Nokasad
Nokasad (full name Somdetch Brhat Chao Jaya Sri Samudra Buddhangkura; alternate names Soi Si Samout Phouthong Koun; King of Champa Nagapurisiri or Nakhon Champa Nakhaburisi) (reckoned posthumously to have been born in 1693 as Prince (Chao) Nakasatra Sungaya or Nokasat Song) was a grandson of the last king of Lan Xang, King Sourigna Vongsa; and a son-in-law of the Cambodian King Chey Chettha IV.[citation needed] He was made king of the southern Laotian Kingdom of Champasak from 1713 to 1737. In 1718, the first Lao muang in the Chi valley — and indeed anywhere in the interior of the Khorat Plateau — was founded at Suwannaphum District in present-day Roi Et Province by an official in the service of this king.[1] In 1725, he turned his executive powers over to his eldest son; he died at Khorat in 1738.[2]
References
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- Fa Ngum
- Samsenethai
- Lan Kham Deng
- Phommathat
- Yukhon
- Khon Kham
- Kham Tam Sa
- Lusai
- Khai Bua Ban
- Kham Keut
- Nang Keo Phimpha (female)
- Chakkaphat Phaen Phaeo
- Souvanna Banlang
- La Sen Thai
- Somphou
- Visoun
- Photisarath
- Setthathirath
- Sen Soulintha
- Voravongsa I
- Sen Soulintha
- Nakhon Noi
- Nokeo Koumane
- Voravongsa II
- Oupagnouvarath
- Photisarath II
- Mon Keo
- Tone Kham
- Vichai
- Sourigna Vongsa
- Tian Thala
- Ong Lo
- Nan Tharat
- Setthathirath II
Kingdom of Vientiane | |
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Kingdom of Luang Phrabang | |
Kingdom of Champasak | |
Principality of Xiangkhouang Muang Phuan |
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