Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T16:22:39.582Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Saint with Indra's Sword: Khruubaa Srivichai and Buddhist Millenarianism in Northern Thailand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 July 2014

Katherine Bowie*
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Abstract

Despite a growing literature revealing the presence of millenarian movements in both Theravada and Mahayana Buddhist societies, scholars have been remarkably reluctant to consider the role of messianic beliefs in Buddhist societies. Khruubaa Srivichai (1878–1938) is the most famous monk of northern Thailand and is widely revered as a tonbun, or saint. Although tonbun has been depoliticized in the modern context, the term also refers to a savior who is an incarnation of the coming Maitreya Buddha. In 1920 Srivichai was sent under arrest to the capital city of Bangkok to face eight charges. This essay focuses on the charge that he claimed to possess the god Indra's sword. Although this charge has been widely ignored, it was in fact a charge of treason. In this essay, I argue that the treason charge should be understood within the context of Buddhist millenarianism. I note the saint/savior tropes in Srivichai's mytho-biography, describe the prevalence of millenarianism in the region, and detail the political economy of the decade of the 1910s prior to Srivichai's detention. I present evidence to show that the decade was characterized by famine, dislocation, disease, and other disasters of both natural and social causes. Such hardships would have been consistent with apocalyptic omens in the Buddhist repertoire portending the advent of Maitreya. Understanding Srivichai in this millenarian context helps to explain both the hopes of the populace and the fears of the state during that tumultuous decade.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

HD#38 Lung Pan Thongin (over age sixty). Baan Sanpasak, #1, Tambon Hankaew, Amphur Hang Dong. Interviewed 28 Dec. 1984.Google Scholar
HD#39 Poh Naan Daeng (age seventy-seven). Baan Rai, #5, Tambon Hankaew. Amphur Hang Dong. Interviewed 28 Dec. 1984.Google Scholar
SKP#231. Khruubaa Laa Thaathip (age eighty-eight). Wat Ba Tyng, Baan Ba Tyng, #7, Tambon Ohn Tai, Amphur San Khampaeng. Interviewed 10 and 18 July 1985.Google Scholar
SKP#253. Mae Ui Kaew Panyarryang (age eighty-eight). Baan Mae Laen, #14, Tambon Ohn Nya. Amphur San Khampaeng. Interviewed 25 July 1985.Google Scholar
Poh Noi Sri Saen-uun (age ninety-five). Baan #1, Tambon Srivichai, Amphur Lii. Interviewed 4 July 2011.Google Scholar
Adas, Michael. 1979. Prophets of Rebellion: Millenarian Protest Movements against the European Colonial Order. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Anan Ganjanapan. 1984. The Partial Commercialization of Rice Production in Northern Thailand (1900–1981). PhD diss., Cornell University.Google Scholar
Ashley, Sean. 2011. Late for Buddha: The Construction of Dar'ang (Silver Palaung) Religious and Ethnic Identity. PhD diss., Simon Frazer University.Google Scholar
Baird, Ian G. 2007. Contested History, Ethnicity and Remembering the Past: The Case of the Ay Sa Rebellion in Southern Laos. Crossroads 18, 2: 119–59.Google Scholar
Baird, Ian G. 2013. Millenarian Movements in Southern Laos and North Eastern Siam (Thailand) at the Turn of the Twentieth Century: Reconsidering the Involvement of the Champassak Royal House. South East Asia Research 21, 2: 257–79.Google Scholar
Bangkok Times Weekly Mail (BT). Cited by date.Google Scholar
Bock, Carl. 1986 [1884]. Temples and Elephants: Travels in Siam in 1881–1882. Singapore: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. 1988. Peasant Perspectives on the Political Economy of the Northern Thai Kingdom of Chiang Mai in the Nineteenth Century: Implications for the Understanding of Peasant Political Expression. PhD diss., University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. 1992. Unraveling the Myth of the Subsistence Economy: The Case of Textile Production in Nineteenth-Century Northern Thailand. Journal of Asian Studies 51, 4: 797823.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. 1998. The Alchemy of Charity: Of Class and Buddhism in Northern Thailand. American Anthropologist 100, 2: 469–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. n.d.a. Of Buddhism and Militarism in Northern Thailand: Solving the Puzzle of the Saint Khruubaa Srivichai. Forthcoming in Journal of Asian Studies 73, 3 (Aug.).Google Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. n.d.b. The Politics of Humor: The Vicissitudes of the Vessantara Jataka in Thailand. Book MS under review.Google Scholar
