Pinto, using borrowed funds, buys passage from…
January 1558 CE
Pinto, using borrowed funds, buys passage from Sunda to Siam, where, not long after his arrival, the King of Ayutthaya requests Portuguese residents to enlist to quell a revolt in the Northern boundaries.
The King is subsequently poisoned by the Queen, who also murders the young heir to the throne, and places her lover in the boy's place.
The new King is then murdered, and unrest ensues, provoking Bayinnaung to lay siege to Ayutthaya.
The Burmese king, intent on preventing the Ayuttahyans, or Siamese, from allying with the Shan states, has used the refusal of the Siamese king Mahachakrabarti to send him a sacred white elephant as a pretext for invasion.
The description of these events in Burmese and Thai history, whether they were actually witnessed firsthand by Pinto, represents the most detailed account of these events that can be found in all of recorded Western history.