Bangkapi (บางกะปิ)
Thai. Name of a
khet or
district in eastern
Bangkok.
The
name is a compound of the words
bang
and
kapi. Whereas bang is the name
used for any riverside settlement that often occurs in names of
villages and districts, and in this case refers to its location
along
Khlong Saen Saeb
(fig.),
a canal that connects the capital
with the
Bang Pakong
River (fig.)
in
Chachengsao,
the name kapi is up for dispute.
According to some
the name kapi derives from the local production of
kapi (กะปิ), a salty
paste made from pulverized marine shrimps
that are fermented in salt and used as an ingredient to flavour
food, and the main ingredient in a dish known as
khao kluk kapi
(fig.).
They believe the area was previously known for this.
However, some inhabitants of this district with a large
Muslim
community claim the name is an abbreviation of
kapioh (กะปิเยาะห์),
the religious brimless hat worn by Muslims
(fig.). And yet
another source believes the name kapi (กะปิ), with the short
vowel a, is a corruption of the word
kapi (กปิ), which has the
unwritten vowel a and is also spelled
kabi (กบิ) and
kabih (กบี่),
and means ‘monkey’, saying the area in the past was home to lots of
monkeys living in the wild. Some of the places of interest in
Bangkapi include The Mall Bangkapi, Bangkapi Fresh Market,
Saen Saeb
Walkway-Biking Path (fig.),
Plaeng Nah Sathit
(fig.),
Bangkok
Airport Link
(fig.),
Suan Son
Erawan
Statue (fig.),
Wat Sri Boon Reuang
(fig.),
an
Airplane Graveyard (fig.),
the
Prasat Museum (fig.),
Ramkhamhaeng
University (fig.),
Rajamangala National Stadium (fig.),
the Krihtha Krung Thep Sports Club or
Samohson Krung Thep Krihtah (fig.),
Sahn Chao Mae Pra Sop (fig.),
Sahn Chao Pho Peung Thao Kong
(fig.),
Wat Theplihla (fig.),
and the Toy
Museum, which sadly closed permanently when the Covid pandemic hit
Thailand.
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