Brereton, Bonnie Pacala. 1995. Thai Tellings of Phra Malai: Texts and Rituals Concerning a Popular Buddhist Saint. Tempe: Arizona State University Program for Southeast Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Bristowe, W. S. 1976. Louis and the King of Siam. London: Chatto and Windus.Google Scholar
Burridge, Kenelm. 1969. New Heaven, New Earth: A Study of Millenarian Activities. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Cady, John F. 1958. A History of Modern Burma. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Chandler, David. 1996. Facing the Cambodian Past: Selected Essays 1971–1994. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Press.Google Scholar
Chatthip Nartsupha. 1984. The Ideology of Holy Men Revolts in Northeast Thailand. In Turton, Andrew and Tanabe, Shigeharu, eds., History and Peasant Consciousness in South East Asia. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 111–34.Google Scholar
Cohen, Paul T. 2001. Buddhism Unshackled: The Yuan ‘Holy Man’ Tradition and the Nation-State in the Tai World. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 32, 2: 227–47.Google Scholar
Cohn, Norman. 1961. The Pursuit of the Millennium. New York: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Cohn, Norman. 1970. Medieval Millenarism: Its Bearing on the Comparative Study of Millenarian Movements. In Thrupp, Sylvia L., ed., Millennial Dreams in Action. New York: Schocken, 3143.Google Scholar
Collins, Stephen. 1998. Nirvana and other Buddhist Felicities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodd, William Clifton. 1923. The Tai Race. N.p.: Torch Press.Google Scholar
Easum, Taylor. 2013. A Thorn in Bangkok's Side: Khruba Sriwichai, Sacred Space and the Last Stand of the Pre-Modern Chiang Mai State. South East Asia Research. 21, 2: 211–36.Google Scholar
Faa Wongmahaa. 1976–1977. Khruubaa Sriiwichai. Serialized in Thaan Tawan (Bangkok), vols. 170–203 (30 July 1976–28 Mar. 1977).Google Scholar
Gay, Bernard. 2002. Millenarian Movements in Laos, 1895–1936: Depictions by Modern Lao Historians. In Ngaosrivathana, Mayoury and Breazeale, Kennon, eds., Breaking New Ground in Lao History: Essays on the Seventh to Twentieth Centuries. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 281–95.Google Scholar
Griswold, A. B. and Nagara, Prasert na. 1969. Epigraphic and Historical Studies No. 3: The Pact Between Sukhodaya and Nan. Journal of the Siam Society 57, 1: 57107.Google Scholar
Gunn, Geoffrey C. 1985. A Scandal in Colonial Laos: The Death of Bac My and the Wounding of Kommadam Revisited. Journal of the Siam Society 73, 1–2: 4259.Google Scholar
Gunn, Geoffrey C. 1988. Sambran (The White Python): The Kha (Lao Theung) Revolt of 1936–39. Sojourn 3, 2: 207–15.Google Scholar
Gunn, Geoffrey C. 1990. Rebellion in Laos: Peasant and Politics in a Colonial Backwater. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Hallett, Holt Samuel. 1890. A Thousand Miles on an Elephant in the Shan States. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons.Google Scholar
Hansen, Anne Ruth. 2007. How to Behave: Buddhism and Modernity in Colonial Cambodia, 1860–1930. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press.Google Scholar
Harkin, Michael, ed. 2004. Reassessing Revitalization: Perspectives from Native North America and the Pacific Islands. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Harris, Ian. 2005. Cambodian Buddhism: History and Practice. Honolulu: University of Hawaìi Press.Google Scholar
Hinton, Peter. 1979. The Karen, Millennialism, and the Politics of Accommodation to Lowland States. In Keyes, Charles, ed., Ethnic Adaptation and Identity: The Karen on the Thai Frontier with Burma. Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues, 8199.Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, Eric. 1965. Primitive Rebels: Studies in Archaic Forms of Social Movements in the 19th and 20th Centuries. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.Google Scholar
Ishii, Yoneo. 1986. Sangha, State, and Society: Thai Buddhism in History. Hawkes, Peter, trans. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter. 1988. The Hupphaasawan Movement: Millenarian Buddhism among the Thai Elite. Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 3, 2: 134–70.Google Scholar
