View
58
Download
3
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
Slavery in nineteenth century northern Thailand:archival anecdotes and village voices.
by Katherine A. Bowie
SLAVERY IN NINETEENTH CENTURY NORTHERN THAILAND:
ARCHIVAL ANECDOTES AND VILLAGE VOICES.1
Katherine A. Bowie
The study of Thai history is still in its infancy. As the quality of contemporary
scholarship improves, the extent to which unsupported assumptions have served as
historical truths becomes more apparent (e.g. Bowie 1992). As David Wyatt, with
penetrating honesty, writes: "Historians' study of Thailand prior to the nineteenth century
remains relatively superficial, based on very scanty sources" (1984:245). This essay is
an exploration into a fundamental historical aspect of Thai society, namely, the
institution of slavery. Many scholars have prefaced their remarks on slavery in
Southeast Asia with comments to the effect that western conceptions of freedom and
slavery are misleading and inappropriate (see Aung Thwin 1984:228; Cruikshank
1975:331; Rabibhadana 1969:109; Reid 1983:1-2; for broader discussion see also
Miers and Kopytoff 1977:12; Kopytoff 1982:221). While few scholars would disagree on
the need to understand slavery within the context of a given society, the argument for
the cultural uniqueness of Thai slavery has encouraged a kind of complacency about
the role of political authority and military force.
This complacency has been reinforced by the assumption that slavery in
Thailand and elsewhere in Southeast Asia was predominantly due to indebtedness
(Aymonier 1900, II:42, quoted in Lasker 1950:57; Bock [1884] 1986:13; Colquhoun
1Research for this article was conducted under a grant from the Social Science Research Council from 1984-1986 and under the auspices of the National Research Council of Thailand. The author would like to acknowledge the editorial assistance of Hugh Wilson and Paul Durrenberger.
bowie (2-15-93)-2 1885:186, 189; Cruikshank 1975:315-16; Graham 1924:237; Ingram 1971:15; Lasker
1950:57, 138, 150-154; O'Kane 1972:131; Pendleton 1962:14; Rabibhadana 1969:106-
7; Reid 1983:xv; Terweil 1983:19). The prominence given to debt-slavery is in part the
result of a focus on the possibility of exit from slavery, rather than on the manner of
entry. Because slaves in central Thailand have generally been divided into two major
categories, redeemable and non-redeemable, attention has focussed on the possibility
of manumission. Since redeemable slaves are thought to have outnumbered non-
redeemable, slavery in Thailand has taken on an even more benign cast.
With the assumption that debt-slavery was the primary form of slavery, the
emphasis has shifted from a consideration of physical force to fiscal pressure, from the
state's use of force to obtain slaves and maintain slavery to economic factors. Despite
the possibility of poverty and economic coercion as a factor explaining entry into debt
slavery, a remarkable number of scholars have asserted that slavery was not an
onerous or oppressive condition. Thus Sir John Bowring writes:
Bishop Pallegoix states that slaves are 'well treated in Siam--as well as servants are in France;' and I, from what I have seen, would be inclined to go even farther, and say, better than servants are treated in England... In small families, the slaves are treated like the children of the masters; they are consulted in all matters, and each man feels that as his master is prosperous, so is he... ([1857] 1969:193-94).
Later scholars rely to a remarkable extent upon the conclusions of Jean Baptiste
Pallegoix and Bowring. Bowring and Pallegoix are clearly the implied European
observers behind Robert Pendleton's comment that "The slaves were, by and large, not
badly off. European observers generally reported that they were better off than freemen
servants in Western society" (1962:15). Citing Pallegoix, Bruno Lasker writes that
bowie (2-15-93)-3 "since they were essential to the support of their owners, they enjoyed a relatively
humane treatment" (1950:58). Also citing Pallegoix, Virginia Thompson writes, "Though
their condition varied...their status was always comparatively easy and generally
humane" (1967[1941]:599). Citing Pallegoix and Bowring, R. B. Cruikshank writes, "In
any event, most observers suggest that slaves in Siam were very well treated"
(1975:320; see also Bacon 1881:296; Bock ([1884] 1986:159; Colquhoun 1885:189,
267; Freeman 1910:100; Garnier 1873:171-72; Graham 1924:237-38; Pallegoix
1854:299; Turpin 1771:87, quoted in Lasker 1950:57; Wales 1965:63; Wilson 1962:96).
Not only have scholars have argued that slaves were well-treated, but many
have argued that the entry into servitude was the voluntary economic decision of the
slave. Bowring cites as evidence "the fact that whenever they are emancipated, they
always sell themselves again" (1969 [1857]:193). Archibald Colquhoun waxes
moralistic, writing of his hope that time may "shame them out of the indolence which
leads so many of the Siamese to prefer living the life of serfs, dependent upon others,
rather than as free men, who must battle with the world and face the consequences"
(1885:178). Although Carl Bock notes that debt-slaves very rarely succeed in working
off their indebtedness, he explains, "on the contrary, the servant generally contrives to
add to the amount of his indebtedness, and lives in a perpetual state of semi-bondage,
with which his indolent nature fully harmonizes. I have seldom seen a slave-debtor
discontented with his lot" ([1884 1986:13). Cruikshank writes, "The sale and purchase
of slaves was, however, a private matter between the one selling (or being sold), the
buyer, and probably, the patron of the one being sold" (1975:319). James Ingram writes
bowie (2-15-93)-4 that "In general, it appears that the lot of the debt slave was not too unpleasant in
comparison with his countrymen, and that many people were probably 'slaves' more or
less through choice" (1971:61). So extreme has this benign portrait of Thai slavery
become that the role of political force is even explicitly denied. Thus Kukrit and Seni
Pramoj write:
...in King Mongkut's time slavery was not a system whereby one or more human being were subjugated by another. It was, strangely enough, the right of free men to sell themselves into bondage which, in most cases, was exercised with the object of extricating these persons from financial difficulties. (In Ingram 1971:61).
Using the case of the Chiang Mai kingdom of northern Thailand, this essay seeks
to challenge the scholarly complacency which I believe has developed around the
subject of Thai slavery. Although most attention has been paid to the division of Thai
slaves into redeemable and non-redeemable, in fact the Thai law codes on slaves make
many more distinctions (see Bowring 1969 [1857]:189-199; Rabibhadana 1969; Smith
1880 for details). I am not using the Thai legal categories since such categories as
hereditary servitude or acquisition as gifts only beg the question of the cause of the
original enslavement. Since this paper focusses on the manner of entry into servitude
rather than the manner of exit, I shall draw upon Lasker's division of five main ways in
which individuals might become enslaved: capture in warfare; condemnation for crimes;
raids, both by pirates and by professional traders; sale of dependents, usually of
children by their parents; and indebtedness (1950:16). However, I should like to reduce
these five major sources of slavery into two broader categories, considering
enslavement through war, kidnapping or as sentences for crimes as manifestations of
bowie (2-15-93)-5 various forms of political power and considering enslavement through indebtedness and
the related sale of family members as manifestations of economic pressure. My
evidence is drawn from two major sources, from interviews I conducted with some 550
villagers, the majority of whom were over the age of 80, and from accounts left by
nineteenth century observers of northern Thailand. Chiang Mai was the largest
kingdom in northern Thailand.
This essay is divided into three sections. In the first section, I shall examine
these combined oral and archival sources for information about the relative percentages
of people enslaved through political power and those enslaved through economic
pressure. I shall establish that war captives far outnumbered debt-slaves. In the
second section, I shall discuss the extent and trauma involved in the major categories of
forced slavery, war captives and kidnappees, noting the manner in which state power is
involved in both categories. In the third section I shall focus on debt-slavery, the
primary basis for the assumptions of other scholars arguing for the benign, voluntary
and even non-political character of Thai slavery in general. I shall briefly suggest how
the state can be understood to have shaped debt-slavery as well. In conclusion, I argue
that the preliminary insights into the extent and nature of slavery in northern Thai
society presented in this paper should encourage a more general and more critical
reexamination of the prevailing assumptions regarding slavery in Thailand, and possibly
elsewhere in mainland Southeast Asia.
PART ONE: On the Number of Slaves:
bowie (2-15-93)-6
Although Pallegoix and Bowring are most frequently cited as nineteenth century
authorities on Thai slavery, other contemporaries have been ignored. Pallegoix's
estimate that one-fourth to one-third of the population of Siam (central Thailand) were
slaves is the most often cited (I:235, II:298;2 see also Lasker 1950:57; Pendleton
1962:14; Thompson [1941] 1967:599). Bowring's citation of Pallegoix is then taken as
support for Pallegoix, even though in a footnote Bowring advances that Pallegoix is
including the Chinese in his figure of one third of the population "for there are distinctly
much more than a third of Siamese who are slaves" ([1857] 1969:191; see also
Colquhoun 1885:189). Hallett, citing Mr. Alabaster, a confidential advisor to the king, is
more specific, noting that "nine-tenths of the non-Chinese inhabitants of Bangkok were
slaves" (1890:447).
If the evidence from central Thailand suggests the possibility that a large
percentage of the population were slaves, the historical evidence from northern
Thailand is more definitive, since it is drawn from different authors writing decades
apart. Several of these authors had considerable experience in Southeast Asia, some
even able to speak the native language, and had personally travelled to many villages in
the region. Furthermore, oral histories confirm the archival sources. The combined
northern Thai sources suggest that a clear majority of slaves were war captives and
kidnapees and that a far smaller percentage were debt slaves.
