueang was later enthroned as the Angkorian king Indravarman III, but this presumption is debated.
Coincidentally, after the Tai-Mon dynasty of Chaliang at Lavo lost the northern cities of Sukhothai-Si Satchanalai to Pha Mueang in 1238, and Indravarman III – who was speculated to be Pha Mueang – overthrew his father-in-law Jayavarman VIII and assassinated the would-be successor, then enthroned himself as the new Angkorian king in 1295, the Xiān monarchs at Ayodhya, who had a closed relationship with the Tai-Mon dynasty at Lavo, began to invade Angkor. The Customs of Cambodia, written by a Chinese Zhou Daguan during his diplomatic mission in Angkor from 1296 to 1297, says Angkor faced repeated attacks by Xiān and the country was utterly devastated. The weakened Angkor was later taken over by an usurper, Trasak Paem, in 1336. However, the raid campaign by Xiān was continuously resumed throughout the reign of this new dynasty, and drove them, that severely affected by frequent attacks, to forsake Angkor by relocating the capital to the south of the Tonlé Sap in 1431. Notwithstanding, the relations between the Mahidharapura house till the reign of the overthrown Jayavarman VIII and the dynasties in the Menam Valleys to the west have not been examined. It is reported that former Kasitindrakama monarch, Suryavarman II, who annexed Angkor, also directly governed Lavo from 1115 throughout his reign in Angkor. Later, another Mahidharapura king, Jayavarman VII of Angkor, entrusted his son Nripatindharavarman to oversee Lavo in the late 1180s. His religious acts in the Menam Valley are also cited in the Prasat Preah Khan Inscription. The 1684 Instructions Given to the Siamese Envoys Sent to Portugal, Voyage de Siam of Guy Tachard, and the Du Royaume de Siam of Simon de la Loubère, trace back the Siamese Lavo dynasty of the first Ayutthaya King Uthong to an ambiguous polity named Yassouttora Nacoora Louang or Tasoo Nacora Louang, which several scholars propose to be either Yaśodharapura or Lavo.
Ayutthaya period:1300s–1700s
Before the traditional formation of the Ayutthaya Kingdom in 1351, Siamese political influence had not yet reached the Phimai region, which was believed to maintain a relationship with Angkor, despite a significant reduction in its population and a considerable drop in its power. David Welch says the Phimai region was conquered by Ayutthaya during the reign of Ramathibodi I. However, the Inscription, which provides the account of Ayutthaya's military campaign toward the Phimai region during the reign of Borommarachathirat II, suggests that the Phimai region potentially became under Ayutthaya around 1431. The Siamese forces then marched south to plunder Angkor Thom, which caused the Angkorian king Barom Reachea II to abandon Angkor and relocate their capital further south-east. The inscription also provides a series of polities in the region, including Phimai, Phanom Rung, Srawkhchay, Phnom Khram Smechrod, Phnom Mas, Singhaphichai, and Praikhdar.Phimai, together with other cities in the region, still maintains its political and family relations with Angkor. In light of its strategic and economic significance, the Ayutthaya court diminished Phimai's prominence to undermine Angkor's influence by establishing a new fortified city, Nakhon Ratchasima, 50 kilometers west of Phimai. This city functioned as Ayutthaya's stronghold for its power expansion efforts into the northeastern region, Lan Xang, and Cambodia. According to a trace of an ancient city moated and walls discovered in 2025, Nakhon Ratchasima has probably existed before the traditional establishment by Ayutthaya; several scholars propose that the city-state named Mueang Rad of King Pha Mueang, mentioned in the Wat Si Chum Inscription, was Khorakhapura, whose population later relocated to Nakhon Ratchasima, but this presupposition has recently been disputed, as some say Mueang Rad is a modern Lom Kao in Phetchabun province. However, as cited in the Wat Si Chum Inscription, Pha Mueang rules Mueang Rad and Mueang Lum ; thus, both contested theories might be correct.
Following the First Fall of Ayutthaya in 1569, Phimai became independent for a short period under a Siamese prince Kromma Muen Thepphiphit of the Ban Phlu Luang dynasty. The new Siamese king Taksin of Thonburi Kingdom marched to subjugate Thepphiphit's Phimai regime the following year. During the reign of Ayutthayan Narai, Phimai, together with the three other satellite cities, including Chan Thuek, Chaiyaphum, and Buriram, were governed from Nakhon Ratchasima.
Modern era: 1700s–present
Phimai has been absent from historical documentation since the late Ayutthaya period, reappearing under the reign of Chulalongkorn of the Rattanakosin Kingdom, when all local principalities were fully integrated into Siam following the abolition of agnatic succession in the regional dynasties.Rulers
Three city-states era: 7th century – 1080
During Dvaravati period, the Phimai region was probably divided into three courts: the house of Vimayapura at Phimai, the house of Mahidharapura at Kasitindrakama, and the house of Bhavapura–Canasapura at. The latter house, Bhavapura–Canasapura, has some relations with Angkorian king Jayavarman V, who was also of the Bhavapura house. Following the decline of its sisters Dvaravati's Lavapura and Ayojjhapura to the west in the Pasak Valley, its chief city at Muang Sema was then left abandoned and was replaced by the Hindu polity of Khorakhapura.There are some relations between the houses of Vimayapura and Mahidharapura, as they both were of the Solar dynasty; the line of Mahidharapura house at Kasitindrakama begins with the king Surya, while the earliest king of Vimayapura was Soryavarman, as mentioned in the K.1000 Inscription. Mahidharapura monarchs were believed to be the descendants of Bhavavarman I of Chenla. Meanwhile, the house of Canasapura at was possibly part of the Bhavapura dynasty.
A Japanese historian, Tatsuo Hoshino, proposes that around the 8th century, Canasapura was probably under the control of Tai-speaking people, who then expanded their political and military influence to the Pasak and Chao Phraya Basins a few centuries later.
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Mahidharapura Kingdom: 1080 – 1113
Hiranyavarman was claimed to be the descendant of both the Mahidharapura and Vimayapura clans. He reigned at Kasitindrakama, while Vimayapura was ruled by his oldest son, Jayavarman VI, who later conquered Yaśodharapura in 1080.After Suryavarman II, who succeeded his grandfather–Hiranyavarman–at Kasitindrakama, annexed both Vimayapura and Yaśodharapura, and moved his seat to a newly conquered Yaśodharapura in 1113, Vimayapura and Kasitindrakama then considered de facto vassals of Angkor.
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