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Samui was probably
first settled about 1500 years ago by fisherman using the island
as a base to fish its rich waters. The first officially recorded
mention of Samui was approximately 1500 AD, when maps drawn by scribes
of China's Ming Dynasty show and label the islands. The Unearthing
of various ceramics and porcelains is further evidence that the
Chinese settled here. Many migrants from the island of Hainan -
now part of the Peoples Republic of China have settled in the northern
villages and their influence can still be seen in Nathon and Maenam.
Muslim fishermen settled in the South and East and the small village
of Hua Thanon is still a strong Muslim enclave. During the 17th
and 18th centuries most of what is now Thailand was feudal and the
islands would have come under the protection of the rulers of Nakhon
Si Thammarat, which at that time was the main power in southern
Thailand.
The governing families
of Nakhon Si Thammarat eventually came under direct rule of the
Siamese from Bangkok in the late 18th century during the reign of
Rama I. By the end of the 19th century lasting communities had been
established and word of the beautiful islands in the Gulf of Siam
was already seeping through to the greater Thai world, and King
Chulalongkorn (Rama V) was a regular visitor to Koh Phangan, which
was said to be his favorite retreat. Even though Samui and the other
islands would have been part of greater states and kingdoms they
have always been essentially selfgoverning, separated from the nearest
town on the mainland by a 35 kilometer stretch of water. With relatively
small populations, the islands were mostly overlooked or ignored.
There was also the fact that the inhabitants had gained a reputation
as tough and sometimes violent people best left to their own devices,
so authorities on the mainland stayed clear for most of the time.
A notable exception was the Japanese Army who occupied the island
and used it for a staging post in their invasion of British Malaya
After the war Thailand became
more economically sophisticated and natural produce such as timber,
rubber and fruit became tradable commodities. Coconuts began to
assume monetary value and these fertile islands were important plantations.
Also rich with other crops as well as important bases, the islanders
quietly prospered and multiplied, living simply. Then the backpackers
arrived, slowly at first. Gradually tourism began to dominate the
island economically, socially and completely. It is said that the
first tourists came on coconut boats from Bangkok it is more likely
they came on the slow boat from Suratthani, but either way the fact
is tourism has had a far bigger impact on Samui than any other outside
force in its history. When those first curious farang (foreigners)
arrived they found backwater islands with a token administration
and police presence, where local disputes were settled by the puu
yai ban (village chief) or as often as not by shootouts. In just
twenty years the population of Samui has almost doubled (it is now
estimated at 35,000 people, not including foreing residents and
tourists) and the islands are now a tambon-just one step down from
having provincial status-which makes them practically self-governing
although still part of the province of Suratthani and answerable
to its governor.
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