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				Mukdahan (มุกดาหาร)  
			Thai. 
			‘Divided pearl’. The name of a Thai  
			 jangwat
				or province (map), 
				as well as of its capital city in 
			 
			 Isaan. The 
            town is located at 642 kms Northeast of
			
			
			Bangkok, on the 
			
				
				Mae Khong 
				(Mekhong) River and the border with Laos, and has a population of around 25,000.  
			Around the first half of the 18th century AD,
			
			
		Chao 
			
			Chandra 
			Suriyawong, an
			
			
		Isaan local ruler, founded a settlement along the 
			left banks of the
				Mae Khong River, 
			in present-day 
			
				
			
    Laos. In 
			1767 AD, after his death, his son  
			Chanthakinnaree (จันทกินรี) moved the settlement to the other 
			side of the river, near the mouth of a creek called Bang Muk (บังมุก), 
			in present-day Thailand. This was in the vicinity of an abandoned 
			monastery and several 
				
			sugar palms. Upon clearing the woods to make place for the 
			resettlement, two
			
			
        Buddha images were found underneath a
				
			
		bodhi tree, prompting the 
			construction of new temple, to house the images. According to legend 
			however, after a while, the smaller one of the two Buddha images, 
			which was made from iron, appeared to mysteriously reestablish 
			itself beneath the bodhi tree, where it had first been discovered and 
			eventually, after this phenomenon had occurred repetitively, it 
			began slowly sinking into the ground there, until only the crown of 
			its head could be seen. As a result, a new sanctuary was built on 
			that spot instead. The city of Mukdahan was officially established 
			in 1770 and the administered area originally covered both sides of 
			the Mae Khong River. Its name is a compound of  
				
			mukdah 
			(มุกดา),
			a kind of semi-precious 
			gem that translates as ‘pearl’ and derives 
			from the nearby creek Bang Muk, and han (หาร) which means 
			‘to 
			divide’ or ‘split’ and most likely refers to the Mae 
				Khong River that divided the initially 
			administered area in two. In the Bangkok period, the city with the 
			beauty of a mukdah was first 
			administered as an  
				 
			amphur of 
			 
				 
			Nakhon Phanom 
			but in 1982 split and became a provincial capital itself. The province has 
            seven amphur. Due to the closeness of the Laotian city Suwannakhet, 
            on the other bank of the river, there is a lively trade with Laos. This is
            particularly noticeable at the local markets, including the famous Talaat 
            Indojien, the Indochinese Market. Its places of interest include Phu Pha Thup National Park and the 
            many panoramic views over the Mae Kohng River.
			 
			
				The provincial tree and flower of Mukdahan is the 
	
	Vietnamese Mickey 
	Mouse Plant (fig.). 
				Sometimes 
				transliterated Mukdaharn yet pronunciation is Mukdahaan. See also
			
			
			Mukdahan data file.
				
			
				
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