Jump to content

Southern Thailand

Coordinates: 8°03′33″N 99°58′32″E / 8.0592°N 99.9756°E / 8.0592; 99.9756
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Look2See1 (talk | contribs) at 04:15, 17 October 2016 (See also). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Southern Thailand
Southern Thailand

Southern Thailand is a distinct region of Thailand, connected with the central region by the narrow Kra Isthmus.

Geography

Huts, Khao Sok National Park, Surat Thani

Southern Thailand is on the Malay Peninsula, with an area of around 70,713 km2 (27,302 sq mi), bounded to the north by Kra Isthmus, the narrowest part of the peninsula. The western part has steeper coasts, while on the east side river plains dominate. The largest river of the south is the Tapi in Surat Thani, which together with the Phum Duang in Surat Thani drains more than 8,000 km2 (3,100 sq mi), more than 10% of the total area of Southern Thailand. Smaller rivers include the Pattani, Saiburi, Krabi, and the Trang. The biggest lake of the south is Songkhla Lake (1,040 km2 (400 sq mi) altogether). The largest artificial lake is the Chiao Lan (Ratchaprapha Dam), occupying 165 km2 (64 sq mi) of Khao Sok National Park in Surat Thani.

Ko Lao Liang Phi with the steep limestone hills present at most of the western coast

Running through the middle of the peninsula are several mountain chains, with the highest elevation at Khao Luang, 1,835 m (6,020 ft), in Nakhon Si Thammarat Province. Ranging from the Kra Isthmus to Phuket island is the Phuket chain, which connects to the Tanao Si Mountain Range further north. Almost parallel to the Phuket chain, but 100 km (60 mi) to the east is the Nakhon Si Thammarat or Banthat chain, which begins with Samui island, Ko Pha Ngan, and Ko Tao in Surat Thani and ends at the Malaysian border at the Ko Ta Ru Tao archipelago. The border with Malaysia is formed by the Sankalakhiri range, sometimes subdivided into the Pattani, Taluban, and Songkhla chain. At the Malaysian border the Titiwangsa chain rises up.

The limestone of the west coast has been eroded into many steep singular hills. Those parts submerged by the rising sea after the last ice age now form many islands, like the well-known Phi Phi Islands. Also quite famous is the so-called James Bond Island in Phang Nga Bay, featured in the movie The Man with the Golden Gun.

The population of the growing region is projected to be 9,156,000 in 2015, up from 8,871,003 in 2010 (census count and adjusted), despite these figures are adjusted for citizens who have left for Bangkok or who have moved to the region from elsewhere, as well as registered permanent residents (residency was problematic in the prior 2000 census), the figure is still misleading. There are still a huge number of migrant or informal workers, temporary workers, and even stateless people, and a large contingent expatriate population which is not included.[1]

History

Wat Phra Baromathat, Nakhon Si Thammarat, an old and important temple
Pagoda in Srivijaya-style, Chaiya, Surat Thani
Malay Muslim provinces in Southern Thailand and northern Malaysia.

The Malay peninsula has been settled since prehistoric times. Archeological remains were found in several caves, some used for dwellings, others as burial sites. The oldest remains were found in Lang Rongrien Cave, dating 38,000 to 27,000 years before present, and in the contemporary Moh Khiew cave.

In the first millennium Chinese chronicles mention several coastal cities or city-states. No exact geographical locations were recorded, so the identification of these cities with later settlements is difficult. The most important of these states were Langkasuka, usually considered a precursor of the Pattani Kingdom; Tambralinga, probably the precursor of the Nakhon Si Thammarat Kingdom, or P'an-p'an in Phunphin district, Surat Thani, probably located at the Bandon Bay Tapi River. The cities were highly influenced by Indian culture, and have adopted Brahman or Buddhist religion. When Srivijaya in Chaiya extended its sphere of influence, those cities became tributary states of Srivijaya. The city Chaiya in Surat Thani Province contains several ruins from Srivijaya times, and was probably a regional capital of the kingdom. Some Thai historians even claim that it was the capital of the kingdom itself for some time, but this is disputed.

After Srivijaya lost its influence, Nakhon Si Thammarat became the dominant kingdom of the area. During the rule of King Ramkhamhaeng the Great of Sukhothai, Thai influence first reached Nakhon Si Thammarat. According to the Ramkhamhaeng inscription, Nakhon Si THammarat was a tributary state of Sukhothai. During most of later periods, Nakhon became a tributary of Ayutthaya.

The deep south belonged to the Malay sultanates of Pattani and Kedah, while the northernmost part of the peninsula was under the control of Bangkok.

During the thesaphiban reforms at the end of the 19th century, both Nakhon Si Thammarat and Pattani were incorporated into the central state. The area was subdivided into 5 monthon, which were installed to control the city states (mueang). Minor mueang were merged into larger ones, thus forming the present 14 provinces. With the Anglo-Siamese Treaty of 1909 the boundary to Malaysia was fixed. Kedah came under British control, while Pattani stayed with Siam.

