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*''Died: [[1688]]''
    
Constantine Phaulkon was a Greek employee of the [[English East India Company]] who became for a time in the late 17th century the chief advisor to the Siamese king.
 
Constantine Phaulkon was a Greek employee of the [[English East India Company]] who became for a time in the late 17th century the chief advisor to the Siamese king.
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Phaulkon married a Japanese [[Christianity|Christian]] and, taking up residence in the Siamese capital of [[Ayutthaya]], became chief advisor to King [[Narai]]. Once English and [[VOC|Dutch]] pressures on the king began to become troublesome, however, he called for aid from the [[French East India Company]], resulting in armed conflict between allied French and Siamese forces, and English ones, in the streets of Bangkok; the French occupied the city, and in [[1688]] Phaulkon was arrested, and Narai was succeeded by [[Phra Phetracha]]. The French were convinced to quit their occupation of the city, however, before long.
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Phaulkon married a Japanese [[Christianity|Christian]] and, taking up residence in the Siamese capital of [[Ayutthaya]], became chief advisor to King [[Narai]]. Once English and [[VOC|Dutch]] pressures on the king began to become troublesome, however, he called for aid from the [[French East India Company]], resulting in armed conflict between allied French and Siamese forces, and English ones, in the streets of Bangkok; the French occupied the city, and in [[1688]] Phaulkon was arrested and later killed, and Narai was succeeded by [[Phra Phetracha]]. The French were convinced to quit their occupation of the city, however, before long.
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His Japanese wife survived him, and later became head of the royal kitchens.<ref>William Wray, “The Seventeenth-century Japanese Diaspora: Questions of Boundary and Policy,” in Ina Baghdiantz McCabe et al (eds.), ''Diaspora Entrepreneurial Networks'', Oxford: Berg (2005), 87.</ref>
    
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==References==
 
==References==
 
*Warren Cohen, ''East Asia at the Center'', Columbia University Press (2000), 206.
 
*Warren Cohen, ''East Asia at the Center'', Columbia University Press (2000), 206.
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<references/>
    
[[Category:Foreigners]]
 
[[Category:Foreigners]]
 
[[Category:Edo Period]]
 
[[Category:Edo Period]]
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