|
Ancient records reveal that before establishment of the current dynasty
in the late 18th Century, the area called Phang-nga was a district
attrached to Takuapa, the leading town thereabouts. Then with the
beginning of the Rattanakosin Dynasty, during the reign of Rama I,
Phang-nga was given equal status with Takuapa and another nearby town,
Takuatung, and all three were removed from the government's Harbor
Department and put under the Ministry of Defense.
The best evidence
indicates that Phang-nga was officially established in 1809 during the
reign of Rama II, when one of the periodic wars with Burma was reging.
The king there, Padung Kasatri, appointed Ah Terng Woon to lead an
invasion force for attack on Thailand's southern towns. The ship-borne
army carried off the populations of Takuatung, and Thaland (in Phuket).
Thalang was razed to the ground. An army under the direction of a royal
prince was therefore sent from Bangkok to drive of the attackers.
While the war was raging some of the local people took refuge at a
place then called Kra Ph-nga *(Malay for river mount of Pu-nga)
protected on all sides by mountains. After the razing of Thalang, it
was the government's view that Thailand's hold on the area had weakened,
and that a new town should be established in its stead. Thus the
citizenry left in the Thalang area was instructed to move to Kra Pu-nga
and register themselves as being resident there. There is still a
villages in what is today Takuatung District called Thalang founded by
those immigrants from Phuket. The new city was put under the
administration of the government in Nakorn Sri Thammarat.
During the reign of Rama III, the central government thought to
strengthen the southwest coastal town that were prey to successive
Burmese attacks by appointing a governor for the province who reported
directly ot Bangkok. Praya Borirak Puton (Sang Na Nakorn) thereby
became first governor of Phang-nga in 1840. In the same year, Takuatung
was reduced in status and became merely a district of Phang-nga.
All during this period tin mining was booming, and as one of the most
tin-rich of Thailand's tin bearing locales, Phang-nga attracted
increasing attention from the central government because of its
importance as a foreign exchange earner. When the worldwide economic
depression of the 1930s struck.
Thailand, Phang-nga's status was further enhanced by incorporation of
Takuapa as a district (1931). One of Phang-nga Town's most beautiful
old buildings is the Provincial Hall. The first such structure was
built in Ban Chai Kai; a larger one was constructed in 1930 at Ban Tai
Chang. The present structure near Poong Chang Cave was built in 1972.
*Pronunciation of Phang-nga's name is thought to have resulted from
foreign tin buyers' and operators' confusion with the way it was
formerly written on maps, Pu-nga in which the old long '00' sound is not
clearly expressed. If pronounced with a short '00' it is very close to
present pronunciation.
|