Vijayaraja
Vijayarāja was a tenth-century Siamese ruler known primarily from the Ayutthaya Testimonies, which identify him as exercising authority over Phitsanulok and Phetchaburi. The text presents him as a descendant of the Padumasūriyavaṃśa dynasty and states that he ascended the throne of Phitsanulok at the age of fifteen following the death of his elder brother, Viṣṇurāja. Vijayarāja is further said to have shifted his political center southward, founding Phra Nakhon Phichai Buri, generally identified with present-day Phetchaburi, which thereafter functioned as his principal seat of power.
According to the same source, Vijayarāja was married to Queen Śrīkanyārājadevī, by whom he had a son, Śrīsiṃha, who succeeded him upon his death in 1027. The Ayutthaya Testimonies attribute a reign of forty years to Vijayarāja. His reign was contemporaneous with the period during which Angkorian authority asserted political influence over the eastern Menam Valley.
The Ayutthaya Testimonies also record a contemporaneous dynastic realignment in the upper Mae Klong basin during Vijayarāja’s period of authority at Phetchaburi. This transition is located at Mueang Sing, identified with Jayasimhapuri in the Preah Khan Inscription, situated along the upper Khwae Noi River, a tributary of the Mae Klong River. The text states that a new ruling lineage founded by Ekarāja supplanted the earlier dynasty of Bodhisāra. This lineage is said to have continued for three further reigns—Baramatiloka, Śrībhūparāja, and Jatirāja. The last of these rulers, Jatirāja, is described as a relative of a descendant of Vijayarāja, Pra Poa Noome Thele Seri, who is said to have succeeded him around the 1160s. The preceding dynasty at Jayasimhapuri is recorded as having comprised four rulers: Rāmeśvara, Baramarāja, Mahācakravartin, and Bodhisāra.