Dr. Richardson, in his diary of his journeys to Chiang Mai in the 1830s (Ms:143),
noted that three-quarters of the kingdom's population were not only slaves, but war
2I have taken the Pallegoix references from Cruikshank 1975:319n. According to Cruikshank, v. 1, p. 235 says one third; v. 2, p. 298 says one-fourth. However, I have
bowie (2-15-93)-7
captives. General McLeod wrote of his trip to Chiang Mai in 1837 that war captives
from regions north of Chiang Mai and Peguans (Talaings from southern Burma)
"comprise more than two-thirds of the population of the country":
the greater part of the inhabitants of Zimme are people from Kiang Tung, Muang Niong (Yong), Kiang Then (Tsen or Hsen), and many other places to the northward. They were originally subjects of Ava (Burmah). (quoted in Hallett 1890:202).
Hallett indicates that about 60 percent of a single lord's retainers were slaves
descended from war captives. From his discussions with the ruling lord of Chiang Saen
(Kiang Hsen), Hallett took the proportion of 6,000 adult males, of whom 2,500 were
fighting men, to conclude that the remaining 58 percent were slaves:
The Chow Hluang told me that before he left Lapoon to take up the
government of Kiang Hsen, when it was reoccupied in 1881, his retainers
numbered fully 30,000 souls, amongst whom were 2500 fighting men.
Every man from 18-70 year of age, who is not a slave, is reckoned as a
fighting man; and allowing one grown man to every five souls, there must
have been fully 6,000 grown men amongst his dependents. This
proportion between full grown slaves and fighting men shows that there
were about 17,500 slaves amongst his 30,000 retainers. (Hallett
1980:202-203).
John Freeman estimated that about half of the population of Lamphun province were
descendants of war captives (1910:100). Thus there is a remarkable consensus
amongst several independent nineteenth century observers that 1) at least half of the
been unable to verify the one-third figure, although it is commonly cited as such.
bowie (2-15-93)-8 population were war captives, and 2) that the combined total of war captives together
with other kinds of slaves must have comprised more than half of the population.
The vast majority of slaves were owned by the ruling lords of the northern
kingdoms. As Freeman succinctly writes, "The 'chow,' or native princes, are the
principal slave-holders" (1910:101). Other nineteenth century observers provide
supporting evidence. A.H. Hildebrand writes that the second chief had some 600 slaves
living under his roof and another 600 or so slaves living elsewhere (FO69/65/1875),
thus owning a combined total of some 1,200 slaves. D. J. Edwardes records that the
ruling lords had 300 slaves engaged in weaving alone (FO69/62/1875). Colquhoun
provides the most detailed breakdown, showing the Chiang Mai aristocracy owned
thousands of slaves. He records that the first lord or Chaw Luang had 1,500 slaves; the
second lord or Chaw Huanaa had 1,000 slaves; the third lord had 800 slaves, and other
lesser lords had 70-100 each. The lesser ranking rural elite (Phrayars) also had slaves,
averaging 15-20 each (Colquhoun 1885:257). Although population figures are difficult
to obtain (see Ingram 1971:55-58), Hildebrand offers an estimate of some 10-11,000
people living in and immediately around the town of Chiang Mai (FO69/65/1875). Using
Colquhoun's figures, the three ruling lords of Chiang Mai alone owned some 3,300
slaves, or one-third of the population. If the slaves of these three lords are combined
with those of the lesser lords and rural elite, the estimate that about half the population
were slaves is reinforced.
Oral histories confirm both the presence of significant numbers of slaves and the
preponderance of war captives over debt-slaves. Of the approximately 550 people I
bowie (2-15-93)-9 interviewed in villages, 167 interviewees, or some 30 percent, recalled some specific
information about slavery in the past. In this figure, I did not include villagers who
merely confirmed that slavery existed in the past, but rather only those who were able to
provide some specific details about slaves or slavery in their village.
I consider this a high number since several factors would tend to minimize
villagers' recollections of slavery. First of all, it seems that slaves were more likely to
live near the court than in remote villages (e.g. Hildebrand writes that the second chief
had some 600 slaves living under his roof and another 600 or so slaves living elsewhere
(FO69/65/1875). Secondly, the status of slave was stigmatized and so some villagers
would have been reluctant to admit their forbearers were slaves. Thirdly, those who
were war captives from the Chiang Saen region had already been forced to return to
Chiang Saen in 1881 and hence no longer lived in the Chiang Mai area (see Hallett
1890:203-5). Fourthly, poor villagers, such as slaves, were more likely to be orphaned
young or more likely to have had parents who were travelling greater distances in
search of work and food; consequently I found that it was much more difficult to find
knowledgeable village elders in villages with considerable poverty than in better-off
villagers with more stability and better health.
Fifthly, the sheer numbers of war captives may over time have served to allow an
ironic inversion of memory. If the majority of villagers were war captives, then the
accounts of parents would not necessarily have impressed itself on children and
grandchildren as particularly unusual. This ambiguity of status would have been
reinforced if the differentiation in the treatment of serfs and slaves was simply a matter
bowie (2-15-93)-10 of degree. This ambiguity is reflected in village comments such as, "in those days
everyone was a slave" or comments to the effect that in those days "everyone worked
as if they were a slave." The fact that many of the war captives were women,
distributed as wives amongst the soldiers and political dependents as part of their
reward for their efforts, would have served to blend the accounts of fathers and mothers
which were passed on to the next generation.
Sixthly, given a reluctance by many villagers to admit to slave ancestry, it is not
surprising that accounts of the past became more ambiguous over time. Thus many
villagers denied that their forbearers were war captives but recalled that their forbearers
had "fled fighting," "been forced to flee fighting," or even "chased out of the region by
fighting" ("nii syyk", "nii maa," or even "rai maa, mii syyk." The process of changing
accounts was dramatically evident in one interview in which the village headman was
listening in as I talked with one 83-year old villager. The villager elder explained that
villagers had been captured (ngap maa), while the middle-aged village headman
insisted that the old man was mistaken and he was sure the village ancestors had
simply fled fighting. In another example, a 94-year old woman couldn't recall if her
village's ancestors had fled fighting or had been captured. Yet another informant
recalled that his village forbearers were chaleoi (war captives), but denied that this
meant they were slaves! Very often these villagers, although only recalling their village
ancestors as having fled fighting, were of ethnic backgrounds compatible with war
slavery (e.g. Khyyn). Thus it is not hard to understand how over time the issues of war,
captivity and flight become confused in the minds of successive generations.
bowie (2-15-93)-11 Even though several factors have contributed to the gradual erasure of slavery
from villagers' historical memory, oral histories confirm the comments made by
nineteenth century foreign observers. Oral histories support not simply the large-scale
presence of slavery in northern Thailand, but also reveal the extent to which the primary
cause of enslavement was political force rather than economic pressure. Of the 167
villagers who recalled some specific information about slavery, only 53 were able to
recall specific information about the cause of enslavement (this figure is not surprising
given most informants, if born, were only small children at the time slavery officially
ended in Thailand in 1905). Of these 53 informants, 28 (53 percent) gave war slavery
as the cause; 14 (26 percent) cited indebtedness; 9 (or 17 percent) cited kidnapping
and 2 (4 percent) cited punishment for crimes as the reason (see table 1). Another 15
recalled their village forbearers had "fled fighting," but did not recall that their forbearers
were slaves; hence I listed these informants separately and did not include them in the
167 interviews on slavery. Thus oral histories suggest that war slavery was by far the
most common reason given for enslavement. If war slavery is combined with other
categories of enslavement involving the direct use of force (kidnapping and punishment
for crimes), then 74 percent of the informants recalled that northern Thai slaves were
enslaved by political force as compared to only 26 percent for economic indebtedness.
TABLE #1
The use of state force in slavery becomes even clearer if the ownership of slaves
bowie (2-15-93)-12 by lords is differentiated from the ownership of slaves by the rural elite. Out of 30
informants discussing slave ownership by lords, 19 (63 percent) recalled that the slaves
in their area were war captives; 10 (33 percent) gave reasons of indebtedness (see
table #1). If the category of "fled fighting" is included in the total of war captives, then
26 out of 37 informants, or 70 percent, reported that war slavery was the reason for
enslavement. This concentration of slave ownership in the hands of the ruling lords
reveals the extent to which slavery was an important underpinning to political power,
and also the result of that power in warfare.
It might be expected that debt slavery would be the more common of
enslavement for slaves owned by the rural elite, since villagers were more likely to be in
day-to-day contact with them rather than the more remote lords. Remarkably, this
expectation was not borne out. Of a total of 19 informants who recalled the reason for
enslavement for slaves owned by the rural elite, only 4 informants (21 percent) reported
indebtedness was the cause. Another 6 informants (32 percent) recalled the individual
concerned had either captured the slave directly as part of a war effort or had received
a war captive as a reward for services rendered a victorious lord. Another 8 informants
(42 percent) recalled that the slaves owned by a member of the rural elite were
purchased from parties who dealt in kidnapping slaves.
The use of state force in northern Thai slavery is supported by three additional
kinds of information from the oral histories. First, if ruling lords are differentiated from
lesser lords, an even clearer majority of the slaves of the ruling lords were war captives.
Out of 25 informants recalling information about slaves owned by the ruling elite, 17 or
bowie (2-15-93)-13 68 percent recalled war slavery as the cause of enslavement. If the "fled fighting"
category is included, then out of 31 informants, 23 or 74 percent cited war slavery as
the cause. By comparison, amongst the lesser lords, informants citing war slavery as
the cause of enslavement were about equal to those citing indebtedness as the cause
(see table #1).
Secondly, if informant responses are weighted by the number of slaves each
informant was referring to, the evidence shifts even more dramatically in favor of war
slavery (see table #2). Some 25 entire villages are described as having been
comprised of war slaves, in addition to another 54 individuals or families. By
comparison, only 1 village is mentioned as having been comprised of debt-slaves and
another 47 individuals or families. Fully 21 out of the 25 villages described as being
comprised of war captives owned by one of the ruling lords. If an average village is
conservatively estimated as having only 10 households, then some 304 families or 84
percent were war captives, compared to only 57 debt-slave households or 16 percent.
