Talaat Nahm Khwan-Riam (ตลาดน้ำขวัญ-เรียม)
Thai. ‘Khwan-Riam Water Market’.
Name of a
floating market
located on
Khlong Saen Saeb,
a major canal in
Bangkok, i.e. a section past the last jetty of the
Bangkapi
express boat service near Wat
Sri Boon Reuang. The market area is around
Wat Bang Peng Tai
(fig.) and
both sides of the canal are connected with a bridge in the form of
the skeleton of an ancient
rice barge
and referred to in Thai as
saphaan
kradook ngu,
i.e.
‘snake
skeleton bridge’ or ‘snake bones bridge’.
Visitors can take a boat trip along the waterway or have a meal at
one of the many barges turned restaurant or coffee shop, although
there are also ample shops and stalls on land. Around the market
there is also a range of Thai cultural effigies on display, as well
as some live animals, such as rabbits, miniature pigs and ponies,
and different species of ducks, geese and swans.
The name of the
market is taken from the story Phlaek Kao (แผลเก่า) written in 1936
and which is set in the area of today's floating market, and
represented in an effigy of the protagonists from the story seated
together on a
water buffalo, i.e. Khwan, the son of the
Bangkapi
Village Chief; and Riam, the daughter of Ta Rueang (ตาเรือง), who
lived along the Saen Saeb Canal. The effigy stands along the
canal on the southeastern side of the
rice barge
skeleton
bridge. In the story Khwan and Riam are lovers despite the fact that
their families were each others adversaries, and when Khwan was
eventually shot and killed by a jealous contender called Somchai (สมชาย),
Riam took Khwan's knife and slit her own throat in order to follow
her lover into the hereafter.
Also transcribed
Talaat Nahm
Kwan-Riam.
See also
Ban Suan Phuttasin
and
talaat nahm,
and
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