Muak Lek District

Muak Lek (Thai: มวกเหล็ก, pronounced [mûa̯k lèk]) is a district (amphoe) in Saraburi Province, Thailand.

Muak Lek

มวกเหล็ก
District location in Saraburi Province
Coordinates: 14°39′20″N 101°11′54″E
CountryThailand
ProvinceSaraburi
SeatMuak Lek
Area
  Total681.4 km2 (263.1 sq mi)
Population
 (2005)
  Total49,572
  Density73/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)
Postal code
18180
Geocode1911

Geography

Muak Lek, in the east of the province, is the largest of Saraburi's districts. Neighbouring districts are from the north clockwise: Phatthana Nikhom, Tha Luang, and Lam Sonthi of Lopburi Province; Sikhio and Pak Chong of Nakhon Ratchasima Province; Mueang Nakhon Nayok of Nakhon Nayok Province; and Kaeng Khoi and Wang Muang of Saraburi.

The district is in the hills of the Phetchabun Mountains, which separate central Thailand from the northeastern part (Isan). To the south of the district is Khao Yai National Park.

History

District office

The district was created on 27 December 1968, when the area of the former tambon Muak Lek in Kaeng Khoi District was split into three tambons containing 33 villages, and formed a new district named Muak Lek.[1] The new district started operation on 21 January 1969. On 7 May 1970 the permanent district office building was opened.

In 1988 the northwestern area was split off from the district to form the new Wang Muang District.

Traffic

The district is crossed by the Mittraphap Road and the northeastern railway line on their way through the hills.

Administration

The district is divided into six sub-districts (tambons), which are further subdivided into 65 villages (mubans). Muak Lek itself has township status (thesaban tambon) and covers parts of tambons Muak Lek and Mittraphap. There are six tambon administrative organizations (TAO).

No. Name Thai name Villages Pop.
1.Muak Lekมวกเหล็ก139,925
2.Mittraphapมิตรภาพ1010,448
4.Nong Yang Sueaหนองย่างเสือ146,318
5.Lam Somphungลำสมพุง104,468
7.Lam Phaya Klangลำพญากลาง1811,305
9.Sap Sanunซับสนุ่น157,108

The missing numbers 3, 6 and 8 were the tambon which now forms Wang Muang.

Economy

The headquarters of the Thai state enterprise, the Dairy Farming Promotion Organization of Thailand (DPO), is in Mittraphap Sub-district.[2]

gollark: ...
gollark: I mean, you can escape some special characters (not magically all of them at once, that would be moronically stupid), but the solution is to just use things which either don't require stuff to be escaped or handle it sensibly and securely for you.
gollark: That is not a solution.
gollark: Not even potatOS has such power.
gollark: No, there is *not* a function for magically fixing all security problems.

References

  1. พระราชกฤษฎีกาตั้งอำเภอมวกเหล็ก พ.ศ. ๒๕๑๑ (PDF). Royal Gazette (in Thai). 85 (121 ก): 1051–1053. December 31, 1968.
  2. "Contact us". Dairy Farming Promotion Organization of Thailand (DPO). Retrieved 2018-12-21.
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