If a larger figure is assigned as the average number of households, then the ratio of war
captives to debt-slaves would increase even further.
TABLE #2
Thirdly, a survey of slaves by ethnic or geographical background is also
revealing. If indebtedness were the reason for enslavement, one would expect the
slaves to be of local backgrounds. However, out of 96 interviews in which villagers
bowie (2-15-93)-14 were able to recall some information about the ethnic or geographical origin of slaves,
75 (78 percent) villagers recalled that the slaves were of backgrounds other than local
northern Thai (phyn muang). Of slaves owned by the ruling lords, this pattern was even
more clear, with 43 out of 51 informants, or 84 percent, reporting a non-local origin for
royal slaves (see tables #3 and #4). Amongst lesser lords and rural elite this pattern
was similar, but less pronounced. If some effort is made to factor in the number of
slaves of various ethnic and geographical backgrounds, this pattern becomes even
more pronounced, with a total of over 41 villages and 132 individual households
described as non-local as compared with only 2 1/2 villages and 73 households
described as local. Using a very conservative figure of 10 households per village, there
would be some 542 non-local slave households (85 percent) compared with only some
98 local slave households. Using a less conservative estimate of the number of
households per village would yield an even higher percentage of non-local slaves. The
fact that slaves were far more likely to come from non-local backgrounds further
reinforces the argument that war captivity predominated as a cause of slavery over
indebtedness.
INSERT TABLE #3
INSERT TABLE #4
bowie (2-15-93)-15
bowie (2-15-93)-16 PART TWO: The Role of State Power in Slavery.
Of the five major causes of slavery in Thailand, three can be categorized as
overtly political, namely war captivity, kidnapping and punishment for crimes.
Punishment appears to have accounted for a very small percentage of those enslaved.
Consequently in this section, I shall focus on the two more important categories, war
captivity and kidnapping, suggesting that the inhumanity of this violence has been
minimized by many of those who have written on Thai slavery. When not omitted from
consideration entirely, the reality of the violence perpetrated is often softened by
phrasing. Thus Colquhoun writes that "even savages who are captured and sold as
slaves are treated so kindly that, to a stranger, if it were not for their physiognomy and
long hair, they would seem part of the family of their masters" (1885:189).3 Graham
writes "The condition of slavery was not hard, provided the slaves were fairly tractable
and did not try to run away" and adds nonchalantly, "They were rarely sold without their
own consent" (1924:237-38). Similarly, Cruikshank writes, "It seems clear, however,
that their fate, once they had arrived through forced marches from the scene of the
battle or raid, was generally good" 1975:317).
War Captives:
In most accounts of central Thai slavery, prisoners of war have received minimal
consideration. Nonetheless, it has frequently been noted that Southeast Asian rulers
3In this passage, Colquhoun claims to be quoting Garnier. I have checked Garnier and Garnier does not say what Colquhoun says he says. Instead Garnier says that the condition of slavery was not comparable to that of the "negroes in European colonies" and he speaks of the "deplorable consequences" and "undeserved violence"
bowie (2-15-93)-17 were more interested in control over people rather than control over territory, to "put
vegetables into baskets and put slaves into kingdoms" (kep phak saj saa, kep khaa saj
muang; Nimmanhaeminda 1965).4 The capture of slaves has a long history in northern
Thailand. One of the earliest mentions of war captives can be found in the famous
Inscription of King Ramakhamhaeng dating from the thirteenth century. Ironically,
although this inscription is cited as evidence of a paternalistic form of rule (see Andaya
1971), the passage providing evidence of Ramakhamhaeng's filial piety reads:
During my father's life I served my father and I served my mother. If I got a bit of meat or a bit of fish, I took it to my father; if I had any sort of fruit, sour or sweet, anything delicious and good to eat, I took it to my father. If I went on an elephant hunt and caught any, I took them to my father. If I went to attack a village or a city and collected some elephants and ivory, men and women, silver and gold, I gave them to my father. (Benda and Larkin, ed. 1967:40-41).
Chronicles record thousands of captives being taken at a time. For example, in
1462, King Tilok of the Lannathai kingdom of Chiang Mai is recorded as conquering
eleven Shan principalities and carrying off 12,328 people who were relocated in three
towns and several frontier posts "where their descendants have lived until our days"
(Notton 1926-32, Vol. 3:135; quoted in Turton 1980:255). Simon de la Loubere gives a
sense of these earlier kingdoms in his description of late seventeenth-century Ayuthaya:
"They busie themselves only in making slaves. If the Peguins (sic), for example, do on
one side invade the lands of Siam, the Siamese will at another place enter the Lands of
Pegu, and both Parties will carry away whole Villages into Captivity" (1969:90).
(1873:172). 4Many scholars have suggested that this emphasis on control over labor rather than land set Southeast Asian states apart from European feudal kingdoms. I believe this distinction is grossly overstated. As Perry Anderson observes of Europe, "Plunder,
bowie (2-15-93)-18 Richardson provides one of the earliest accounts of the importance of war
captives in northern Thailand. Told from the perspective of the war captives
themselves, the account gives some idea of the distances travelled and the numbers
involved:
The thonghee of this village (KAB: Ban Pasang (Basang) in Lamphun) and of Ban San Kanoy and most of the villagers were captured about 29 years ago (KAB: 1805-6) and brought here as slaves from the city of Moung Neaung about 45 days march northerly from this, about one month northeast of Ava and about three long days from the Chinese frontier. The mother of Meng Nyot Boo was a sister of this Thooghee's wife--they say there were about 2,000 people brought away. (Ms:56).
General McLeod gives a broader sense of the social impact of the war captives on the
kingdom of Chiang Mai when he writes in his journal in 1837 "the greater part of the
inhabitants of Zimme are people from Kiang Tung, Muang Niong (Yong), Kiang Then
(Tsen or Hsen), and many other places to the northward. They were originally subjects
of Ava (Burmah)." In another passage he writes, "They, with the Talaings (Peguan
Burmese), comprise more than two-thirds of the population in the country" (quoted in
Hallett 1988[1890]:202). As Hallett continues:
From the time when Kiang Hsen was captured till 1810, Ping Shan armies frequently raided into the Burmese Shan States--proceeding as far west as the Salween and as far north as the border of China--sacked the towns, and carried away the inhabitants into captivity.
Some sense of the magnitude of these population relocations was given by the ruling
lord of Chiang Saen in an interview with Hallett. In describing the territory he ruled, the
lord explained "that many other cities were scattered about the country, but owing to
their having been depopulated during the wars of last and the beginning of this century,
tribute and slaves were the central objects of aggrandisement" (1974:28).
bowie (2-15-93)-19 most of their names had been forgotten" (1988[1890]:199).
The ruling lord of Chiang Saen provided a rare account of the variable fortunes of
his kingdom which give insight into the process of mass enslavement. The original
capital was built, according to the Chaw Luang, in 1699. Between 1779 and 1803,
Chiang Saen was attacked six times. The Lao of Vieng Chang [sic] and Luang Prabang,
together with the Lao of Chiang Mai laid siege to Chiang Saen from 1794 to 1797.
During the siege, Phya Anoo, the chief of Vieng Chang, enraged at the long resistance,
issued a proclamation that every male found in the city would be put to death on its
capture. This proclamation reinforced the resolve of the besieged and although the city
wall was breached at one point, the people of Chiang Saen succeeded in fighting off the
attack. The siege was then called off, but famine was raging in the city.
The city finally fell in 1804 through the deception of the commander of the Ping
Shans (KAB: another term for Chiang Mai, the city being located on the Ping River)
troops. The commander of the Ping troops, which included the joint forces of Chiang
Mai, Lampang, Nan, and Phrae, secretly informed the chief of Chiang Saen that they
merely wished Chiang Saen to throw off the Burmese and become feudatory to Siam.
He promised that, if the inhabitants of Chiang Saen would massacre the Burmese
governor and his troops and open the gates, the Ping Shans would form an alliance with
them. Accordingly the inhabitants of Chiang Saen killed the Burmese governor and the
300 Burmese soldiers within the city walls and opened the gates to the Ping Shans. As
Hallett explains:
They soon found to their cost that they had been treacherously dealt with. The city was destroyed; some of the people escaped across the Salween
bowie (2-15-93)-20
and settle in Mokmai and Monay, and the rest were taken captive to the Ping States, and distributed amongst them. With the Shans treachery is an ordinary occurrence in warfare: the persons deluded are ashamed at having been taken in; the successful party chuckles and crows over his cleverness. (1988[1890:202).
The devastation caused by repeated warring and raiding was considerable. As
Freeman explains:
In raids as these, whole villages were wiped out, entire valleys depopulated, for not only were many killed by the robbers or carried of as slaves, but the survivors fled to the forests and dared not return. There, jungle fever, dysentery and other diseases, due to exposure, carried off children and adults by the score. Often the stock of rice was burned, and, since the cattle were driven off or killed, the survivors could not work their fields. Famine followed in the wake of war. (1910:99).
