Pattalung (พัทลุง)
Thai. ‘City of Elephants’. Capital of a province as well as the name of the province itself, on the east coast of the southern Thai peninsula 840 kms from
Bangkok. The province (map) is situated to the West of an enormous inland bay on the Gulf of Thailand, but the spit of land that forms the bay belongs to the province of
Songkhla. In the 14th century, during the reign of the
Ayutthayan
King
Ramathibodi I, Pattalung became one of 12 royal cities. At the end of the 18th century King
Rama I submitted the city to the Ministry of Defense, which was responsible for all the southern provinces. During the administrative reform by King
Rama V, Pattalung became part of the
monthon
Nakhon Sri Thammarat. In the past, the name Pattalung wasn't always spelled nor known, as it is today. Prior to 1883, it is found in official Thai documents written with several different spellings, such as Phatthalung (พัททะลุง), Phat-ta-lung (พัตะลุง) Phadthalung (พัดทลุง) Phath Talung (พัทธลุง) and Pat-a-lung (พัตลุง). The name is said to derive from the word talung (ตะลุง), which means ‘to tether an elephant’. In English documents dated to the reign of King
Rama III, the city is mentioned by the names Bondelun and Merdelong, the latter referring to the Malay name Mardelong, which was used for the city when the region was under
Muslim
influence. In earlier documents of a French engineer, dated to the reign of King
Narai, the city is mentioned as Bourdelun. Today the province has ten
amphur and one
king amphur. Pattalung is famed for its performances of
Manohra (fig.) and
nang thalung. Sometimes transcribed Phatthalung. See also
Pattalung data file.
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