Jory, Patrick. 2002. Thai and Western Buddhist Scholarship in the Age of Colonialism: King Chulalongkorn Redefines the Jatakas. Journal of Asian Studies 61, 3: 891918.Google Scholar
Kehoe, Alice Beck. 2006. The Ghost Dance: Ethnohistory and Revitalization. 2d ed.Long Grove, Ill.: Waveland Press.Google Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1971. Buddhism and National Integration in Thailand. Journal of Asian Studies 30, 3: 551–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1977. Millennialism, Theravada Buddhism, and Thai Society. Journal of Asian Studies 36, 2: 283302.Google Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1982. Death of Two Buddhist Saints in Thailand. Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Thematic Studies 48, 3–4: 149–80.Google Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1989. Buddhist Politics and Their Revolutionary Origins in Thailand. International Political Science Review 10, 2: 121–42.Google Scholar
Kwanchewan Srisawat [Buadaeng]. 1988. The Karen and the Khruba Khao Pi Movement: A Historical Study of the Response to the Transformation in Northern Thailand.” MA thesis, Ateneo de Manile University.Google Scholar
Kwanchewan Buadaeng. 2002. Khuba Movements and the Karen in Northern Thailand: Negotiating Sacred Space and Identity. In Hayashi Yukio and Thongsa Sayavongkhamdy, eds., Cultural Diversity and Conservation in the Making of Mainland Southeast Asia and Southwestern China: Regional Dynamics in the Past and Present. Kyoto: Kyoto University Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 262–93.Google Scholar
Landon, Kenneth Perry. 1939. Siam in Transition: A Brief Survey of Cultural Trends in the Five Years since the Revolution of 1932. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lanternari, Vittorio. 1963. The Religions of the Oppressed: A Study of Modern Messianic Cults. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.Google Scholar
Lefferts, Leedom and Cate, Sandra. 2012. Buddhist Storytelling in Thailand and Laos: The Vessantara Jataka Scroll at the Asian Civilisations Museum with Wajuppa Tossa. Singapore: Asian Civilisations Museum.Google Scholar
LeMay, Reginald. 1986 [1926]. An Asian Arcady: The Land and Peoples of Northern Siam. Bangkok: White Lotus Co. Ltd.Google Scholar
Lepowsky, Maria. 2004. Indian Revolts and Cargo Cults: Ritual Violence and Revitalization in California and New Guinea. In Harkin, Michael, ed., Reassessing Revitalization: Perspectives from Native North America and the Pacific Islands. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 160.Google Scholar
Linton, Ralph. 1943. Nativistic Movements. American Anthropologist 45: 230–40.Google Scholar
Malalgoda, Kitsiri. 1970. Millennialism in Relation to Buddhism. Comparative Studies in Society and History 12, 4: 424–41.Google Scholar
McCarthy, James. 1900. Surveying and Exploring in Siam. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
McGilvary, Daniel. 1912. A Half Century among the Siamese and the Lao: An Autobiography. New York: Fleming H. Revell Company.Google Scholar
Mendelson, E. Michael. 1975. Sangha and State in Burma: A Study of Monastic Sectarianism and Leadership. Ferguson, John P., ed. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Mooney, James. 1965. The Ghost-Dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Murdoch, John A. 1974. The 1901–1902 “Holy Man's” Rebellion. Journal of the Siam Society 62, 1: 4765.Google Scholar
Naquin, Susan. 1976. Millenarian Rebellion in China: The Eight Trigrams Uprising of 1813. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Betty. 2011. A Sangha without a King: A Buddhist Millenarian Response to the Collapse of Lanna Buddhist Kingdoms. Paper presented at the Informal Northern Thai Group, 7 Mar.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Betty. 2014. Calamity Cosmologies: Buddhist Ethics and the Creation of a Moral Community. PhD diss., University of Wisconsin-Madison.Google Scholar
Ooms, Emily Grosnos. 1993. Women and Millenarian Protest in Meiji Japan: Deguchi Nao and Ōmotokyō. Ithaca: East Asia Program, Cornell East Asia Series no. 61.Google Scholar
Ownby, David. 1999. Chinese Millenarian Traditions: The Formative Age. American Historical Review 104, 5: 1513–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patel, Marti. 2011. Germany's Contribution to Thailand's Rail Network. At: http://sanuksanuk.wordpress.com/2011/08/24/germany%E2%80%99s-contribution-to-thailand%E2%80%99s-rail-network/ (accessed 3 Oct. 2013).Google Scholar