Richardson includes a brief but moving account of a discussions with war captives from
Muang Neaung. Their accounts give some sense of both the numbers of people being
uprooted and their personal feelings:
The rightfull Tsobwa of Mein Neaung stayed with me a great part of the day. He is a prisoner who was carried off by the present Chow Tcheeweet about 30 years ago, the year after he re-established this town (Laboung). He complained with little reserve of his situation here. He said he ate and drank and slept like other people--his natural part was here, but his spirit was in his own country . . . The sister of my neighbour Chow Ni Non Luang paid me a visit this morning accompanied by a little train of hand-maidens bearing some presents . . . She gave me a most distressing account of their captivity immediately after they were brought here. She was sent down as an addition to the King of Siam's harem. He had however the humanity . . . to send her back again with instructions to Chow Tchiiwiit to give as little additional cause for sorrow and allow the captives to live as much together as possible. As they amounted to 3,000 people, they were afraid to trust them together and they were distributed in small numbers about the different villages in this principality which the Birmans had then only recently left and which was very thinly peopled. They never made any combined attempts to escape and large proportion are now collected in this vicinity under her brother. (Ms:58-59).
bowie (2-15-93)-21 By far the most powerful description of the impact of being captured is recorded
in an account left by a British official, Mr. Gould. This rare first-hand account provides
graphic details of the capture and forced march of some war captives from Laos in
1876. Gould visited two groups of "prisoners," one group numbering 1,005 and the
other group numbering 300, who by that time had reached the border of Thailand. In
his account, Gould explains that the Siamese soldiers had successfully driven the Chin
Haw from Laos. During the fighting, many of the Laotians had fled into the surrounding
mountains. Gould continues:
The Laos fugitives in the hills being aware of what had taken place naturally thought that they time had come when they might return to their homes. They however regarded the stranger Siamese with some distrust and a considerable number determined not yet to leave their asylum in the hills. That these poor people were wise, the event proved, and every person of humanity will when the result is known, wish that none of these Laos had left their shelter at all. However, large numbers did, and returned to their homes in Chieng Kwang and the neighbourhood, and no doubt felt thankful to the power which had driven out their enemies. Whether what followed was due to special orders from Bangkok or whether action was taken independently by the Chiefs of the army I had no means of ascertaining, but however the matter may stand, the Laos who were now settling down again into their homes and endeavouring to repair the damage done by the Chin Haw invasion were called upon to take the oath of allegiance to the King of Siam in the usual form of "kin nam sabot". Various places were appointed, all on the same day, for the taking of the oath, and the unsuspecting people were summoned. As soon as they had thus been called together, they were, after taking the oath, suddenly set upon and made prisoners. The number thus treacherously seized amounted to 5,700. The Siamese military expedition had been converted into a slave hunting operation on a large scale. It only remained to drive the slave gangs to Bangkok. The unfortunate creatures, men, women and children, many of the latter still in arms, were driven off in droves through the jungles from Muang Puen to Pichai, the nearest point on the Menam River.
bowie (2-15-93)-22
This terrible march occupied more than a month and is hardly surpassed in its details of miserable suffering by any story of the slavers of Africa told by Sir Samuel Baker and others. The captives were hurried mercilessly along, many weighted by burdens strapped to their backs, the men who had no wives or children with them and were therefore capable of attempting escape, were tied together by a rope passed through a sort of wooden collar. Those men who had their families with them were allowed the free use of their limbs. Great numbers died from sickness, starvation and exhaustion on the road. The sick when they become too weak to struggle on were left behind. If a house happened to be near, the sick man or woman was left with the people in the house. If no house was at hand which must have been oftener the case in the wild country they were traversing, the sufferer was imply flung down to die miserably in the jungle. Any of his or her companions attempting to stop to assist the poor creatures were driven on with blows. Thus the slave gangs were driven down to Pichai. There they were placed on rafts and brought down the river to the place where I saw them. A good many have not yet completed the journey and are, I was told, scattered about at various places on the upper waters of the river. As to those I saw active ill-treatment by their masters is for the present at an end and indeed there is now some show of humanity towards them. They have been supplied with a staff of Siamese doctors from Bangkok and they are given daily a sufficiency of rice and fish. For all the smaller necessaries which go to make up a native curry they are obliged to depend upon the charity of the country people among whom they go about begging and upon whom their sad story is not without effect. Still their condition even now is in the last degree pitiable. They are nearly all in a state of disease aggravated by being compelled to live upon the low country rice instead of the glutinous rice "kow neeo" to which alone they are accustomed. Some of the middle-aged people only seemed to have retained their health. All the rest were very thin and wretched. Great numbers had every joint swollen up to a great size and numbers more were covered with a foul erruption on the skin often extending over the entire body. The little children of whom there were still a great many were in a condition of terrible emaciation. Fever and dysentery were still at work among them and many more will probably die. Already I was told, more than half of the original 5,700 so treacherously seized are dead. My information as to the present condition of the prisoners was of
course obtained by direct inspection. The particulars of their history I
gained from many conversations with individual captives among whom
bowie (2-15-93)-23
was the son of the Governor of Wieng Kang who shared the fate of his
countrymen and was still possessed of some authority over them. (Gould
1876 FO 69:#64).
If there is considerable evidence of the importance of war captives to the
nineteenth century northern Thai kingdoms, there is also evidence that war captives
played a role in nineteenth century Siam. Wales describes such war expeditions as "the
regular occupation of the dry season (1934:64). Captives included soldiers and
civilians, males and females: "The Siamese equally carry off the peasantry of the open
country of both sexes" (Crawfurd 1915:145; Turton 1980:255). After the Siamese
capture of Vientiane in 1826, some six thousand families were removed to Thailand
(Turton 1980:255). Garnier mentions that after an uprising in Cambodia, the Siamese
"profited by it by making an incursion into Cambodia from whence they took away a
rather big number of Annamite prisoners" (1873:147). Bowring estimated that during
the reign of Rama III (1824-1851), there were 46,000 war slaves; he lists some 5,000
Malays, 10,000 Cochin Chinese, 10,000 Peguans, 1,000 Burmese, in addition to 20,000
Laos (1969 [1857]:190).
The captured slaves became the property of the king, which he either kept or
distributed as rewards to favored underlings (Turton 1980:256; Colquhoun 1885:54;
Hallett 1890:203). The evidence regarding the treatment of war captives is ambiguous.
According to Bowring, war captives belonged primarily to one of the two kings and saw
themselves as superior to other classes of slaves. In contrast Turton suggests that the
treatment of war slaves, "perhaps especially the first-generation slaves may have been
bowie (2-15-93)-24
harsher than other classes of slaves" (1980:256). As Turton writes:
Wales claimed that "no regard was paid to the sufferings of the persons thus transported" (1934:63). Lingat refers to frequent mistreatment and Crawfurd considered that war captives were better treated by the Burmese than the Siamese, despite his judgement that in war the Burmese were "cruel and ferocious to the last degree"; and none were condemned to work in chains as in Siam (Crawfurd 1830, Vol 1:422, Vol 2:134-135).
Crawfurd writes, "At the Siamese capital we daily saw great numbers of these
unfortunate persons [war captives] employed in sowing, ditching, and other severe
labour" (Crawfurd 1915:145).
Given the present state of scholarship, I do not believe it is possible to reach a
definitive conclusion of the conditions and numbers of war captives in other parts of
Thailand, in part because they have been merged into general discussions of debt-
slavery by virtue of the law declaring them as redeemable slaves and also because their
conditions may well have changed over the course of the century.5 Only when more
local histories which include some effort to record the experiences of villagers become
available will it be possible to venture more sensible opinions about the relative
5It seems possible that at least some of these war captives were slowly amalgamated
into other statuses, possibly both redeemable slaves and serfs. Thus, according to
Wales, in 1805, King Rama I gave war captives the right to buy their freedom. Wales
and others suggest that as a result, their lot was improved and they were merged with
other slaves (1965:60; see also Turton 1980:256). Freeman suggests that at least
some of the Laotian war captives of 1826 "were attached as serfs to the royal palace
the temples at Petchaburee," thus merging more with serfs than with slaves (1910:109).
bowie (2-15-93)-25 positions of slaves to serfs, and relative positions of war captives and others captured
by force to those enslaved by indebtedness.
Nevertheless, I believe there is sufficient evidence to suggest the importance of
war captives in the central Thai state, as well as the kingdoms of northern Thailand.
The forced march which Gould so movingly recounted occurred in 1876, during the
reign of King Rama V, the king most famous for his efforts to abolish slavery. In 1881,
this same central Thai king also gave the orders that the kingdom of Chiang Saen be
repopulated by the descendants of the original captives. His order met with
considerable resistance, both from the northern Thai rulers who didn't want to loose
their population and from the descendants themselves. Nonetheless his order was
executed. Some idea of the scale of relocation is given by Hallett, who estimated some
30,000 people from Lamphun province alone were involved (see Hallett
1988[1890]:202-5 for a fascinating discussion). The heartbreak these orders entailed
was movingly recounted in oral histories. Villagers told of the tears shed when villagers
who had originally been captured from the Chiang Saen area at the beginning of the
nineteenth century were given orders to resettle decades later. As villagers explained,
by the time the orders were given, these war captives had intermarried with other
villagers in the Chiang Mai region. The king's orders meant that families were once
again torn apart.
On Kidnapping:
Although the evidence from oral histories suggests that a smaller percentage of
bowie (2-15-93)-26 people were enslaved through individual kidnapping as opposed to capture en masse in
warfare, archival sources nonetheless suggest that kidnapping took place on a
considerable scale. So great was the commerce in kidnapped slaves that Colquhoun
suggests that the reason the territories to the east of the Mekhong seem less populated
than the territories to the west "may be accounted for by the shameful practice of slave-
hunting which exists, the Anamites, Chinese, Cambodians, and Shans making a
hunting-ground of the Mois Hills, which lie between Cambodia and Siam, and Anam"
(1885:13). Colquhoun himself also describes a considerable slave trade in other
regions. Thus he writes "there is little doubt that the sparsity of the hill-tribes in the hills
neighbouring Zimme [Chiang Mai] has been chiefly caused by their having been, in the
olden time, systematically hunted like wild cattle, to supply the slave-market" (1885:257-
58). Of the Karennees, on Siam's western border, Colquhoun writes:
The Karen-nees, like the Kachyens, their neighbours to the northwards,
are renowned for their kidnapping propensities. At least one-third of the
slaves are taken from the Burmese Shan States, and the remainder from
the adjoining hill-tribes. (1885:40).
