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Bang Kung Camp is located at Mu 4, Tambon Bang
Kung. When arriving at the camp site, visitors will firstly see an
imitation wall built in memory of the battle. Here is a historic navy
camp site. Following the second defeat of the Ayutthaya kingdom in
1767, King Taksin the Great moved the naval force to set up camp in the
district of Bang Kung since Mueang Mae Klong (the city of Mae Klong)
was in the way used by the Burmese army. A wall was built to make Wat
Bang Kung be in the middle of the camp as a spirit centre for soldiers.
King Taksin the Great later commanded the Chinese from Rayong, Chon
Buri, Ratchaburi, and Kanchanaburi to form a guard unit for the camp.
The camp was, therefore, called the ‘Bang Kung Chinese Camp.’ The king
named the guards ‘Thahan Phakdi Asa’ or the ‘voluntary loyal soldiers.’
In 1768, the Burmese king of Angwa led an army via Kanchanaburi to
surround the camp. King Taksin the Great and Phra Maha Montri (Bunma)
jointly fought and defeated the Burmese. It was the first battle
against the Burmese after the Kingdom of Thon Buri had been established
by King Taksin the Great.
The victory was hailed as moral support to
the Thai people while it created a sense of fear among the Burmese
army. The camp site was left deserted for almost 200 years. In 1967,
the Ministry of Education established a boy scout camp on the site to
celebrate King Taksin the Great, and also built a shrine as a memorial
to the king. The ceremony to raise the shrine was held on 20 June 1968.
Within the camp compound, there is the Ubosot (ordination hall)
commonly called as ‘Bot Luangpho Dam,’ which was built in the Ayutthaya
period. The hall is wholly covered by four species of ficus plants: Pho
(Bodhi), Sai, Krai, and Krang. Therefore, it is also called ‘Bot Prok
Pho’ (ordination hall covered by Bodhi trees). The monument of King
Taksin the Great is in the nearby area.
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