Buriram (บุรีรัมย์)
Thai-Khmer.
‘Cheerful city’. Capital of a modern province (map)
in
Isaan with approximately 30,000
inhabitants, bordering Cambodia and situated at 410 km northeast of
Bangkok. The province is
located at the southern end of the Plateau of
Korat
and has several extinct volcanoes. The region was previously part of the
Khmer
Empire and its rulers recognized the hegemony of Khmer Empire. In
the early nineteenth century the town was known as Meuang Pae which
translates as the ‘Defeated City’. The province of Buriram in its
present form came about during the reign of Rama V, by unifying
several ancient
khom
meuang
in 1898 AD. Among its
places of interest are the
Buriram Bird Park, the King
Rama I
Monument (map
-
fig.),
Rao Soo Monument (map
-
fig.),
and many temple ruins, including those of the ancient
Khmer sanctuary
Prasat Phanom Rung. In the
Southwest Buriram neighbours the
Cambodian
province of Oddar Meancheay
and due to the age-long
influences from that country, 42% of the population still speaks a
dialect known as Northern Khmer, besides the official Thai language.
The province has 21
amphur
and two
king amphur, which are
devided in 189
tambon
and another 2,212
mu ban.
See also
Buriram data file.
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