The history of Thailand begins with the migration
of the Thais from their ancestral home in southern China into
mainland southeast Asia around the 10th century AD. Prior to this
Mon, Khmer and Malay kingdoms ruled the region. The Thais established
their own states starting with Sukhothai and then Ayutthaya kingdom.
These states fought each other and were under constant threat
from the Khmers, Burma and Vietnam. Much later, the European colonial
powers threatened in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but Thailand
survived as the only Southeast Asian state to avoid colonial rule.
After the end of the absolute monarchy in 1932, Thailand endured
sixty years of almost permanent military rule before the establishment
of a democratic system which was temporally suspended by the cuurent
ruling Military Junta in September 2006.