Ramsay, James Ansil. 1979. Modernization and Reactionary Rebellions in Northern Siam. Journal of Asian Studies 38, 2: 283–97.Google Scholar
Reynolds, Frank E. and Capps, Donald, eds. 1976. The Biographical Process: Studies in the History and Psychology of Religion. The Hague: Mouton and Co.Google Scholar
Reynolds, Frank E. and Reynolds, Mani B., trans. 1982. Three Worlds according to King Ruang. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Salemink, Oscar. 1994. The Return of the Python God: Multiple Interpretations of a Millenarian Movement in Colonial Vietnam. History and Anthropology 8, 1–4: 129–64.Google Scholar
Salisbury, David Austin, ed. 2005. A History of Kruba Sriwichai (The Buddhist Saint of Northern Thailand): The Story of Making the Road Up Doi Suthep and a Historical Chronicle of Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep. Ronald D. Renard translation of a book by Khun Charun Kamsorn published in 2000. The first half of the book is in Thai. Additional editing by Jerome Chmielak, James E. Bogle, David Freyer, and Keith Lorenz. N.p.: Sutin Press.Google Scholar
Sangaa Suphaaphaa. 1956 [2499 BE]. Chiiwit læ ngaan khohng Khruubaa Sriiwichai (The life and Works of Khruubaa Srivichai). Phra Nakhorn: Samnakphim Khlang Witthayaa.Google Scholar
Sarkisyanz, E. 1965. Buddhist Backgrounds of the Burmese Revolution. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Schober, Juliane, ed. 2002 [1997]. Sacred Biography in the Buddhist Traditions of South and Southeast Asia. Dehli: Motilal Banarsidass Publisher.Google Scholar
Singkha Waanasai. 2010 [2553 BE]. Saaraprawat Khruubaa Sriiwichai Nakbun haeng Laannaa. Lamphun, Thailand: Saphaa Watthanatham Cangwat Lamphun ruam kap Saphaa Watthanam Amphur Muang Lamphun.Google Scholar
Sommai Premchit 2002 [2545 BE]. Khruubaa Sriiwichai, Nakbun haeng Laannaa (Khruubaa Srivichai, the Holy Man of Lanna). Chiang Mai: Rongphim Mingmyang.Google Scholar
Sophaa Chanamuul. 1991 [2534 BE]. Khruubaa Sriiwichai Tonbun haeng Laannaa (phoo soo 2421–2481) (Khruubaa Srivichai, Saint of Lanna, 1878–1938). MA thesis, Thammasat University.Google Scholar
Spiro, Melford E. 1970. Buddhism and Society: A Great Tradition and Its Burmese Vicissitudes. New York: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Sponberg, Alan and Hardacre, Helen, eds. 1988. Maitreya, the Future Buddha. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stern, Theodore. 1968. Ariya and the Golden Book: A Millenarian Buddhist Sect among the Karen. Journal of Asian Studies 27, 2: 297328.Google Scholar
Stewart, Kathleen and Harding, Susan. 1999. Bad Endings: American Apocalypsis. Annual Review of Anthropology 28: 285310.Google Scholar
Stewart, Pamela J. and Strathern, Andrew. 2004. Witchcraft, Sorcery, Rumors, and Gossip. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Swearer, Donald. 1981. Buddhism and Society in Southeast Asia. Chambersburg, Penn.: Anima Books.Google Scholar
Tai, Hue-Tam Ho. 1983. Millenarianism and Peasant Politics in Vietnam. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Talmon, Yonina. 1962. Pursuit of the Millennium: The Relation between Religious and Social Change. Archives europaennes de sociologie 3, 1: 125–48.Google Scholar
Tambiah, Stanley J. 1976. World Conqueror and World Renouncer: A Study of Buddhism and Polity in Thailand against a Historical Background. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tambiah, Stanley J. 1984. The Buddhist Saints of the Forest and the Cult of Amulets: A Study in Charisma, Hagiography, Sectarianism and Millennial Buddhism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tambiah, Stanley J. 1987. The Buddhist Arahant: Classical Paradigm and Modern Thai Manifestations. In Hawley, John Stratton, ed., Saints and Virtues. Berkeley: University of California Press, 111–26.Google Scholar
Tanabe, Shigeharu. 1984. Ideological Practice in Peasant Rebellions: Siam at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. In Turton, Andrew and Tanabe, Shigeharu, eds., History and Peasant Consciousness in South East Asia. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 75110.Google Scholar
Taylor, Hugh. n.d. Missionary Autobiography. Phayab College Archives, Chiang Mai, Thailand.Google Scholar
Tej Bunnag. 1967. Kabot Phuu mii bun Phaak Isaan R.S. 121 (Holy Men Uprisings in the Northeast, 1902). Sangkhomsaat Parithat (Social Science Review) 5: 7886.Google Scholar
