Phaya Tani

[6] Hikayat Patani, however, gives the name of these three cannons as Seri Negeri, Tuk (Datuk) Buk, and Nang (Lady) Liu-Liu.

After the fall of Ayutthaya to the Burmese in 1767, the Sultanate of Pattani renounced its tributary status to Siam and declared its independence.

Some sources said that Phaya Negara came loose as it was being loaded aboard a ship and plunged into the sea, where it remains.

[1] King Rama I ordered a similar-sized cannon named the Narai Sanghan (Thai: นารายณ์สังหาร) to be cast to serve as a companion to the Phaya Patani, now renamed the Phraya Tani.

A replica of Phaya Tani was created and placed in front of Krue Se Mosque in Pattani in 2013, but it was damaged by separatists who saw it as 'faked' and wanted the return of the original cannon.

The Phaya Tani, in front of the Ministry of Defence (2023)
A painting of Siamese army take the cannon Phaya Tani to Bangkok in 1786, painted in 1887.