Languages

The main language is Southern Thai (Template:Lang-th [pʰaːsǎː tʰajtâːj]), also known as Pak Thai or Dambro (Template:Lang-th [pʰaːsǎː taːmpʰroː]), which is a southwestern Tai language spoken in the 14 changwat of Southern Thailand as well as by small communities in the northernmost Malaysian states. It is spoken by roughly five million people, and as a second language by the 1.5 million speakers of Patani Malay and other ethnic groups such as the local Thai Chinese communities, Negritos, and other tribal groups. Most speakers are also fluent or understand the central Thai dialect.

Administration

Provinces of the south
Provinces of the south

Usually the south is identified as 14 provinces (1 Nov 2008)

No. Name Thai Area Pop. Density GPP (THB) (2007) GPP/capita (2007)[citation needed]
1 Chumphon ชุมพร 6,009.00 485,713 80.83 45,580 92,192
2 Krabi กระบี่ 4,708.00 417,735 88.73 41,383 108,629
3 Nakhon Si Thammarat นครศรีธรรมราช 9,942.50 1,512,249 152.10 123,614 73,960
4 Narathiwat นราธิวาส 4,475.00 718,724 160.61 46,468 62,625
5 Pattani ปัตตานี 1,940.40 641,187 330.44 39,534 59,618
6 Phang Nga พังงา 4,170.00 250,079 59.97 29,828 114,988
7 Phatthalung พัทลุง 3,423.50 504,470 147.36 33,259 60,677
8 Phuket ภูเก็ต 543.00 325,586 599.61 62,055 214,621
9 Ranong ระนอง 3,298.00 191,744 58.14 17,309 94,640
10 Satun สตูล 2,479.00 287,866 116.12 27,217 97,614
11 Songkhla สงขลา 7,393.90 1,329,635 179.69 168,611 119,620
12 Surat Thani สุราษฎร์ธานี 12,891.50 981,595 76.14 122,398 125,651
13 Trang ตรัง 4,917.50 614,222 124.91 62,912 94,863
14 Yala ยะลา 4,521.10 474,559 104.97 39,198 84,614

Demography

Southern Thailand has around 8.734 million inhabitants and its population density is around 126 per square kilometre (330/sq mi).

Ten major cities of southern Thailand

No. Name Pop. Metropolitan
1 Hat Yai 157,359 801,747 in Songkla Province.
2 Surat Thani 126,280 358,000 in Surat Thani Metropolitan Area
3 Nakhon Si Thammarat 108,139 280,000 in Amphoe Mueang Nakhon Si Thammarat.
4 Phuket 75,971 325,600 on Phuket Metropolitan Area.
5 Songkhla 73,835 801,747 in Greater Hat Yai-Songkhla Metropolitan Area.
6 Yala 63,640
7 Trang 61,067
8 Ko Samui 51,044 Ko Samui, Surat Thani Province
9 Kho Hong 43,989 801,747 in Greater Hat Yai-Songkhla Metropolitan Area.
10 Pattani 43,255

Economy

Main article GPP of Southern Thailand

In 2007, Southern Thailand had a GRP (Gross Regional Product) of about ฿859.325 million (US$25 million). The regional economic hubs of the region are Hat Yai City for "lower southern", Surat Thani City for "upper southern", and Phuket City for "west coast southern".

Transportation

Southern Thailand is connected with Bangkok by railway as well as highway. Several regional airports are located at the larger towns. The transportation hub of all south Thailand is Hat Yai.

Road

Phetkasem Road is the longest road in Thailand, running from Bangkok along the Kra Isthmus and then along the west coast of the peninsula. From Trang it crosses over to the east coast to Hat Yai, and ends at the Malaysian border.

Two Asian highways run through Southern Thailand: Asian Highway 2 runs mostly parallel to the railroad all the way from Bangkok. It crosses to Malaysia at Sadao, and continues on the west side of the peninsula. Asian Highway 18 begins in Hat Yai and runs south along the east coast, crossing to Malaysia at Sungai Kolok.

Samui Airport departure gate
Samui Airport runway
Hat Yai Airport Bridge Contact Gate

Rail

The southern railway connects Bangkok to Hat Yai, and continues from there to Sungai Kolok. There are branches from Ban Thung Phoe Junction to Kirirat Nikhom. Two smaller branches of the railway run from Thung Song to Trang and Nakhon Si Thammarat, and from Hat Yai Junction to Malaysia and Singapore.

Air

Southern Thailand has 5 international airports and 6 domestic airports.

References

  • Suthiwong Pongpaiboon. Southern Thai Cultural Structures and Dynamics Vis-à-vis Development. ISBN 974-9553-75-6.

See also


8°03′33″N 99°58′32″E / 8.0592°N 99.9756°E / 8.0592; 99.9756