Tha Din Daeng, Bangkok

Tha Din Daeng (Thai: ท่าดินแดง, pronounced [tʰâː dīn dɛ̄ːŋ]) is a market and one of oldest neighbourhoods in Bangkok. It is in the Somdet Chao Phraya and Khlong San Subdistricts of Khlong San District on the Thonburi side (west bank of the Chao Phraya River).

The tip of Tha Din Daeng Road (Tha Din Daeng Pier is ahead).

History

Tha Din Daeng dates back to the early Ayutthaya period (reigns of King Uthong to Intharacha). This area was a stop for cargo ships traveling from the Chao Phraya's mouth to Ayutthaya.

In the Rattanakosin period Tha Din Daeng was considered a prime location for commerce and industry. The area along the Chao Phraya, from Tha Din Daeng to the estuary, was home to many factories and businesses, such as rice mills, sawmills, warehouses, and docks. The traders in the area were mostly Chinese and Malays. King Mongkut (Rama IV) later encouraged European settlements.

Tha Din Daeng is home to many Thai Chinese, like other similar settlements such as Bangkok Chinatown, Yaowarat, Sampheng, Talat Noi, and Talat Phlu. Here there is a ferry that crosses from Rachawong pier (N5) in Sampheng.[1] There are three shrines: Shiva Shrine, Sam Nai Keng Joss House (Chinese: 吞府三奶廟), the oldest Hakka's joss house in Bangkok, built in 1847[2], and Pung Tao Kong Joss House (本頭公廟).[1]

Tha Din Daeng Road was built in 1931 during King Prajadhipok's (Rama VII) reign after the construction of Memorial bridge linked Phra Nakhon and Thonburi. The road was named by Prince Damrong to recall King Rama I's victories over the Burmese Army (Tha Din Daeng campaign).[3]

Tha Din Daeng is home to many restaurants and street food vendors selling pork satay, pot-stewed goose and duck, milk café, bok kia (a kind of Hainan-style ice dessert)[4], and Phra ram long song (พระรามลงสรง, rice topped with scalded pork and scalded water spinach and topped with satay sauce and nam phrik phao).[5][6]

Food stall selling fried pla thu (short mackerel) and nam phrik kapi with many kinds of Thai food at Tha Din Daeng.

Places

gollark: You could replace that, probably, although it would be annoying and expensive.
gollark: That's an entirely different issue if it's just the display being broken.
gollark: > proprietaryuncool.
gollark: Well, phones are very æææææææ to repair.
gollark: So make the door hollow or something so it's lighter.

References

  1. ""ท่าดินแดง" ย่านการค้าเก่าแก่ แหล่งชุมชน คนหลากเชื้อชาติ" ["Tha Din Daeng" the old commercial area, multi-ethnic community]. MGROnline]]. 2014-09-26.
  2. Chantaronanon, Pornpan. "ศาลเจ้าในกรุงเทพ" [Joss Houses in Bangkok]. Encyclopedia of Thai Culture, Central, Volume 1 (in Thai).
  3. Bangkok Noi District Office (2013-05-09). "ข้อมูลเิ่พิ่มเติม ประวัติถนนวังหลัง" [More info, history of Wang Lang Road]. facebook (in Thai). Retrieved 2020-05-24.
  4. "Bokkia Tha Din Daeng". Michelin Guide.
  5. "THAI RAMA CHICKEN, 'PRARAM LONG SONG'". importfood.
  6. Miller (2017-07-24). "เมนูที่หาทานยาก 'ข้าวพระรามลงสรง' ตรงข้ามท่าดินแดง 6" [Rare menu 'Khao phra ram long song' opposite Tha Din Daeng]. Amarin TV (in Thai).

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.