Palace Mrigadayavan Photo: The Palace Mrigadayavan

Former Royal summer residence in the Palace of Mrigadayavan at the present time is a tourist attraction. His second name is Phra Ratchaniwet Marukkhathaiyawan. It was founded by decree of king Vajiravudh, or Rama VI, as a place to rest from public Affairs. After his death in 1925, the Palace was abandoned and was rebuilt by the present decree of his Majesty king Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand in 1965.

King Rama VI himself had designed the main room of the Palace, consisting of 16 teak columns and multiple corridors. The construction lasted from 1923 to 1924 under the supervision of the Italian architect Ercole Manfredi. Mrigadayavan largely copied the Western style in architecture: high ceilings, moldings and more 1080 concrete columns. This is pretty typical of the Royal buildings of those times, since the reign of Rama V, royals of Thailand brought from abroad by the best masters of his craft.

In General, the Palace is a 16 carved wooden pavilions, divided into three groups located at the beach on Bang KRA.
The first group called Samson Sevanatha is an area for meetings and negotiations, as well as office space. The second group of Bisnagar is the personal residence of the king. There is a bedroom, bathroom, dressing room and office, where the night's king was writing poetry. The third group of areas of Samodelkin – inner area of the Palace, where it was forbidden to appear to all men, except the king. Here were the apartments of the Queen of Interacti Sachi.

Mrigadayavan known as the Palace of Love and Hope, because it is here that the Queen lived Interacti Sachi being pregnant, and king Vajiravudh cared about your spouse and invested great hopes in the birth of a son, an heir. Unfortunately, the Queen had a miscarriage. Later she bore her husband a daughter, the Princess Bejaratana, but on the same day he died.

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