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Northern Thailand
Geographical region of Thailand
Geographical region of Thailand
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| <!-- Basic info ----------------> | name | Northern Region |
| other_name | ภาคเหนือ | |
| settlement_type | Region | |
| image_skyline | {{Photomontage | |
| photo1a | Intanon 03.jpg Doi Inthanon National Park | |
| photo2a | ดอยผ้าห่มปก.jpg Doi Pha Hom Pok National Park | |
| photo2b | Phra That Doi Suthep 01.jpg Wat Phra That Doi Suthep | |
| photo3a | Friendship_Bridge_-_panoramio_(6).jpg Fourth Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge | |
| photo3b | ภูชี้ฟ้า_501.jpgPhu Chi Fa | |
| size | 270 | |
| position | center | |
| spacing | 2 | |
| color | transparent | |
| border | 0 | |
| foot_montage | From upper-left to lower-right: Doi Inthanon, Doi Pha Hom Pok, Wat Phra That Doi Suthep, Fourth Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge and Phu Chi Fa | |
| image_map | Thailand_North_six_regions.png | |
| map_caption | Northern Region in Thailand | |
| parts_type | Provinces | |
| parts_style | coll | |
| parts | 9 Provinces | |
| p1 | Chiang Mai Province | |
| p2 | Lamphun Province | |
| p3 | Lampang Province | |
| p4 | Uttaradit Province | |
| p5 | Phrae Province | |
| p6 | Nan Province | |
| p7 | Phayao Province | |
| p8 | Chiang Rai Province | |
| p9 | Mae Hong Son Province | |
| subdivision_type1 | Largest city | |
| subdivision_name1 | Chiang Mai | |
| unit_pref | metric | |
| area_footnotes | ||
| area_total_km2 | 96,077 | |
| population_as_of | 2019 | |
| population_footnotes | ||
| population_total | 12,119,572 | |
| population_density_km2 | 66 | |
| blank1_name_sec2 | Language | |
| blank1_info_sec2 | ||
| demographics_type2 | GDP | |
| demographics2_footnotes | ||
| demographics2_title1 | Total | |
| demographics2_info1 | US$41.9 billion (2019) | |
| demographics2_title2 | Per capita | |
| timezone1 | ICT | |
| utc_offset1 | +07:00 |
| Khon Muang Northern Thailand, or more specifically Lan Na, is a region of Thailand. It is geographically characterized by several mountain ranges, which continue from the Shan Hills in bordering Myanmar to Laos, and the river valleys that cut through them. Like most of Thailand, it has a tropical savanna climate, but its relatively high elevation and latitude contribute to more pronounced seasonal temperature variation, with cooler winters than the other regions.
Historically, northern Thailand has been linked to the Hariphunchai Kingdom, which emerged as a powerful state in the region in the 7th century. This kingdom was related to the Dvaravati that existed from the 6th to 11th centuries. The Hariphunchai culture later influenced the development of the Lanna Kingdom, which emerged in the 13th century and lasted until the 18th century.
Geography
North Thailand is bound by the Salween River in the west and the Mekong in the east. The basins of rivers Ping, Wang, Yom, and Nan, all tributaries of the Chao Phraya River, in the central part run from north to south and are mostly very wide. The basins cut across the mountains of two great ranges, the Thanon Range in the western part and the Phi Pan Nam in the eastern. Their elevations are generally moderate, a little above 2,000. m for the highest summits. Although formerly forested, many of these mountains are now denuded.
Parallel mountain ranges extend from the Daen Lao Range, in the southern region of the Shan Hills, in a north–south direction, the Dawna Range forming the western border of Thailand between Mae Hong Son and the Salween River. To the east the Thanon Thong Chai Range, the Khun Tan Range, the Phi Pan Nam Range, as well as the western part of the Luang Prabang Range, form the natural region of the Thai highlands together with the former.
The high mountains are incised by steep river valleys and upland areas that border the central plain. A series of rivers, including the Nan, Ping, Wang, Yom, and Nan, flow southwards through mountain valleys and join to form the Chao Phraya in Nakhon Sawan Province in the central region. Sirikit Dam is on the Nan River in Uttaradit Province. The northeastern part is drained by rivers flowing into the Mekong basin, like the Kok and Ing.
The four-region system includes the northern parts of the central plain as well as some mountainous areas bordering the western and the northeastern limits. The total forest area is 90,228 km² or 52.5 percent of this four-region area.
