. The gazette was first issued by an announcement of King Mongkut dated 15 March 1858. King Mongkut himself served as the producer and editor-in-chief of the gazette. The office was under an independent department, called
Akson Phimphakan (), to which the king directly appointed a director general. The gazette was discontinued after having been in publication for merely around one year. However, Akson Phimphakan revealed that only few people were willing to spend their money on the gazette, stating that, of over 500 copies published, only 50–60 were taken, and this caused it to feel like "wasting its efforts producing [the gazette]". The gazette was again discontinued after five years in publication. King Chulalongkorn again revived the gazette on 8 September 1881 The king also turned the independent department Akson Phimphakan into a subsidiary of the
Royal Scribal Department. But due to excessive workload of its staff, the gazette was again discontinued after having been published for a while, and the king again revived it on 28 December 1884, announcing that, this time, he intended to "allow no interruption as before". After a series of publicity to solicit readers, the gazette gained a greater number of subscribers that, in 1893, it publicly expressed its gratitude to its subscribers, saying they were "source of its delight". Also in 1893, King Chulalongkorn established a cabinet ministry called
Murathathon and had the Royal Scribal Department affiliated to it. The work of publishing this gazette thus became under the responsibility of Murathathon. But instead of printing the gazette itself as before, the government employed private printers, including
Bamrung Nukulkij, to print the gazette. Occasionally, private printers printed the gazette for the government without charge. After the
Siamese revolution of 1932, the scribal works of the Murathathon ministry were transferred to the
Secretariat of the Cabinet (SOC) newly established in the
Office of the Prime Minister. The gazette was initially published once a week, but now the publication has no fixed schedule and depends on the urgency of each work. and each issue is only available in four physical copies, one to be archived at the SOC, the others at the
National Library of Thailand in Bangkok. ==Series==