Robert Hunter in Siam
When Siam emerged from isolation, writes W.S. Bristowe, a fiery Scottish sea captain settled for twenty years in Bangkok.
When Siam emerged from isolation, writes W.S. Bristowe, a fiery Scottish sea captain settled for twenty years in Bangkok.
Elka Schrijver tells the story of the artists who followed the Dutch East India Company to modern day Indonesia.
The easternmost and largest of the Lesser Sunda Islands has been the scene of Portuguese influence in Asia for more than 450 years.
For nearly a hundred years, travellers and archaeologists have been investigating the mysterious ruins of Angkor. Today, writes Michael Sullivan, much of the mystery has been dispelled; but these relics of a vanished civilization still preserve their beauty and dignity.
Geoffrey Evans describes how British and Indian forces recovered Burma from the Japanese during the Second World War.
British Malaya since 1786 has become the home of many different races, whose harmonious union, writes C. Northcote Parkinson, would offer an example from which the rest of the world might profit.
The country was renamed on 23 June 1939.
A foothold in Siam offered new trading opportunities for France in the late 17th century, as well as a chance to spread the Catholic faith.
The suffering of prisoners of war at the hands of the Japanese during the Second World War has coloured the British view of the conflict in the Far East. Clare Makepeace highlights a little known aspect of the captives’ story: their quest for compensation.
George Woodcock gives an account of an Imperial enterprise in south-east Asia.