Vajiravudh as a writer and a lotus finial. The caption, in the King's hand, classified the Buddha. He signed the photo on top right King Vajiravudh was one of Thailand's most highly renowned artists, writing modern novels, short stories, newspaper articles, poems, plays, and journals. He translated many works of
English and
French literature into Thai, Among his works were translations of three
Shakespeare plays:
The Merchant of Venice,
As You Like It, and
Romeo and Juliet. He wrote many other pieces promoting Thai
nationalism, one of his nationalistic works is "" () based on ancient French chivalric rhyme "Mon âme à Dieu, Ma vie au Roi, Mon cœur aux Dames, L'honneur pour moi", and might also be influenced by
Alexandre Dumas's
The Three Musketeers. King Vajiravudh also composed nonfiction such as “The War of Polish Succession”, which he wrote while he was Crown Prince (see also external links below). The king introduced mysteries and detective stories to the Thai reading public. He translated
Agatha Christie's
Hercule Poirot novels into Thai, and created the character "
Nai Thong-In" () as a Siamese consulting detective, using
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's
Sherlock Holmes and
Edgar Allan Poe's
Dupin as an archetypes. He translated
Sax Rohmer's
The Golden Scorpion. The king was well-versed in
Sanskrit and
Hindu literature, including the
Ramayana and the
Mahabharata epics. He translated many stories from the two epics into Thai and also wrote plays inspired by Hindu literature. He was influenced by
Rama, the incarnation of Lord
Vishnu and hero of the Ramayana epic, to the extent that he systemized and promoted the use of the name
Rama as the (English) reign names of all Thai kings of the Bangkok (Rattanakosin) era. His own reign was dubbed as "Rama VI". (See
Rama (Kings of Thailand)) As a homage to his great, great, great-grandfather, Tao Sên-pom, King Vajiravudh published a fictional play in Thai, based on the Prince and designed for performance with musical accompaniment in 1913. Prince Sên-pom was the father of Chao Praya Chakri,
Rama I. The drama centres on a tale of Siamese courtly romance. It is absorbing fun and well-written. A copy of the play was given as a present to the Armstrong family in
Cragside House,
Rothbury, where it remains in the library. On a trip to the English
Lake District, Vajiravudh directed the performance of a play at the Stonehenge-like setting of
Castlerigg Stone Circle, in the mountains near
Keswick. In 1914 King Vajiravudh published in a Thai newspaper an article titled "Jews of the Orient" (). Vajiravudh explicitly adopted Western antisemitic tropes and applied them to Chinese in Siam. The essay was written in the context of a recent strike by Chinese merchants and workers which had paralyzed Bangkok, and may also have been the product of Vajiravudh's exposure to European
anti-Semitism. The article described
Chinese immigrants in Thailand as having excessive "racial loyalty and astuteness in financial matters." The king wrote, "Money is their God. Life itself is of little value compared with the leanest bank account."
Marriages Vajiravudh had been a king without a queen for about ten years. In 1920, he met
Her Serene Highness Princess Varnvimol at his theatre at
Phayathai Palace. They were engaged and Princess Vanbimol was elevated to Princess
Vallabhadevi. However, four months later in 1921, Vajiravudh nullified the engagement and pursued Princess Vallabha's sister,
Princess Lakshamilavan, whom he engaged. However, the marriage was never held and the couple then separated. Princess Vallabha Devi was house-arrested in the
Grand Palace from then on. In 1921, Vajiravudh married
Prueang Sucharitakul, who was a daughter of Lord Suthammamontri and elevated her to Lady Sucharitsuda. He then married Sucharitsuda's sister,
Prabai Sucharitakul, with the title of Lady Indrani. In 1922, Lady Indrani was elevated to Princess and Queen Indrasakdisachi. However, the queen suffered two miscarriages. In 1924, Vajiravudh married Krueakaew Abhaiwongse, later renamed
Suvadhana, a daughter of Lord Aphaiphubet. Queen Indrasakdisachi was then demoted to Princess Consort in 1925. Vajiravudh had only one child, a daughter with
Suvadhana,
Princess Bejaratana Rajasuda. In his influential book
Imagined Communities, Anglo-Irish political scientist and historian
Benedict Anderson speculated that the king was
homosexual and that this would have prevented him from accession if the law of succession had not been reformed. Anderson was the first modern scholar to break the taboo and write about the king's personal preferences. File:Lashamilavan.jpg|
Lakshamilavan File:SucharitSuda and King Vajiravudh (Rama VI).jpg|
Sucharit Suda File:HM Queen Indrasakdi Sachi.jpg|
Indrasakdi Sachi File:Queen Suvadhana in Rama VI.jpg|
Suvadhana ==Succession law==