and Maria Guyomar de Pinha (
Baan Vichayen), in
Lopburi,
Thailand. Maria was born in
Ayutthaya during the reign of King
Narai. Her father was known as Fanique or Phanick, a
Mestiço from
Goa of mixed Portuguese,
Bengali and Japanese ancestry, who was described as "half-black, half-Bengali, half-Japanese," a devout Catholic of little means. Her mother was a Japanese Christian, named Ursula Yamada, who was claimed to be descended from the first Japanese Christian baptized by
Francis Xavier in 1549. A contemporary account noted that Ursula was not a very faithful wife and bore children of varying complexions, including one (Maria) of light complexion who was fathered by a Jesuit priest. Maria Guyomar was brought up as a
Catholic. In 1682, Maria married
Constantine Phaulkon after he abandoned
Anglicanism for Catholicism. They had two sons, George "Jorge" Phaulkon and Constantin "João" Phaulkon, and lived a life of affluence as Phaulkon rose to become highly influential at the royal court of king Narai. During the period of
rapprochement between France and the Siamese court Maria Guyomar de Pinha, together with her husband Phaulkon, was promised French protection by being ennobled a
countess of France. During the
1688 Siamese revolution, after the execution of her husband on 5 June, she managed to flee Ayutthaya with the help of a French officer named Sieur de Sainte-Marie and took refuge with the French troops in
Bangkok on 4 October, but the Commander of the French fort
General Desfarges returned her to the Siamese under pressure from the new ruler, usurper
Phetracha, for the exchange of hostages on 18 October. Despite the promises that had been made regarding her safety, she was condemned to perpetual slavery in the kitchens of Phetracha until his death in 1703, but remained and became the head of the royal kitchen staff. One of her sons, Jorge, became a minor official at the Siamese court. Her second son, João, was known to have been put in charge by
Prince Phon of building a German
organ for the royal palace. According to French missionary sources he was called
Racha Mantri and was at the same time a supervisor of the Christians in Ayutthaya and the official in charge of the royal storehouses. In her later life, Maria, together with her daughter-in-law Louisa Passagna (widow of João), continued to sue the
French East India Company to recoup money which her husband Phaulkon had lent to the company. She was vindicated in 1717 through a decree from the Council of State in France, which provided her with a maintenance allowance. Maria died in 1728. ==Thai desserts==