National parks
Main article: List of national parks of Thailand
Within the northern region there are some sixty national parks. Chiang Mai Province has nine national parks of which Doi Inthanon National Park with the country's highest mountain and Op Luang National Park have a scenic river canyon, waterfalls, and caves. Doi Khun Tan National Park, which is located midway between the two provincial capitals of province Lampang and Lamphun, is best known for Thailand's longest railroad tunnel, which is 1,352 m long. Doi Phu Kha National Park in province Nan is northern Thailand's largest national park.
Regional classification of northern Thailand
The northern region, as defined by the National Geographical Committee in 1978, consists of nine provinces. Geographically the division, in conformance with the six-region system, includes most of the mountainous natural region of the Thai highlands.
In the four-region classification system, northern Thailand gains the eight upper-central-region provinces: Kamphaeng Phet, Nakhon Sawan, Phetchabun, Phichit, Phitsanulok, Sukhothai, Uthai Thani and Tak, bringing the total to 17 provinces.
In 2019 it is common to subdivide the northern region into: nine provinces of the upper northern region and eight provinces of the lower northern region. All websites of these eight provinces state: "located in the lower northern region".

| Flag | Seal | Province | Capital | DOPA | Population | Area (km2) | Density | ISO | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:Flag of Chiang Mai.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Chiang Mai.png | 50px]] | 1 | Chiang Mai | Chiang Mai | 14 | 1,779,254 | 22,135 | 79 | |
| [[File:Flag of Lamphun.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Lamphun.png | 50px]] | 2 | Lamphun | Lamphun | 54 | 405,075 | 4,478 | 92 | |
| [[File:Flag of Lampang Province.png | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Lampang.png | 50px]] | 3 | Lampang | Lampang | 53 | 738,316 | 12,488 | 59 | |
| [[File:Flag of Uttaradit.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Uttaradit.png | 50px]] | 4 | Uttaradit | Uttaradit | 75 | 453,103 | 7,906 | 58 | |
| [[File:Phrae flag.svg | 100px]] | [[File:Seal of Phrae Province (colour version, as the provincial administration used).svg | 50px]] | 5 | Phrae | Phrae | 41 | 441,726 | 6,483 | 68 | |
| [[File:ธงประจำจังหวัดน่าน.svg | 100px]] | [[File:Seal of Nan province.svg | 50px]] | 6 | Nan | Nan | 26 | 478,227 | 12,130 | 40 | |
| [[File:Phayao flag.svg | 100px]] | [[File:Seal Phayao.png | 50px]] | 7 | Phayao | Phayao | 34 | 472,356 | 6,189 | 76 | |
| [[File:Flag of Chiang Rai.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Chiang Rai.svg | 50px]] | 8 | Chiang Rai | Chiang Rai | 13 | 1,298,304 | 11,503 | 113 | |
| [[File:Flag of Mae Hong Son Province.svg | 100px]] | [[File:Seal Mae Hong Son.svg | 50px]] | 9 | Mae Hong Son | Mae Hong Son | 45 | 284,138 | 12,765 | 23 | |
| [[File:Flag of Nakhon Sawan province.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Nakhon Sawan.png | 50px]] | 10 | Nakhon Sawan | Nakhon Sawan | 23 | 1,059,887 | 9,526 | 111 | |
| [[File:Flag of Uthai Thani.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Uthaithani.png | 50px]] | 11 | Uthai Thani | Uthai Thani | 76 | 328,618 | 6,647 | 50 | |
| [[File:Flag of Kamphaeng Phet.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Kamphaeng Phet.png | 50px]] | 12 | Kamphaeng Phet | Kamphaeng Phet | 5 | 725,867 | 8,512 | 86 | |
| [[File:Flag of Tak province.svg | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Tak.png | 50px]] | 13 | Tak | Tak | 17 | 665,620 | 17,303 | 39 | |
| [[File:Flag of Sukhothai Province.svg | 100px]] | [[File:Seal of Sukhothai Province (color version).svg | 50px]] | 14 | Sukhothai | Sukhothai | 66 | 595,072 | 6,671 | 89 | |
| [[File:Pitsanulok flag.svg | 100px]] | [[File:Seal of Phitsanulok Province.svg | 50px]] | 15 | Phitsanulok | Phitsanulok | 38 | 865,247 | 10,589 | 82 | |
| [[File:Flag Phichit Province.png | border | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Phichit.png | 50px]] | 16 | Phichit | Phichit | 37 | 536,311 | 4,319 | 124 |
| [[File:Flag of Phetchabun province.svg | border | 100x100px]] | [[File:Seal Phetchabun.png | 50px]] | 17 | Phetchabun | Phetchabun | 40 | 992,451 | 12,340 | 80 |
Economy
For FY 2018, Northern Thailand Region had a combined economic output of 1,266 trillion baht (US$40.8 billion), or 7.7 percent of Thailand's GDP. Lamphun province had an economic output of 84.395 billion baht (US$2.7 billion). This equates to a GPP per capita of 211,489 baht (US$6,822), half more than for Chiang Mai province, next in the ranking and double than for Lampang province, which is third in the ranking.
