Phetchabun (เพชรบูรณ์)
Thai.
‘Full Diamond’. Province (map) and its capital city of the same name in North Thailand, 346 kms north of
Bangkok. The
name
Phet or
Petcha, which means ‘Diamond’, refers to the natural resources of the land,
as well as to the fact that at some point in time, in the
amphur
Lom Sak, quartz was quarried, whereas the second word bun (บูรณ์), comes
from the word burana (บูรณ) or purana (ปูรณ), which itself derives from the
Sanskrit word puurna (पूर्ण)
and means ‘full’. The province lies in the broad fertile river valley of the
Pa Sak River,
flanked both in the East and West by the Phetchabun Mountain Range. The province
of Phetchabun was established through administrative reforms, that took place
during the beginning of the 20th century, and in which several districts and
monthon
were merged, whilst others were dissolved. The region is known for the communist
rebels of the PLAT (People's Liberation Army of Thailand), who hid in the
region's mountains in the seventies and eighties, and for the production of
tamarind
and tobacco. The province has eleven
amphur.
See also
Phetchabun data file
and
Purana.
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