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Lang Sathanee Rotfai Buriram Village. Lang Sathanee Rotfai Buriram Village, or Chumchon Lang Sathanee is one of the 19 villages that constitute Buriram, Thailand. It is located in the north of the Town of Buriram. Buriram Railway Station is located in the village. The village is on northeastern railway line. Main station is Buriram Railway Station.
Khiriwong (Thai: คีรีวง, also spelled Khiri Wong) is a village in Nakhon Si Thammarat Province of Thailand. It is known as the best ozone area in Thailand. It is located in the Kamlon, Lan Saka district in Nakhon Si Thammarat, southern Thailand.
Thailand divides its settlements into three categories by size: city municipalities (thesaban nakhon), towns (thesaban mueang) and townships (or subdistrict municipality) (thesaban tambon). [1] There are 33 city municipalities as of November 2024. The national capital Bangkok and the special governed city Pattaya fall outside these divisions ...
Huay Pu Keng (Thai: ห้วยปูแกง) is a village located in the Mae Hong Son province, in the northwest of Thailand.The village is inhabited by the Tai Yai, a Thai ethnic community and four subgroups of the Karenni people, namely the Kayan, Kayaw, Red Karen and Pakayor.
The hilltop village of Santikhiri on the mountain of Doi Mae Salong, January 2019. The origins of the Mae Salong community go back to the end of the Chinese Civil War.In October 1949, after Mao Zedong's communist party victory in China, the defeated Kuomintang (KMT) armies led by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek retreated to Taiwan, except for the 3rd and 5th Regiments of the 93rd Division, which ...
Loei was founded by a Thai tribe from the Kingdom of Yonok Chiang Saen.Khun Pha Muang founded the village of Dan-kwa, and Bang Klang Hao founded Dan Sai. Drought and disease later led to the villagers move to the site of present-day Loei.
Chaiyaphum (Thai: ชัยภูมิ, pronounced [tɕʰāj.jā.pʰūːm]; Northeastern Thai: ไซยภูมิ, pronounced [sa᷇j.jā.pʰu᷇ːm]) is one of Thailand's seventy-six provinces (changwat), located in central northeastern Thailand, also called Isan.
Thailand ratified the convention on 17 September 1987. [3] As of 2024, Thailand has eight sites on the list. The first three sites were listed in 1991: Historic Town of Sukhothai and Associated Historic Towns, Historic City of Ayutthaya, and Thungyai–Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuaries.