Kanchanaburi Province
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| Statistics | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Capital: | Kanchanaburi | ||
| Area: | 19,483.2 km² Ranked 3rd | ||
| Inhabitants: | 734,394 (2000) Ranked 31st | ||
| Pop. density: | 38 inh./km² Ranked 74th | ||
| ISO 3166-2: | TH-71
Template:Row}|label=Governor:|contents={{{governor|}}} | Map | |
| Image:Thailand Kanchanaburi.png | |||
Kanchanaburi (Thai กาญจนบุรี) is the largest of the central provinces (changwat) of Thailand. Neighboring provinces are (from north clockwise) Tak, Uthai Thani, Suphan Buri, Nakhon Pathom and Ratchaburi. In the west it borders Myanmar.
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Geography
The province is located in the west of Thailand. The district covers the source valleys of the rivers Kwae Yai and Kwae Noi ("River Kwai"), which merge at the city Kanchanaburi and form the Mae Klong River there.
Several National Parks are located in the forests of the mountain area of the province - the Erawan, Sai Yok, Khao Laem, Khaoen Sri Nakarin and Chaloem Rattanakosin National Parks are located in the province. The Thungyai Naresuan Wildlife Sanctuary in this province is also listed in the UNESCO world heritage list.
Sights
Image:Kanchanaburi cemetery.jpgThe province is most famous for the Bridge on the River Kwai, which was built next to the town of Kanchanaburi crossing the Mae Klong river. The Death Railway ran all the way from the Kwae river valley up to the Three Pagodas pass. Today only the lowest part of the railway to Nam Tok is still in use. In Kanchanaburi city, there is a war museum and a large cemetery of prisoners of war who died during construction of the Death Railway.
In the Sai Yok district, there is a Buddhist Tiger Temple where tame tigers roam freely once a day. Also in Sai Yok is the Mueang Sing historical park, ruins of a Khmer town and temple.
Symbols
| Image:Seal kanchanaburi.png | The seal of the province shows the three pagodas, located on the Bantadthong Mountain. They gave the name to the mountain pass to Myanmar, called "Three Pagodas Pass". The provincial flower is the Night-flowering Jasmine (Nyctanthes arbortristis), and the provincial tree is the Moulmein lancewood (Homalium tomentosum). |
Administrative divisions
Image:Amphoe Kanchanaburi.png Kanchanaburi is subdivided into 11 districts (Amphoe) and 2 minor districts (King Amphoe). The districts are further subdivided into 98 communes (tambon) and 887 villages.
| Amphoe | King Amphoe | |
|---|---|---|
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External links
- Template:Wikitravelpar
- Province page from the Tourist Authority of Thailand
- Website of province (Thai only)
- kanchanaburi.com
- Kanchanaburi-info.com - Information about Kanchanaburi province incl. Sangkhlaburi
- The Kanchanaburi Guide
fr:Province de Kanchanaburi ja:カーンチャナブリー県 ms:Wilayah Kanchanaburi nl:Changwat Kanchanaburi no:Kanchanaburi (provins) th:จังหวัดกาญจนบุรี