Few accounts survive from which to regain the perspective of the victims
themselves. One villager recounted a young kidnapped woman who committed suicide
soon after her arrival in his village, giving some sense of her loneliness at being
violently uprooted. Some sense of the human impact of this slave trade can also be
gained from gleaning archival passages. For example, on one of his trips, Richardson
passed an outpost of 10-12 men from Mawkmai, Burma on the lookout for Karen slave
bowie (2-15-93)-27 dealers. He writes:
Though the town contains many inhabitants, they are in perpetual dread of their attack, and are, in fact, carried off daily (during the last month they have been unmolested) . . . They make no secret of their fear and weakness, and told many tales of the Kareans' skill in kidnapping; among others, of the Kareans who came on a party of 6 of their people, and seeing they were the weaker party waited till night, when they made bundles of bamboos, interwoven with thorns, which they threw over them when asleep, and standing over them, with their spears picked them out one by one, tied their hands and marched them off. (Mangrai 1965:179; see also Colquhoun 1885:71).
Similarly, Colquhoun continues:
The slaves who are captured become slaves in the fullest sense of the word; they are carried off, with no hope of deliverance save death or escape. Trapped by ambush, and driven off after capture, like fallow-deer, by the man-hunters, they are from their forests, chained, and taken to the chief places of the Shan country (KAB: Chiang Mai], Siam, and Cambodia, for disposal. (1885:53; see also Garnier 1873:171-72).
Richardson also gives some insight into the callousness of the slave traders. His
diary reads:
Met several slave merchants with 8 or 10 young slaves on their return to Labong and Zimmay from the Kareenee country. One poor little child had been seized and sold by a creditor of his father's for part price of a gong!! I am told that if a Kareen cannot get a good price for any decent looking female slave, he will take her into his house as a concubine and when the markets are better will sell her and any children she may have had to him without the slightest remorse. (Ms:41)
Although it is easy to dismiss kidnapping as the lawless activities of slave-traders
acting independent of the state, in fact kidnapping also must be understood within the
context of state power. At a certain point, the distinction betweeen the acts of small
bands of "lawless" men capturing neighbouring peoples and "legal" war parties returning
home from war with large contingents of enslaved war captives is merely a difference of
bowie (2-15-93)-28 scale. Some sense of this ambiguity is seen in Cushing's description of the principality
of Main Loongyee (Muang Nium in Shan) in 1870. Due to raiding by the Shans and
Karens, Hallett writes, "the Siamese Shans and our foresters had been shut up in the
city for six months, not daring to venture into the district except in large bodies capable
of defending themselves" (Hallett 1890:31). Wales summarizes the parallel more
succinctly when he writes of military expeditions "that were little more than slave raids"
(1934:64).
The state could play a variety of roles in regard to the commerce in kidnapped
slaves. First of all, territories without a strong centralized authority appear to have been
more vulnerable to slave raids. Both the slaves and their immediate captors appear to
have come from such areas. For example, the Karen had a reputation both as
kidnappers and victims. As Colquhoun writes, "no one single individual of them but is
ready on all occasions to avail himself of the opportunity to seize the person of any one
of the Karen and Shan tribes which occupy the country in their vicinity" (1885:69-70; see
also Hallett 1890:30). Slaves from independent hill populations of Cambodia were
"hunted incessantly and carried off as slaves by the Siamese, the Anamites, and the
Cambodians" (Colquhoun 1885:53). Similarly, certain upland chiefs were willing to sell
their own people into slavery (e.g. Garnier 1873:171-72). According to several
contemporary accounts, the threat of kidnapping prompted many independent
populations to submit to the authority of outside rulers. As Colquhoun explains:
...several of the tribes living between the Mekong and the crest of the main Anam range (the boundary between Anam and Siam) had submitted to the King of Siam, and paid him a light tribute. For this they had received substantial advantages, for they need no longer fear the incursion of the
bowie (2-15-93)-29
slave-dealers, who still drive a flourishing trade amongst the independent tribes. (1885:53).
Strong centralized states had the power to regulate the trade in slaves within
their territories, both the sale of indigenous slaves and those imported from elsewhere.
Thus, for example, the central Thai king Rama I set up regulations to control the sale of
slaves within his kingdom. In his edict of March 1784, he complained that there were
unscrupulous and greedy people who were intriguing "with rogues in order to set up
[slave-selling] rackets." The king continued, "They take children, wives, siblings,
grandchildren and servants and, having sold them at one place, they take them to be
sold at one or two other places...Such shameless and fearless rogues are more
numerous now than in the past, and they need to be punished" (Terweil 1983:79). The
king was not opposed to the sale of slaves as such, but sought to regulate the market
by declaring such rackets illegal.
The state was also complicit in the commerce in kidnapped states from other
territories. As Virginia Thompson writes, "The State in those days either condoned or
actually furthered the slave trade" ([1941]1967:599). Thus Colquhoun writes of
kidnapping in the Shan States, "The officers of the King of Burmah, when the Shan
states were ruled by them, did nothing to protect the people, and even accepted
presents from the Red Karens, as a bribe to stop their ears against all complaints"
(1885:40). Similarly Hallett writes (1890:23):
As long as the King of Siam allows the harmless hill tribes to the east of the Meh Kong to be hunted down, and held and sold as slaves by his subjects, so long should he be abhorred and placed in the same category as the ferocious monsters who have been and are the ruling curses of Africa...King be shamed into putting a stop to the proceedings of
bowie (2-15-93)-30
the slave-dealers, who according to the French travellers up the Meh Kong, are fast depopulating the hills.
State complicity in, if not outright sponsorship of, slave-trading is further revealed
in the fact that it was members of the elite themselves who purchased the kidnapped
victims. According to oral histories gathered in northern Thailand, lower ranking
members of the elite were more likely to buy slaves than the higher ranking elite. Ruling
lords appear to have obtained their slaves more through the military power of the state
directly; however archival sources indicate that the ruling lords themselves also
purchased slaves. Thus O'Riley tells the story of a poor woman with two children:
She said that her husband, a Toung-thoo, residing at Nyoung-ywai, had fallen into difficulties, and had induced her to accompany him to Karen-nee, where he had sold herself and children to one of the chiefs, then present, for the sum of L6. (in Colquhoun 1885:70).
Similarly Crawfurd observes:
The Siamese Government has encouraged this nefarious practice. I am told, that of late years, upwards of four hundred young Chinese have been kidnapped by their countrymen, and brought to Siam, and sold as slaves. Notwithstanding the vigilance which prevails on this subject in our own ports, the King of Siam's ship contrived to carry off from Calcutta, and Prince of Wale's Island, five young African negroes. They were presented as curiosities to the Prince Krom-chiat and the Prah-klang, and we had frequent opportunities of seeing several of them. ([1828] 1987:148).
That the elite were the primary market for slaves is not surprising given the cost
of a slave compared to the income of the ordinary villager. In northern Thailand, both
oral histories and archival sources for the latter part of the nineteenth century concur
that slaves were priced between 54-72 rupees (Hallett 1890:130-131; Bock [1884]
1986:159; see also Colquhoun 1885:257).6 Although very few archival statistics on
6The price of slaves appears to have varied over the century and from region to region.
bowie (2-15-93)-31
northern Thai wage labor rates survive, I was able to find figures for better-paying
positions such as porters, oxen caravan owners, and elephant mahouts. According to
the British Trade Report of 1894, porters were paid 12-15 rupees/month for carrying
loads weighing some 50-75 lbs (RGWB:28 June 1895). According to Hallett, Khamu
and other teak workers "are brought by their masters from their homes in the
neighbourhood of Luang Prabang and hired to our foresters at from 60-100 rupees a
year" (1890:21), or approximately 5-8.3 rupees/month. Caravan men with eight to ten
oxen were paid 30 rupees (food not included; 20 rupees with food provided) for the
month-long roundtrip between Chiang Mai and Maulmain (Hallett 1890:66). The wages
of porters, oxen caravan owners and forest workers were hardly typical of ordinary
village wages. Porters were not ordinary villagers, but rather were amongst the
strongest and fittest of poorer village men. J. Stewart Black, a British consular official,
commented that the wages paid to forest workers were considered a "small fortune"
(1899). Oxen caravan owners were amongst the wealthiest of villagers, evidenced in
the number of oxen they owned. Furthermore, both portering and oxen caravan trading
were seasonal activities, most such villagers rarely making more than a few trips each
dry season. According to oral histories, normal agricultural wages were much lower.
Describing wages at the turn of the twentieth century, many villagers gave rates of 1
In 1830, the price of slaves in northern Thailand varied from 17.5-25 rupees (Colquhoun 1885:40, citing Richardson). Furthermore, in northern Thailand, female slaves were valued more highly than male slaves. However, in the central plains area, men were more highly priced; as Colquhoun writes of Siam, "the value of a man is from L10 to L20, a woman from L7 1/2 to L 12 1/2, and children from twelve to sixteen years of age from L 5 to L 7 1/2" (1885:178-79; for prices in Cambodia, see Colquhoun 1885:54, 178; Garnier 1873:172). This variation in price from region to region suggests possible differences in the usage of slave labor.
bowie (2-15-93)-32 win/day for agricultural labor. Since a win equals 12 satang, agricultural wages were
about 4.24 rupees/month.7
Given the usual figure of the cost of slaves in northern Thailand, it would take an
oxen caravan owner, already an extremely wealthy villager, 1.8 months to earn the cost
of a male slave and 2.4 months to earn that of a female slave, assuming no other
expenses. A porter, assuming full-time employment, would need 3.6 to 4.5 months to
earn the price of a man and 4.8 to 6 months to earn the price of a woman. A forest
worker would need 6.5 to 10.8 months to earn the price of a man and 8.7 and 14.4
months to earn the price of a woman. An ordinary villager working as an agricultural
laborer, itself a seasonal form of employment, would need 12.7 months of solid work to
earn the equivalent cost of a man and 17 months for a woman. These figures help to
put the cost of a single slave in broader perspective and give some idea of the
economic position of those able to afford to buy a slave.