Tej Bunnag, 1968. Kabot Ngiew Myang Phrae (The Shan Uprising in Phrae). Sangkhomsaat Parithat (Social Science Review) 6: 6780.Google Scholar
Thompson, Virginia. 1967 [1941]. Thailand: The New Siam. New York: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Wallace, Anthony. 1956. Revitalization Movements. American Anthropologist 58: 264–81.Google Scholar
Wasan Panyagaew. 2011. Remembering with Respect: Tracing a Cross-Border Journey of One Charismatic Lue Monk. Paper delivered at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, 23 Sept.Google Scholar
Wilson, Constance M. 1997. The Holy Man in the History of Thailand and Laos. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 28, 2: 345–64.Google Scholar
Woodhouse, Leslie. 2009. A “Foreign” Princess in the Siamese Court: Princess Dara Rasami, the Politics of Gender and Ethnic Difference in Nineteenth-Century Siam. PhD diss., University of California at Berkeley.Google Scholar
Worsley, Peter. 1968. The Trumpet Shall Sound: A Study of “Cargo” Cults in Melanesia. New York: Schocken Books.Google Scholar
HD#38 Lung Pan Thongin (over age sixty). Baan Sanpasak, #1, Tambon Hankaew, Amphur Hang Dong. Interviewed 28 Dec. 1984.Google Scholar
HD#39 Poh Naan Daeng (age seventy-seven). Baan Rai, #5, Tambon Hankaew. Amphur Hang Dong. Interviewed 28 Dec. 1984.Google Scholar
SKP#231. Khruubaa Laa Thaathip (age eighty-eight). Wat Ba Tyng, Baan Ba Tyng, #7, Tambon Ohn Tai, Amphur San Khampaeng. Interviewed 10 and 18 July 1985.Google Scholar
SKP#253. Mae Ui Kaew Panyarryang (age eighty-eight). Baan Mae Laen, #14, Tambon Ohn Nya. Amphur San Khampaeng. Interviewed 25 July 1985.Google Scholar
Poh Noi Sri Saen-uun (age ninety-five). Baan #1, Tambon Srivichai, Amphur Lii. Interviewed 4 July 2011.Google Scholar
Adas, Michael. 1979. Prophets of Rebellion: Millenarian Protest Movements against the European Colonial Order. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Anan Ganjanapan. 1984. The Partial Commercialization of Rice Production in Northern Thailand (1900–1981). PhD diss., Cornell University.Google Scholar
Ashley, Sean. 2011. Late for Buddha: The Construction of Dar'ang (Silver Palaung) Religious and Ethnic Identity. PhD diss., Simon Frazer University.Google Scholar
Baird, Ian G. 2007. Contested History, Ethnicity and Remembering the Past: The Case of the Ay Sa Rebellion in Southern Laos. Crossroads 18, 2: 119–59.Google Scholar
Baird, Ian G. 2013. Millenarian Movements in Southern Laos and North Eastern Siam (Thailand) at the Turn of the Twentieth Century: Reconsidering the Involvement of the Champassak Royal House. South East Asia Research 21, 2: 257–79.Google Scholar
Bangkok Times Weekly Mail (BT). Cited by date.Google Scholar
Bock, Carl. 1986 [1884]. Temples and Elephants: Travels in Siam in 1881–1882. Singapore: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. 1988. Peasant Perspectives on the Political Economy of the Northern Thai Kingdom of Chiang Mai in the Nineteenth Century: Implications for the Understanding of Peasant Political Expression. PhD diss., University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. 1992. Unraveling the Myth of the Subsistence Economy: The Case of Textile Production in Nineteenth-Century Northern Thailand. Journal of Asian Studies 51, 4: 797823.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. 1998. The Alchemy of Charity: Of Class and Buddhism in Northern Thailand. American Anthropologist 100, 2: 469–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. n.d.a. Of Buddhism and Militarism in Northern Thailand: Solving the Puzzle of the Saint Khruubaa Srivichai. Forthcoming in Journal of Asian Studies 73, 3 (Aug.).Google Scholar
Bowie, Katherine. n.d.b. The Politics of Humor: The Vicissitudes of the Vessantara Jataka in Thailand. Book MS under review.Google Scholar
Brereton, Bonnie Pacala. 1995. Thai Tellings of Phra Malai: Texts and Rituals Concerning a Popular Buddhist Saint. Tempe: Arizona State University Program for Southeast Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Bristowe, W. S. 1976. Louis and the King of Siam. London: Chatto and Windus.Google Scholar
Burridge, Kenelm. 1969. New Heaven, New Earth: A Study of Millenarian Activities. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Cady, John F. 1958. A History of Modern Burma. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Chandler, David. 1996. Facing the Cambodian Past: Selected Essays 1971–1994. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Press.Google Scholar
