Somanass Waddhanawathy

Queen Somanass Waddhanawathy[1][2][3] (Thai: โสมนัสวัฒนาวดี; Thai pronunciation: [sǒː.má(ʔ).nát.wát.tʰà(ʔ).nāː.wá(ʔ).diː]; RTGS: Somanat Watthanawadi; 1834–1852) was the first consort of Mongkut, the King of Siam, and the queen consort though for only nine months.

Somanass Waddhanawathy
Queen consort of Siam
Tenure2 April 1851 – 10 October 1852
Coronation15 May 1851
Born(1834-12-21)21 December 1834
Bangkok, Siam
Died10 October 1852(1852-10-10) (aged 17)
Bangkok, Siam
SpouseMongkut (Rama IV)
IssuePrince Somanass
HouseChakri Dynasty
FatherPrince Lakkhananukhun
MotherNgiu Suvarnadat

Princess Somanass was a daughter of Prince Lakkhananukhun (son of Nangklao) and Ngiu Suvarnadat. Since her father was Phra Ong Chao (Lakkhananukhun was Phra Ong Chao or Second rank Prince because he was a son of The King and royal concubine), Somanass was destined to be Mom Chao (third rank princess). However, King Nangklao (Rama III) who's her grandfather specially granted her the title of Phra Ong Chao (second rank princess)

In 1851, upon his coronation, Mongkut married Princess Somanass, making her the queen. In the same year she gave birth to a prince: Somdet Chaofa Somanass, but the prince died shortly after birth. Queen Somanass herself died two months after.

Ancestors

gollark: That's why salts are recommended (they're a bit of extra data you store along with the password and feed to the hash function when hashing it in the first place and comparing passwords with the hash).
gollark: The main attack on this is that you can, sometimes even using dedicated ASICs/FPGAs, run hashes *very fast* on a lot of possibilities and figure out what the original password was.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: The point is that for one hashed input you always have the same output, so you can compare values without storing what they originally were.
gollark: Encryption means you can encrypt something with a key then decrypt it with that key (symmetric encryption, anyway), hashing means that you irreversibly convert it to a different value.

References

  1. Wichitwathakan, Wibun. Satri sayam nai adit [Feminine Siamese in the past]. Bangkok : Sangsanbooks, 1999, p. 172 (in Thai)
  2. Komatra Chuengsatiansup. Krom Luang Wongsa and the House of Snidvongs: Knowledge Transition and the Transformation of Medicine in Early Modern Siam. retrieved 25 August 2013
  3. Cristo Raul. Mongkut Archived 2014-07-20 at the Wayback Machine. retrieved 25 August 2013
  4. Phlainoi, Sombat. Phraborommarachini lae chaochommanda haeng ratchasamnaksayam [Queen and royal concubines of Siamese court]. Bangkok : Thanbooks, 2011, p. 76 (in Thai)
  5. Phlainoi, Sombat. Phraborommarachini lae chaochommanda haeng ratchasamnaksayam [Queen and royal concubines of Siamese court]. Bangkok : Thanbooks, 2011, p. 274 (in Thai)
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