The high cost of a slave relative to the wages of ordinary villagers also helps to
understand why kidnapping slaves was such a flourishing form of commerce in
nineteenth century Thailand. The traffic in kidnapped slaves was clearly lucrative. As
Garnier explained, a slave who cost 100 or 150 francs at Attopeu will resell at about 500
francs in Pnom Penh (1873:276). Some of these slaves apparently were exported
internationally. Alfred R. Wallace notes slaves from Siam being sold at the flourishing
slave market in the Sulu Islands (Peoples of Malaysia (Lasker 1950:39). Captives from
7The exchange rate between the Siamese tical/baht and Burmese rupee varied, but it was about 80-90 satang = 1 rupee. From interviews and British Trade Report RGWB:28 June 1895. For these calculations, I am using an average of 85 satang/rupee. See Bowie 1992 for a more detailed discussion of wages.
bowie (2-15-93)-33 upper Burma are mentioned in Tibet (Lasker 1950:44).8
Kidnapped slaves were clearly an important commodity of nineteenth century
trade, in both northern and central Thailand, as well as the surrounding regions where
the slaves originated. Chiang Mai was one of the nodes on the slave trade network and
Siam was one of the principal destinations for kidnapped slaves. Richardson, writing in
the 1830s, notes that the Chiefs of Chiang Mai bought and sold an average of 300
slaves each year, buying them from the Red Karennis in Burma and selling them to
buyers in central Thailand (Ms:121). O'Riley, writing in 1865, estimated "about 1,200
souls are annually captured" and sold to the Chiang Mai buyers (Mangrai 1965:180-
181). Similarly, Colquhoun writes that various of the tribal populations to the northwest
of Chiang Mai "all doomed to a hopeless state of slavery, in which, priced like beasts of
burden, they are sold to the Zimme Shans, by whom they are re-sold to the Siamese"
(1885:70). Crawfurd writes that "a good number" of slaves kidnapped from Laos and
Cambodia are to be found in Bangkok, adding "The Siamese make no scruple in
kidnapping them whenever they can find an opportunity" ([1828] 1987:177). Given the
magnitude of the slave trade, it is remarkable that so little attention has hitherto been
paid to it and the hardships suffered by its victims.
PART THREE: On the State and Debt Slavery:
Arguments regarding the benign character of Thai slavery have rested on the
8Slaves were also imported from overseas. Crawfurd mentions meeting a party of 13 people who had been kidnapped in Java and sold as slaves in Siam. He also mentions that two of the Bangkok princes had slaves from Africa ([1828] 1987:148). Such importation of slaves raises the possibility that foreign slaves were sought after in elite
bowie (2-15-93)-34
assumption that debt-slavery was the predominant form of slavery, a condition into
which villager entered apparently voluntarily and exited easily. Although scholars have
recognized that the obvious overt cause of debt slavery is the need for money, they
have minimized the significance of debt by suggesting the amount was minimal and
easily repaid--if not by the slaves themselves then by others. As Bowring writes:
Masters cannot ill-treat their slaves, for they have always the remedy of
paying the money they represent; and he must be a very worthless
character who cannot get somebody to advance the sum. If they are
treated harshly, you may make certain that generally it is the man's own
fault. (Bowring 1969[1857]:193; see also Colquhoun 1885:186; Graham
1924:237-38).
Colquhoun writes, "You hear of people selling themselves for as small a debt as twenty
rupees, or about thirty-six shillings" (1885:257); nonetheless twenty rupees was
equivalent to four months of steady work for an agricultural wage laborer.
As I have shown in the first section of this essay, my research in northern
Thailand has shown that debt-slavery was not the predominant form of slavery in this
region. However, to the extent that debt was a factor in enslaving villagers, debt slavery
was not a state which villagers entered freely and without coercion. With a better
understanding of the economic condition of the peasantry, particularly the extent of
poverty and the interest rates, it is possible to shed light on the broader context of debt
slavery in Thailand. Economic conditions illuminate both the reasons why villagers may
have been forced to enslave themselves or members of their families and why, once
households as status items.
bowie (2-15-93)-35 enslaved, it was difficult for them to regain their freedom. Furthermore, these economic
factors cannot be understood without an understanding of the role of the state in
creating and maintaining social inequality.
Due to the prevailing characterization of the traditional peasant economy as self-
sufficient or subsistence-oriented (see Bowie 1992 for critique), the extent of poverty
and class stratification in nineteenth century Thailand has been minimized. I have
documented the extent of class stratification and poverty in another paper (see Bowie
n.d.), however inequality in land holdings was one of the primary factors contributing to
the significant degree of poverty. Lords and members of the rural elite owned much of
the best land. Consequently the elite had large surpluses of rice, while most ordinary
villagers fell short (see Bowie 1988).
Natural vicissitudes exaggerated this social disparity. Just how devastating
natural disasters could be is dramatically related in a moving account of the effects of a
drought in 1892 by Hugh Taylor, a missionary in the northern Thai kingdom of
Lampang. The preconditions for the drought in Lampang were established as early as
1890, with the destruction of irrigation dams by foreign teak logging companies (the
decision to award teak logging concessions was the result of decisions made by the
ruling lords). That year was followed by a shortage of rain in 1891, which resulted in
"the worst of three rice failures in succession" (Taylor Ms:110-1). By 1892, famine had
hit the region.
The shortage of food was so severe that villagers were even begging for coconut
husks to chop up and mix with whatever rice they had in order to fill their stomachs.
bowie (2-15-93)-36 Taylor, who had organized some relief work, said "We had to post a guard to keep the
people from crowding in on us too hard...sifting the starving from the merely hungry
(Taylor Ms:113)." As Taylor continues:
Yes, they were starving. More than three score starved to death in the next village down the river from us . . . The Elders and Evangelists who were sent out to follow up those who had received help reported finding dead bodies in deserted houses. They set fire to the houses and cremated the bodies. They found village wells filled with starved bodies that the neighbors were too weak to bury. (Taylor Ms:114).9
While famines of this severity were not the norm, evidence for the more general
extent of agrarian poverty is provided by oral histories. In the course of my interviews in
1984-86, I routinely asked elderly villagers throughout the Chiang Mai Valley if people in
their villages fell short of rice in the past (generally defined as during their childhood or
earlier), and if so, for how many months out of the year. The data are dramatic. Of a
total of 273 villages about which I have information, only nine villages or 3.3 per cent
claimed to be "self-sufficient." The remaining 96.7 percent of villages had at least some
households who fell short of rice for at least two or three months each year. In nearly
half (48.7 per cent) of the villages, the majority of households fell short of rice at least
two or three months each year.
Given inequality in landholdings and pervasive rural poverty, it is not surprising
that so many villagers had to borrow rice or money with which to buy rice to see their
households through to the next harvest. Bowring informs us that the master is under
obligation to "furnish rice and salt fish, but not clothes" (1969 [1857]:192). Indeed this
9See also McGilvary 1912:351 for another account of this famine. Satow, who travelled to the north in 1885-86, writes of a earlier serious drought in the area in 1885, which affected thousands of villagers (PRO 30/33 (20/1):200).
bowie (2-15-93)-37 obligation of the master to his slaves suggests one way in which being a slave may
have been better than being a freeholder--at least during times of famine. Taylor,
during the famine of 1892 made it a point of separating slaves from freeholders in his
dispersal of food aid to the starving (Ms:110-116). Nonetheless, this benefit
notwithstanding, elitist attitudes are revealed rather crudely as Bowring goes on to
explain, "The principal hardship that slaves suffer is an insufficiency of food; and as
their food is so simple, they require plenty of it--and they certainly do consume an
enormous quantity" (1969 [1857]:194).
The second aspect of the rural economy which is relevant for an understanding
of debt slavery is the interest rate. Several nineteenth century observers, even while
suggesting that debt servitude was "voluntary," characterize the interest rate as
exorbitant (e.g. Colquhoun 1885:69, 185). Bowring himself notes that interest rates
were extremely high, the average rate being 3-6 percent per month (1969 [1857]:188);
he comments, "The legal rate of interest being thirty per cent, it may well be conceived
how rapidly ruin will overtake an unfortunate debtor" (Bacon 1881:296). Bock, like
Bowring, notes the high interest rates of 36 percent per year, adding that "it is not
surprising that a good many debtors are unable to pay so dear for the accommodation,
and much less to repay the capital" [1884] 1986:159). Colquhoun calculated that a
Siamese between 18 and 70 years of age would pay a headtax of 10 shillings, a land
tax of 266 pounds of rice, worth about 6 shillings, and a fee for relief from corvee labor
of L2, a total of L2.16.0. He added, "If indebtedness due to heavy taxation continues in
Siam, soon all the subjects will be slaves." Moreover, he noted the unrestrained graft of
bowie (2-15-93)-38 the officials who collected these taxes (Colquhoun 1885:189,191). When one considers
the devastating impact of incurring debt upon an already struggling average village
household, given the poverty, both the likelihood for large numbers of villagers to run
into debt and the unlikelihood of their ever being able to escape from debt, once in debt,
become much clearer. One need simply recall the earlier discussion of village wage
rates to help put these figures in perspective. A debt load of 20-30 rupees represents
some 4-6 months earnings, even for the best paid of northern Thai laborers.