Chatthip Nartsupha. 1984. The Ideology of Holy Men Revolts in Northeast Thailand. In Turton, Andrew and Tanabe, Shigeharu, eds., History and Peasant Consciousness in South East Asia. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 111–34.Google Scholar
Cohen, Paul T. 2001. Buddhism Unshackled: The Yuan ‘Holy Man’ Tradition and the Nation-State in the Tai World. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 32, 2: 227–47.Google Scholar
Cohn, Norman. 1961. The Pursuit of the Millennium. New York: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Cohn, Norman. 1970. Medieval Millenarism: Its Bearing on the Comparative Study of Millenarian Movements. In Thrupp, Sylvia L., ed., Millennial Dreams in Action. New York: Schocken, 3143.Google Scholar
Collins, Stephen. 1998. Nirvana and other Buddhist Felicities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodd, William Clifton. 1923. The Tai Race. N.p.: Torch Press.Google Scholar
Easum, Taylor. 2013. A Thorn in Bangkok's Side: Khruba Sriwichai, Sacred Space and the Last Stand of the Pre-Modern Chiang Mai State. South East Asia Research. 21, 2: 211–36.Google Scholar
Faa Wongmahaa. 1976–1977. Khruubaa Sriiwichai. Serialized in Thaan Tawan (Bangkok), vols. 170–203 (30 July 1976–28 Mar. 1977).Google Scholar
Gay, Bernard. 2002. Millenarian Movements in Laos, 1895–1936: Depictions by Modern Lao Historians. In Ngaosrivathana, Mayoury and Breazeale, Kennon, eds., Breaking New Ground in Lao History: Essays on the Seventh to Twentieth Centuries. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 281–95.Google Scholar
Griswold, A. B. and Nagara, Prasert na. 1969. Epigraphic and Historical Studies No. 3: The Pact Between Sukhodaya and Nan. Journal of the Siam Society 57, 1: 57107.Google Scholar
Gunn, Geoffrey C. 1985. A Scandal in Colonial Laos: The Death of Bac My and the Wounding of Kommadam Revisited. Journal of the Siam Society 73, 1–2: 4259.Google Scholar
Gunn, Geoffrey C. 1988. Sambran (The White Python): The Kha (Lao Theung) Revolt of 1936–39. Sojourn 3, 2: 207–15.Google Scholar
Gunn, Geoffrey C. 1990. Rebellion in Laos: Peasant and Politics in a Colonial Backwater. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Hallett, Holt Samuel. 1890. A Thousand Miles on an Elephant in the Shan States. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons.Google Scholar
Hansen, Anne Ruth. 2007. How to Behave: Buddhism and Modernity in Colonial Cambodia, 1860–1930. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press.Google Scholar
Harkin, Michael, ed. 2004. Reassessing Revitalization: Perspectives from Native North America and the Pacific Islands. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Harris, Ian. 2005. Cambodian Buddhism: History and Practice. Honolulu: University of Hawaìi Press.Google Scholar
Hinton, Peter. 1979. The Karen, Millennialism, and the Politics of Accommodation to Lowland States. In Keyes, Charles, ed., Ethnic Adaptation and Identity: The Karen on the Thai Frontier with Burma. Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues, 8199.Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, Eric. 1965. Primitive Rebels: Studies in Archaic Forms of Social Movements in the 19th and 20th Centuries. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.Google Scholar
Ishii, Yoneo. 1986. Sangha, State, and Society: Thai Buddhism in History. Hawkes, Peter, trans. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter. 1988. The Hupphaasawan Movement: Millenarian Buddhism among the Thai Elite. Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 3, 2: 134–70.Google Scholar
Jory, Patrick. 2002. Thai and Western Buddhist Scholarship in the Age of Colonialism: King Chulalongkorn Redefines the Jatakas. Journal of Asian Studies 61, 3: 891918.Google Scholar
Kehoe, Alice Beck. 2006. The Ghost Dance: Ethnohistory and Revitalization. 2d ed.Long Grove, Ill.: Waveland Press.Google Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1971. Buddhism and National Integration in Thailand. Journal of Asian Studies 30, 3: 551–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1977. Millennialism, Theravada Buddhism, and Thai Society. Journal of Asian Studies 36, 2: 283302.Google Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1982. Death of Two Buddhist Saints in Thailand. Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Thematic Studies 48, 3–4: 149–80.Google Scholar
Keyes, Charles F. 1989. Buddhist Politics and Their Revolutionary Origins in Thailand. International Political Science Review 10, 2: 121–42.Google Scholar
