Location | Ratchathewi District, Bangkok, Thailand |
---|---|
Nearest metro station | Victory Monument Station |
Coordinates | 13°45′53″N 100°32′19″E / 13.76472°N 100.53861°E |
North | Phahonyothin Road |
East | Ratchawithi Road |
South | Phaya Thai Road |
West | Ratchawithi Road |
Construction | |
Completion | 24 June 1942 |
Other | |
Designer | Pum Malakul |
Victory Monument (Thai: อนุสาวรีย์ชัยสมรภูมิ; RTGS: anusawari chai samoraphum) is an Obelisk monument in Bangkok, Thailand. The monument was erected in June 1941 to commemorate the Thai victory in the Franco-Thai War. The monument is in Ratchathewi District, northeast of central Bangkok, at the center of a traffic circle at the intersection of Phahonyothin Road, Phaya Thai Road, and Ratchawithi Road.
The monument is entirely fascist architecture in design. This is in contrast with another prominent monument of Bangkok, the Democracy Monument, which uses indigenous Thai forms and symbols. The central obelisk, although originally Egyptian, has been frequently used in Europe and the US for national and military memorials. Its shape suggests both a sword. Here it is executed in the shape of five bayonets clasped together. Five statues, representing the army, navy, air force, police, and militia, are depicted in Western "heroic" style, familiar in the 1940s in both fascist and communist states. They were created by the Italian sculptor Corrado Feroci, who worked under the Thai name Silpa Bhirasi. The sculptor did not like the combination of his work with the obelisk, and referred to the monument as "the victory of embarrassment".
In 1940–1941, Thailand fought a brief conflict against the French colonial authorities in French Indochina, which resulted in Thailand annexing some territories in western Cambodia and northern and southern Laos. These were among the territories which the Kingdom of Siam had ceded to France in 1893 and 1904, and nationalist Thais considered them to belong to Thailand.