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			      Samut Sakon (สมุทรสาคร)  
			Thai-Sanskrit. Literally ‘Ocean Lake’, but 
			usually translated as ‘Ocean City’. A province (map) 
			and its capital city of the same name on the  
			
			 
			
			Gulf of Thailand, 
			bordering 
			
			Bangkok, 
			about 36 kilometers to the West of the centre. Samut Sakon was 
			formerly called  
			
			
			Tha Chin, also transcribed Tachin 
			and Thah Jihn, i.e. ‘China Seaport’, because in the past, it had 
			been a trading port dealing with a vast number of Chinese junks. In 
			1548, a town named Sakon Buri (สาครบุรี) was established at the mouth of the 
			local river, equally called Tha Jihn river, as a centre for 
			recruiting troops from various seaside towns. In 1704, the name of 
			the town was changed into 
			
			Mahachai, 
			meaning ‘Great Triumph’, when the Mahachai Canal was dug to link 
			 
			 
			Samut Songkhram 
			with Bangkok. Finally, the town was renamed Samut Sakon by King
			
			
			Rama IV, 
			though it is still popularly called Mahachai by the local populace. 
			The province has a total area of 872.3 square kilometers and is 
			administratively divided into 3  
			 
			amphur. 
			Besides being the biggest producer of brine salt, the city has a 
			major fishing port, that sells some of its produce on the local 
			Talaat Mahachai market (map 
			- 
			fig.),
			one of the largest 
			fresh seafood markets in Thailand, where an outbreak of Corona 
			amongst migrant workers in December 2020 triggered a second wave of 
			the
						Covid-19
						
			pandemic in Thailand. 
			Also transcribed Samut Sakhon. See also
			
			
			Samut Sakon data file.
			
			
			
			
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