Not only was the state involved in the creation and maintenance of economic
inequality, the state was also involved in the enforcement of debt. As Hallett writes of
Chiang Mai:
In cases of debt, a man can either pay the debt, the interest of the debt, or serve his creditor in lieu of the interest. It is optional for a man to serve or pay the interest, unless a special agreement has been made. If a man owes more than he, his family, and possessions are worth, or having sufficient, will not pay, the creditor informs the court, which enforces the claim by putting the debtor in chains until the debt and court fees are paid. Men often linger out their existence in slave-bondage. (Hallett 1890:131).
Furthermore, the moneylenders were generally members of the court themselves:
The princes and high officials are the money-lenders, the usurers, in Lao. Indeed it does not pay for any one but an official or a prince to make any profession of wealth, for if a farmer or trader has saved a little money, and injudiciously makes the fact known, he is sure to receive a visit from one of the "ruling class," who are adepts in the art of squeezing, by fair means or by foul, the uttermost farthing out of the common people. (Bock 1884:1986:157).
Freeman makes the consequences of this identity between debt-owner, slave-
owner, and court absolutely clear when he explicitly states that which common sense,
given an understanding of the political economy of the northern Thai kingdoms, can
bowie (2-15-93)-39 infer, namely that once enslaved, few were ever freed from debt. As he writes, "Debt
slaves have always been able to redeem themselves, though the process was made so
difficult that few succeeded in doing so..."(1910:100). As he points out, since the lords
are the principal slaveholders, "and, naturally, since they are the judges, every obstacle
has been placed in the way of emancipation" (1910:101).
Ironically, the very man who is most frequently quoted as evidence for the benign
treatment of slaves, Sir John Bowring, also provides evidence for the opposite
argument. In a comment laden with chains and coercion, with police and state power,
Bowring writes:
But on the other hand, there were often to be met in the streets of Bangkok, sorrowful-looking persons in chains, "men and women in larger or smaller groups, attended by an officer of police bearing a large staff or stick, as the emblem of authority. The weight of the chains is apportioned to the magnitude of the offence for which the bearer is suffering. I understood," says Bowring, "a large portion of these prisoners to be debtors." (Bacon 1881:296).
Thus there is reason to wonder if debt-slaves were so well treated after all.
Conclusion:
In this essay, I have drawn upon archival sources and oral histories to examine
the reasons people were enslaved in nineteenth century northern Thailand. The
evidence strongly suggests war captives far outnumbered debt-slaves in the northern
Thai kingdom of Chiang Mai, and that therefore far more people were enslaved through
physical force than economic pressure. Far from being voluntary, benign and non-
political as others have asserted, state power and political coercion underwrote the
northern Thai system of slavery. The victims of the kidnapping, be they captured
bowie (2-15-93)-40 individually by slave traders or en masse in warfare, experienced considerable
dislocation and trauma. Although debt-slavery was not the primary form of slavery in
northern Thailand, I have suggested it is a mistake to assume that debt-slavery was
simply the voluntary choice of individual villagers. Rather I have shown how the state
can be understood to have shaped debt-slavery as well. Because state power and
state policy was integrally involved in the maintenance of human servitude, Thai slavery
should not be understood merely at the level of individual decision-making. Thus, in this
essay, I have argued against the view of slavery as the "voluntary" fiscal choice of a
large segment of the Thai peasantry, but rather the physical imposition of the state.
By establishing the role of the coercive power of the state in the maintenance of
slavery in nineteenth century northern Thailand, I have also raised doubts about the
integrity of assertions made regarding Thai slavery in general. Evidence from Bowring
and Hallett suggests that more Siamese were enslaved that the figure of one-fourth to
one-third so frequently cited. The presence of war captives in central Thailand suggests
that greater efforts are needed to distinguish war captives from debt-slaves in our
analyses of archival sources since it appears both were included in the category of
redeemable slaves. The presence of kidnappees in central Thailand also needs to be
taken into account. Far more research remains to be done before the many outstanding
questions regarding the character of Thai slavery are resolved. To date, too much of
the description of the character of slavery have rested on the unchallenged assertions
of the slave-owners themselves. I hope that the insights gained by interworking archival
sources with oral histories presented in this essay will prompt other scholars of Thailand
bowie (2-15-93)-41 and elsewhere in mainland Southeast Asia to search for more carefully reasoned
assessments of the character of slavery in each of the kingdoms. Every effort should
be made to hear the voices of the slaves, be they heard through oral histories or
archival anecdotes.
bowie (2-15-93)-42
LIST OF REFERENCES Archival Sources: Archer, Vice Consul 1894 Trade Report of Chiang Mai. In Rangoon Gazette Weekly Budget. 28 June 1895. Black, J. Stewart 1899. Trade Report of Chiang Mai. In Rangoon Gazette Weekly Budget. 22 October 1900. RGWB: Rangoon Gazette Weekly Budget. Available on microfilm. Cornell University Library. FO69: Foreign Office Series #69. Public Records Office, London, England. Gould, Mr. 1876 FO 69. Volume 64. McLeod Mss: Journal of Captain McLeod. Manuscript Division, British Museum, London, England, 1836. Richardson Mss: Journal of Dr. Richardson. Manuscript Division, British Museum, London, England, 1830-1836. Satow Mss: Journal of Sir Ernest Satow. PRO30/33(21/1). Public Records Office, London, England, 1885-1886. Stringer, Acting Vice-Consul 1890 Trade Report of Chiang Mai. In Rangoon Gazette Weekly Budget. 16 May 1891. 1891 Trade Report of Chiang Mai. In Rangoon Gazette Weekly Budget. 24 June 1892. Taylor Mss. Autobiography of Hugh Taylor. Manuscript, Phayab College Library, Chiang Mai, Thailand, 1888-1930. Published Sources: Andaya, Barbara Watson 1971 "Statecraft in the Reign of Lu Tai of Sukhodaya. Cornell Journal of Social Relations. 6 (Spring):61-83. Anderson, Perry. 1974 Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism. London: New Left Books. Aung Thwin, Michael 1984 "Hierarchy and Order in Pre-Colonial Burma." In Journal of South East Asian Studies. 15:224-232. Aymonier, Etienne 1900 Le Cambodge. Two volumes. Paris.
bowie (2-15-93)-43 Bacon, George B. 1881 Siam, the Land of the White Elephant, as it was and is. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Benda, Harry J. and John A. Larkin, eds. 1967 The World of Southeast Asia, Selected Historical Readings. With Sydney L. Mayer, Jr. New York: Harper and Row. Bock, Carl 1986 [1884] Temples and Elephants: Travels in Siam in 1881-1882. Singapore: Oxford University Press. Bowie, Katherine A. 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. Ph.D. Dissertation, Anthropology, University of Chicago. 1992. "Unraveling the Myth of the Subsistence Economy: The Case of Textile Production in Nineteenth Century Northern Thailand." Journal of Asian Studies. 51:4 (November). n.d. "Of Beggars and Buddhism: Poverty and the Political Economy of Merit-Making in Nineteenth Century Thailand." Bowring, Sir John 1969[1857] The Kingdom and People of Siam. Introduction by David Wyatt. Two volumes. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press. Colquhoun, Archibald Ross. 1885 Amongst the Shans. London: Field and Tuer. Crawfurd, John 1987 [1828] Journal of an Embassy to the Courts of Siam and Cochin China. Introduction by David K. Wyatt. Singapore: Oxford University Press. Cruikshank, R. B. 1975 "Slavery in Nineteenth Century Siam." In Journal of the Siam Society 63(Part 2):315-333. Freeman, John H. 1910 An Oriental Land of the Free. Philadelphia: Westminster Press. Garnier, Francis 1873 Voyage d'exploration en Indo-chine effectue pendant les annees 1866, 1867 et 1868. Two volumes. Paris: Librairie Hachette et cie.
bowie (2-15-93)-44 Graham, W. A. 1924 Siam. London: Alexander Moring Ltd., the De La More Press. Hallett, Holt 1890 A Thousand Miles on Elephant in the Shan States. Edinburgh. Ingram, James C. 1971 Economic Change in Thailand, 1850-1970. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Kopytoff, Igor 1982 "Slavery." In Annual Reviews of Anthropology. 11:207-30. Lasker, Bruno 1950 Human Bondage in Southeast Asia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Lingat, Robert 1931 L'esclavage prive dans le vieux droit siamois (Avec une traduction des anciennes lois siamoises sur l'esclavage). Paris: Les editions domat-montchrestien, F. Loviton & Cie. Mangrai, Sao Saimong 1965 The Shan States and the British Annexation. Southeast Asia Data Paper #57. Ithaca: Cornell University Southeast Asia Series. McGilvary, Daniel 1912 A Half Century Among the Siamese and the Lao. New York: Fleming H. Revel Co. Miers, Suzanne and Igor Kopytoff 1977 Slavery in Africa: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives. Madison: University of Wisconsin. Nimmanahaeminda, Kraisri 1965 "Put Vegetables into Baskets, People into Towns. In Ethnographic Notes on Northern Thailand. L.M. Hanks, J.R. Hanks, and Lauriston Sharp, eds. Pp. 6-10. Southeast Asia Data Paper #58. Ithaca: Cornell University Southeast Asia Series. Pallegoix, Mgr. Jean Baptiste 1854 Description du Royaume Thai ou Siam. Two volumes. Paris: au profit de la mission de Siam. Pendleton, Robert
bowie (2-15-93)-45 1962 Thailand: Aspects of Landscape and Life. With Robert C. Kingsbury and others. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce. Rabibhadana, Akin 1969 The Organization of Thai Society in the Early Bangkok Period: 1782-1873. Ithaca: Cornell University Southeast Asia Data Paper No. 74. Reid, Anthony, ed. 1983 Slavery, Bondage and Dependency in Southeast Asia. With the assistance of Jennifer Brewster. New York: St. Martin's Press. Smith, J. Smith 1880 Siamese Domestic Institutions: Old and New Laws of Slavery. Bangkok: S.J. Smith Office. Terweil, B. 1983 "Bondage and Slavery in Early Nienteenth Century Siam." In Slavery, Bondage and Dependency in Southeast Asia. Edited by Anthony Reid, with the assistance of Jennifer Brewster. New York: St. Martin's Press. Thompson, Virginia 1967 [1941] Thailand: The New Siam. Second edition. New York: Paragon Book Reprint Corporation. Turton, Andrew 1980 Thai Institutions of Slavery. In Asian and African Systems of Slavery. Edited by James L. Watson. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. Vella, Walter F. 1957 Siam Under Rama III: 1824-1851. New York: J.J. Augustin, Inc. Wales, H.G. Quaritch 1934. Ancient Siamese Government and Administration. London: Bernard Quaritch, Ltd. Watson, James L., ed. 1980 Asian and African Systems of Slavery. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. Wilson, David A. 1962 Politics in Thailand. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Wyatt, David K. 1984 "Laws and Social Order in Early Thailand" In Journal of South East Asian Studies. 15:245-252.