Kwanchewan Srisawat [Buadaeng]. 1988. The Karen and the Khruba Khao Pi Movement: A Historical Study of the Response to the Transformation in Northern Thailand.” MA thesis, Ateneo de Manile University.Google Scholar
Kwanchewan Buadaeng. 2002. Khuba Movements and the Karen in Northern Thailand: Negotiating Sacred Space and Identity. In Hayashi Yukio and Thongsa Sayavongkhamdy, eds., Cultural Diversity and Conservation in the Making of Mainland Southeast Asia and Southwestern China: Regional Dynamics in the Past and Present. Kyoto: Kyoto University Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 262–93.Google Scholar
Landon, Kenneth Perry. 1939. Siam in Transition: A Brief Survey of Cultural Trends in the Five Years since the Revolution of 1932. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lanternari, Vittorio. 1963. The Religions of the Oppressed: A Study of Modern Messianic Cults. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.Google Scholar
Lefferts, Leedom and Cate, Sandra. 2012. Buddhist Storytelling in Thailand and Laos: The Vessantara Jataka Scroll at the Asian Civilisations Museum with Wajuppa Tossa. Singapore: Asian Civilisations Museum.Google Scholar
LeMay, Reginald. 1986 [1926]. An Asian Arcady: The Land and Peoples of Northern Siam. Bangkok: White Lotus Co. Ltd.Google Scholar
Lepowsky, Maria. 2004. Indian Revolts and Cargo Cults: Ritual Violence and Revitalization in California and New Guinea. In Harkin, Michael, ed., Reassessing Revitalization: Perspectives from Native North America and the Pacific Islands. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 160.Google Scholar
Linton, Ralph. 1943. Nativistic Movements. American Anthropologist 45: 230–40.Google Scholar
Malalgoda, Kitsiri. 1970. Millennialism in Relation to Buddhism. Comparative Studies in Society and History 12, 4: 424–41.Google Scholar
McCarthy, James. 1900. Surveying and Exploring in Siam. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
McGilvary, Daniel. 1912. A Half Century among the Siamese and the Lao: An Autobiography. New York: Fleming H. Revell Company.Google Scholar
Mendelson, E. Michael. 1975. Sangha and State in Burma: A Study of Monastic Sectarianism and Leadership. Ferguson, John P., ed. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Mooney, James. 1965. The Ghost-Dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Murdoch, John A. 1974. The 1901–1902 “Holy Man's” Rebellion. Journal of the Siam Society 62, 1: 4765.Google Scholar
Naquin, Susan. 1976. Millenarian Rebellion in China: The Eight Trigrams Uprising of 1813. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Betty. 2011. A Sangha without a King: A Buddhist Millenarian Response to the Collapse of Lanna Buddhist Kingdoms. Paper presented at the Informal Northern Thai Group, 7 Mar.Google Scholar
Nguyen, Betty. 2014. Calamity Cosmologies: Buddhist Ethics and the Creation of a Moral Community. PhD diss., University of Wisconsin-Madison.Google Scholar
Ooms, Emily Grosnos. 1993. Women and Millenarian Protest in Meiji Japan: Deguchi Nao and Ōmotokyō. Ithaca: East Asia Program, Cornell East Asia Series no. 61.Google Scholar
Ownby, David. 1999. Chinese Millenarian Traditions: The Formative Age. American Historical Review 104, 5: 1513–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patel, Marti. 2011. Germany's Contribution to Thailand's Rail Network. At: http://sanuksanuk.wordpress.com/2011/08/24/germany%E2%80%99s-contribution-to-thailand%E2%80%99s-rail-network/ (accessed 3 Oct. 2013).Google Scholar
Ramsay, James Ansil. 1979. Modernization and Reactionary Rebellions in Northern Siam. Journal of Asian Studies 38, 2: 283–97.Google Scholar
Reynolds, Frank E. and Capps, Donald, eds. 1976. The Biographical Process: Studies in the History and Psychology of Religion. The Hague: Mouton and Co.Google Scholar
Reynolds, Frank E. and Reynolds, Mani B., trans. 1982. Three Worlds according to King Ruang. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Salemink, Oscar. 1994. The Return of the Python God: Multiple Interpretations of a Millenarian Movement in Colonial Vietnam. History and Anthropology 8, 1–4: 129–64.Google Scholar
Salisbury, David Austin, ed. 2005. A History of Kruba Sriwichai (The Buddhist Saint of Northern Thailand): The Story of Making the Road Up Doi Suthep and a Historical Chronicle of Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep. Ronald D. Renard translation of a book by Khun Charun Kamsorn published in 2000. The first half of the book is in Thai. Additional editing by Jerome Chmielak, James E. Bogle, David Freyer, and Keith Lorenz. N.p.: Sutin Press.Google Scholar
