Satun (สตูล)
Thai.
Name of a province (map)
and its capital city on the southern west coast of the Thai
peninsula, 973 kms south of
Bangkok
and near the Malaysian border. It has a mainly
Muslim
population and
the majority speaks
Yawi, a Malay dialect. At the end of the 18th
century AD, Satun was a small
Malay state known as Setul, and was located in the heartland of
Kedah Sultanate, which the
Rattanakosin
Kingdom of
Siam,
perceived as their vassal. After a secession crisis following the
death of the 20th Sultan of Kedah in 1797, in which the crowning of
the newly elected Sultan, who was endorsed by Siam, was contested by
the crown prince, the Siamese, aiding to reconcile the two rivaling
parties, appointed the crown prince as the ruler of Setul, thus
signifying the birth of Kedah into two separate realms. In 1897,
Satun became part of the
Monthon
Saiburi (ไทรบุรี), which in 1909 was divided between Siam and
the
British
colonisers in
Malaysia,
as part of the 1909
Anglo-Siamese Treaty.
Whereas most of Kedah was ceded to Britain,
Satun was awarded to Siam due to its relatively large Thai
population. Satun was then incorporated into Monthon
Phuket,
until the monthon system was ended in
1933, and Satun became a province of
Thailand
in is own right.
Places of interest include
two national marine parks. The province has six
amphur
and one
king amphur.
Also transcribed Satul. See also
Satun data file.
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