| Rank | Province | GPP | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (million baht) | Population | ||||||||
| (x 1000) | GPP per capita (baht) | Upper provinces | 669,284 | 5,941 | 112,655 | ||||
| 1 | Lamphun | 84,395 | 399 | 211,489 | |||||
| 2 | Chiang Mai | 247,831 | 1,805 | 137,316 | |||||
| 3 | Lampang | 71,950 | 714 | 100,709 | |||||
| 4 | Phayao | 37,298 | 383 | 97,306 | |||||
| 5 | Chiang Rai | 110,815 | 1,156 | 95,895 | |||||
| 6 | Uttaradit | 39,190 | 416 | 94,260 | |||||
| 7 | Phrae | 30,403 | 388 | 78,276 | |||||
| 8 | Nan | 33,674 | 445 | 75,676 | |||||
| 9 | Mae Hong Son | 13,728 | 235 | 58,370 |
Kamphaeng Phet province had an economic output of 117.705 billion baht (US$3.8 billion). This amounts to a GPP per capita of 150,783 baht (US$4,864), half more than for Tak province, which is fifth in the ranking.
| Rank | Province | GPP | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (million baht) | Population | ||||||||
| (x 1000) | GPP per capita (baht) | Lower provinces | 597,377 | 5,480 | 109,010 | ||||
| 1 | Kamphaeng Phet | 117,705 | 781 | 150,783 | |||||
| 2 | Nakhon Sawan | 116,147 | 938 | 123,865 | |||||
| 3 | Phitsanulok | 100,286 | 896 | 111,872 | |||||
| 4 | Uthai Thani | 29,879 | 281 | 106,369 | |||||
| 5 | Tak | 52,720 | 532 | 99,026 | |||||
| 6 | Phichit | 48,347 | 518 | 93,265 | |||||
| 7 | Phetchabun | 81,909 | 921 | 88,971 | |||||
| 8 | Sukhothai | 50,384 | 613 | 82,147 |
Languages
Main article: Northern Thai language, Thai language#Dialects
Central Thai is the sole official language in Thailand. However, in the six-region classification system, it is the second largest native language in Northern Thailand, amounting to roughly two hundred thousand people, found in the lower part of Uttaradit Province. Central Thai spoken in southern regions of Northern Thailand in the four-region classification system comprise a group of dialects classified as Ne.
The main language is Northern Thai, which is a southwestern Tai language spoken in the 9 changwat of Northern Thailand. It is spoken by roughly six million people. There are also various hill tribe languages such as Lolo-Burmese, Karenic, Mienic, Mienic, Palaungic, Southwestern Mandarin.
References
References
- (2019). "ตารางที่ 2 พี้นที่ป่าไม้ แยกรายจังหวัด พ.ศ.2562".
- link. (31 December 2019)
- (July 2019). "''Gross Regional and Provincial Product, 2019 Edition''". Office of the National Economic and Social Development Council (NESDC).
- (2012). "Enlightened Ways: The Many Streams of Buddhist Art in Thailand". Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.
- (2019). "State, Community, and Ethnicity in Early Modern Thailand, 1351-1767". University of Michigan.
- [http://rainforests.mongabay.com/deforestation/archive/Thailand.htm Forest data: Thailand Deforestation Rates]
- [http://www1.mod.go.th/heritage/nation/geography/geo3.htm Northern Thailand] {{webarchive. link. (2012-01-28)
- ดร.กระมล ทองธรรมชาติ และคณะ, สังคมศึกษา ศาสนาและวัฒนธรรม ม.1, สำนักพิมพ์ อักษรเจริญทัศน์ อจท. จำกัด, 2548, หน้า 24-25
- "Phitsanulok Provincial Statistical Report 2562-2019: Economic Statistics - National Accounts". National Statistical Office (NSO).
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