Sangaa Suphaaphaa. 1956 [2499 BE]. Chiiwit læ ngaan khohng Khruubaa Sriiwichai (The life and Works of Khruubaa Srivichai). Phra Nakhorn: Samnakphim Khlang Witthayaa.Google Scholar
Sarkisyanz, E. 1965. Buddhist Backgrounds of the Burmese Revolution. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Schober, Juliane, ed. 2002 [1997]. Sacred Biography in the Buddhist Traditions of South and Southeast Asia. Dehli: Motilal Banarsidass Publisher.Google Scholar
Singkha Waanasai. 2010 [2553 BE]. Saaraprawat Khruubaa Sriiwichai Nakbun haeng Laannaa. Lamphun, Thailand: Saphaa Watthanatham Cangwat Lamphun ruam kap Saphaa Watthanam Amphur Muang Lamphun.Google Scholar
Sommai Premchit 2002 [2545 BE]. Khruubaa Sriiwichai, Nakbun haeng Laannaa (Khruubaa Srivichai, the Holy Man of Lanna). Chiang Mai: Rongphim Mingmyang.Google Scholar
Sophaa Chanamuul. 1991 [2534 BE]. Khruubaa Sriiwichai Tonbun haeng Laannaa (phoo soo 2421–2481) (Khruubaa Srivichai, Saint of Lanna, 1878–1938). MA thesis, Thammasat University.Google Scholar
Spiro, Melford E. 1970. Buddhism and Society: A Great Tradition and Its Burmese Vicissitudes. New York: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Sponberg, Alan and Hardacre, Helen, eds. 1988. Maitreya, the Future Buddha. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stern, Theodore. 1968. Ariya and the Golden Book: A Millenarian Buddhist Sect among the Karen. Journal of Asian Studies 27, 2: 297328.Google Scholar
Stewart, Kathleen and Harding, Susan. 1999. Bad Endings: American Apocalypsis. Annual Review of Anthropology 28: 285310.Google Scholar
Stewart, Pamela J. and Strathern, Andrew. 2004. Witchcraft, Sorcery, Rumors, and Gossip. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Swearer, Donald. 1981. Buddhism and Society in Southeast Asia. Chambersburg, Penn.: Anima Books.Google Scholar
Tai, Hue-Tam Ho. 1983. Millenarianism and Peasant Politics in Vietnam. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Talmon, Yonina. 1962. Pursuit of the Millennium: The Relation between Religious and Social Change. Archives europaennes de sociologie 3, 1: 125–48.Google Scholar
Tambiah, Stanley J. 1976. World Conqueror and World Renouncer: A Study of Buddhism and Polity in Thailand against a Historical Background. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tambiah, Stanley J. 1984. The Buddhist Saints of the Forest and the Cult of Amulets: A Study in Charisma, Hagiography, Sectarianism and Millennial Buddhism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tambiah, Stanley J. 1987. The Buddhist Arahant: Classical Paradigm and Modern Thai Manifestations. In Hawley, John Stratton, ed., Saints and Virtues. Berkeley: University of California Press, 111–26.Google Scholar
Tanabe, Shigeharu. 1984. Ideological Practice in Peasant Rebellions: Siam at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. In Turton, Andrew and Tanabe, Shigeharu, eds., History and Peasant Consciousness in South East Asia. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 75110.Google Scholar
Taylor, Hugh. n.d. Missionary Autobiography. Phayab College Archives, Chiang Mai, Thailand.Google Scholar
Tej Bunnag. 1967. Kabot Phuu mii bun Phaak Isaan R.S. 121 (Holy Men Uprisings in the Northeast, 1902). Sangkhomsaat Parithat (Social Science Review) 5: 7886.Google Scholar
Tej Bunnag, 1968. Kabot Ngiew Myang Phrae (The Shan Uprising in Phrae). Sangkhomsaat Parithat (Social Science Review) 6: 6780.Google Scholar
Thompson, Virginia. 1967 [1941]. Thailand: The New Siam. New York: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Wallace, Anthony. 1956. Revitalization Movements. American Anthropologist 58: 264–81.Google Scholar
Wasan Panyagaew. 2011. Remembering with Respect: Tracing a Cross-Border Journey of One Charismatic Lue Monk. Paper delivered at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, 23 Sept.Google Scholar
Wilson, Constance M. 1997. The Holy Man in the History of Thailand and Laos. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 28, 2: 345–64.Google Scholar
Woodhouse, Leslie. 2009. A “Foreign” Princess in the Siamese Court: Princess Dara Rasami, the Politics of Gender and Ethnic Difference in Nineteenth-Century Siam. PhD diss., University of California at Berkeley.Google Scholar
Worsley, Peter. 1968. The Trumpet Shall Sound: A Study of “Cargo” Cults in Melanesia. New York: Schocken Books.Google Scholar