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Lamphun province

{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right"\n! colspan="2" align=center bgcolor="#DEFFAD"|Statistics\n|-\n||Capital:||Lamphun\n|-\n||Area:||valign=top|4,505.9 km²
Ranked 49th\n|-\n||Inhabitants:||valign=top|413,299 (2000)
Ranked 60th\n|-\n||Pop. density:||valign=top|92 inh./km²
Ranked 48th\n|-\n||ISO 3166-2:||TH-51\n|-\n!colspan="2" align=center bgcolor="#DEFFAD"|Map\n|-\n|colspan="2" align=center|\n|}\nLamphun (Thai ลำพูน) is one of the northern provinces (changwat) of Thailand. Neighboring provinces are (from north clockwise) Chiang Mai, Lampang and Tak.

Table of contents
1 Geography
2 History
3 Symbols
4 Administrative divisions

Geography

\nLamphun is located in the river valley of the Ping river, surrounded by mountain chains.

History

\nUnder its old name of
Haripunchai, Lampang was the northernmost city of the Mon kingdom of the Dvaravati period, and also the last to fall to the Thai. In the late 12th century it came under siege from the Khmer, but did not fall. However in 1281 King Mengrai of Lannathai finally seized the city, and made it part of his kingdom.

Symbols

\n{|\n| valign=top|\n| valign=top|The provincial seal show the temple Wat Phra That Haripunchai, which was already the main temple of the city Lamphun during the Mon times. The gold-covered chedi is said to contain a relic of
Buddha. The provincial flower is the Flame of the Forest (Butea monosperma), and the provincial tree is the Rain Tree (Samanea saman).\n|}\n

Administrative divisions

\nThe province is subdivided in 7 districts (
Amphoe) and one minor district (King Amphoe). These are further subdivided into 51 communes (tambon) and 520 villages (mubaan).\n{|\n!|Amphoe\n!|\n!|King Amphoe\n|--- valign=top\n||\n#Mueang Lamphun\n#Mae Tha\n#Ban Hong\n#Li\n||\n
    \n
  1. Thung Hua Chang\n
  2. Pa Sang\n
  3. Ban Thi\n
\n||\n#Wiang Nong Long\n|}\n

External links

\n*
Province page from the Tourist Authority of Thailand\n*Golden Jubilee Network province guide \n\n

"Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech." - Martin Fraquhar Tupper