bowie (2-15-93)-46
bowie (2-15-93)-47
Table 4: Slaves by Ethnic or Geographic Origin Weighted by Estimated Number of Slaves
Chan Lesser
Phrayar
Than Saen Commoner
Unknown
Totals
Karen 2v+6 5 10+ 3 2 7 2v+33
Mon 3 1/3v+16
3v+10+
6 1/3v+26
Khyyn 7v+7+ 2v 1v+2++
10v+9
Chiang Saen
4 1/2v+ 1 ? 4 1/2v+1
Yong 2 1/3v 1v 1v 4 1/3v
Khamu 10+ 11+ ? 5? 26
Muang 3v 3v
Ngio Shan
2v 34 2v+34
Sipsong Panna
1v+1 ? 1v+1
Lawa 2 1/3v 2 1/3v
Burma ? ?
Lyy 3v 3v
Chiang Tung
1v 1v
Laos 1v 1v
Chan Pa
1v 1v
Central Thai
1 1 2
bowie (2-15-93)-48
Total non-Phyn Muang
32 1/2v+ 40
3v+51 10+ 4 2 7 6v+18 41 1/2v+13
Phyn Muang
2 1/2v+ 24+
29+ 17+ 2 1 2 1/2 + 73
Total 35v + 64+
3v+80 27 6 2 7 6v+19 44v+20
bowie (2-15-93)-49
Table 3: Breakdown of Slaves by Ethnic or Geographical Origin Listed by Number of Informants
Chan Lesser
Phrayar
Than Saen Commoner
Unknown
Totals
Karen 5 1 5 2 2 2 17
Mon 8 2 10
5 2 4 11
Chiang Saen
7 1 1 9
Yong 3 1 1 5
Khamu 2 1 1 4
Muang 3 3
Ngio Shan
2 1 3
Sipsong Panna
2 1 3
Lawa 3 3
Burma 1 1
Lyy 1 1
Chiang Tung
1 1
Laos 1 1
Chan Pa
1 1
Central Thai
1 1 2
Total non-Phyn Muang
43 6 6 3 2 2 13 75
Phyn Muang
8
7 4 1 1 21
Total 51
13 10 4 2 2 14 96
bowie (2-15-93)-50
Table 1: Origin of Servitude, by Number of Informants
War captive
Dept Bought/ Kidnapped
Punish- ment
"Fled Fighting"
Total
Chaw 17 7 1 6 31
Lesser Chaw
2 3 1 6
Phrayar 3 2 3 1 9
Than 1 1 3 5
Saen 1 1 2
Commoner
1 1 1 3
Owne Unclear
3 1 8 12
28 14 9 2 15 68
bowie (2-15-93)-51
Table 2: Origin of Servitude, Approximation of Actual Numbers, Based upon Oral Histories
War Captive
Debt Bought/ Kidnapped
Punishment "Fled Fighting"
Totals
Claw 21 1/2v + 3 1v = 14+ 1 4v ++ 26 1/2v = 18
Lesser Claw
1v + 34 11 1v 2v + 45
Phrayar 12+ 15+ 9 10+ 46
Thao 1 3 5 9
Saen 1 1 2
Commoner 2 4 5 11
Owner Unclear
3v +1 5? 2v ++ 5v + 6+
Total 25 1/2v + 54
1v + 47 25 11+ 7v ++ 33 1/2v + 137
v = village
bowie (2-15-93)-52 NOTE: SLAVERY.DUS is a revision of SLAVERY.DUR according to what Paul Durrenberger want me to do. The major changes are the deletion of many footnotes and the deletion of several pages of text. I include the deleted pages here: Various arguments for the benign character of slavery have been made. Some rely upon comparisons which beg the question; comparisons with the condition of French domestic servants (Pallegoix 1854:299); with English domestic servants (Bowring 1969 [1857]); with the treatment of slaves in the Spanish and Dutch colonies (Colquhoun 1885:267); or negroes in the European colonies more generally (Garnier 1873:171) are hardly conclusive. Yet while Pallegoix and Bowring are both cited as evidence of the humane treatment of slaves in Thailand, both authors suggest cases of ill-treatment; thus Pallegoix complains of the cruel treatment of Christian slaves, and Bowring writes that "no slaves are so ill treated as those of the Christians" (1969 [1857]:194). Several writers argue that slavery was mild because it was a better condition than that of freemen; here the reasoning is less based upon the actual condition of slavery than the oppressiveness of corvee (Vella 1957:21, cited in Cruikshank 1975:330; Rabibhadana 1969:88, 118; Wales 1965:63).10 Other scholars rely on unsubstantiated generalizations. Colquhoun suggests that the ruling lords "are naturally clement in their dispositions" and suggests that public opinion carries weight, that otherwise "the whole country would flare up in rebellion" (1885:267). Cruikshank cites the belief in Buddhism as another reason (1975:321). Yet others scholars emphasize the shortage of manpower as an argument why slaves would be well-treated, arguing that "they were essential to the support of their owners" (Lasker 1950:58; see also Cruikshank 1975:321). Each of these arguments can be challenged. Bowring himself describes Thailand as a country "where might is right" (1969 [1857]:195). One need only reflect on the number of countries in which public opinion is unable to overcome authoritarian governments and rebellion is too dangerous. Religion, Buddhism or any other, has had at best mixed success in mitigating atrocities. Lastly, slaves were very important to plantation owners in the Americas, however their value did not stop the abuses to which they were subjected. By far the most supporting evidence for the easy character of Thai slavery is drawn from the legal codes governing slavery. While it is indeed noteworthy that Siam was concerned about regulating slavery to the extent of drawing up legal codes (the impetus for which would be fascinating to understand better), there is an obvious question about the degree of their enforcement. Thus Bowring himself notes with regard to the law suggesting that a slave could not be sold without his own consent that "this was not absolutely correct" (1969 [1857]:191).11 Some scholars have cited the laws stating that the punishment for slaves was to be limited to that "necessary" to ensure obedience, "but what was 'necessary' had to stop short of permanent injury" (Rabibhadana 1969:108; Cruikshank 1975:320); nonetheless despite the laws forbidding the use of excessive force with slaves, the laws also contain provisions for compensation for the wrongful death of a slave, again suggesting that such cases occurred as well (Wales 1965:192). Cruikshank and others suggest that slavery was light because "no source mentions any significant attempts to escape (1975:317); yet the legal codes contain considerable provisions for the return of escaped slaves (see Wales 1965:125; Akin 1969:87) and according to Bowring himself, "more than four-fifths" of the irredeemable slaves fled when they could (Bowring 1969 [1857]:191). Perhaps one of the most telling contradictions of these legal codes
10While most authors use the issue of oppressive corvee exactions as evidence of a strong state, Wales refers to the inability of the central state to protect villages:
The joint result of the exactions of government officials and the inability of the central power to protect the poorer freemen, especially in the provinces, was their readiness to sell themselves to those who could protect them, even when they were not harassed by creditors. (1965:63).
11I have evidence from oral histories of northern Thai families being sold individually to different masters.
bowie (2-15-93)-53 regarding slaves in summarized in the unwitting remark of Wales when he writes: "[Slaves] had considerable rights, among which were the possession of and the right to inherit property, the right to found a family, and the right to sue in court through the medium of their masters" (1965:60 [underlining mine]; see also Rabibhadana 1969:120, 105; Cruikshank 1975:320; Freeman 1919:100). My point in this section is not to determine the character of slavery in Siam. Rather I wish to suggest that the arguments made thus far with regard to the character of slavery are far from conclusive. Furthermore I wish to assert that any arguments regarding slavery which focus on the apparently voluntary nature of slavery are not considering the full picture. There is some ambiguity regarding the status of these hill populations who pay tribute in return for protection from slave-raiding and the like. According to some accounts, in paying tribute these groups become slaves, albeit with more autonomy than if they were actually kidnapped. Thus Hallett describes the Khas living east of the Meh Kong river as being treated like slaves and having to pay tribute to his Laos or Siamese master (1890:22). The acquisition of vassal-slaves has further political consequences. As Colquhoun explains: In the provinces, not only are one third of the population said to be slaves, but whole clans are dependent...upon the chaos, or chiefs. When the taxes are collected, should the vassal be unable to pay them, he is frequently helped by the chief, who, on failure of the vassal to repay the principal with interest, can sell him as a slave. Many of the chaos, instead of taking extreme action, are satisfied with tribute from the vassal in the shape of presents and extra services to themselves and families. It is self-evident that the growth of such feudal power must be very dangerous to a State like Siam, which has had so frequently to put down rebellions on the part of its tributary States. (1885:191).
Recommended