Taksin - Issue

Issue

King Taksin had 21 sons and 9 daughters named

  • HRH Front Palace Krom Khun Intarapitak
  • HRH Prince Noi
  • HRH Prince Ampawan
  • HRH Prince Tassaphong
  • HRH Princess Komol
  • HRH Princess Bubpha
  • HRH Prince Singhara
  • HRH Prince Sila
  • HRH Prince Onica
  • HRH Princess Sumalee
  • HRH Prince Dhamrong
  • HRH Prince Lamang
  • HRH Prince Lek
  • HRH Prince Tassabhai
  • HRH Princess Chamchulee
  • HRH Princess Sangwal
  • HRH Princess Samleewan
  • HRH Prince Narendhorn Raja Kumarn
  • HRH Prince Kandhawong
  • HRH Prince Makin
  • HRH Prince Isindhorn
  • HRH Princess Prapaipak
  • HRH Prince Subandhuwong
  • HRH Prince Bua
  • HRH Princess Panjapapee
  • Chao Phraya Nakorn Noi - Ancestor of the Na Nagara (Na Nakorn),Yodcheewan Na Nagara (last living Empress) and Komarakul na Nagara families among others
  • HRH Prince (name unknown)
  • HRH Prince Nudang
  • HRH Princess Sudchartree
  • Chao Phraya Nakhonratchasima Thong In - Ancestor of the Indrakhamhaeng and na Rajasima families

Read more about this topic:  Taksin

Famous quotes containing the word issue:

    I don’t have any problem with a reporter or a news person who says the President is uninformed on this issue or that issue. I don’t think any of us would challenge that. I do have a problem with the singular focus on this, as if that’s the only standard by which we ought to judge a president. What we learned in the last administration was how little having an encyclopedic grasp of all the facts has to do with governing.
    David R. Gergen (b. 1942)

    Modern equalitarian societies ... whether democratic or authoritarian in their political forms, always base themselves on the claim that they are making life happier.... Happiness thus becomes the chief political issue—in a sense, the only political issue—and for that reason it can never be treated as an issue at all.
    Robert Warshow (1917–1955)

    If someone does something we disapprove of, we regard him as bad if we believe we can deter him from persisting in his conduct, but we regard him as mad if we believe we cannot. In either case, the crucial issue is our control of the other: the more we lose control over him, and the more he assumes control over himself, the more, in case of conflict, we are likely to consider him mad rather than just bad.
    Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)