To protect the Irrawaddy dolphins, fishermen on the Bang Pakong River have been persuaded by authorities to stop shrimping and 30 to 40 fishing boats have been modified so they can offer dolphin sightseeing tours.[2]
Dvaravati settlements include Muang Phra Rot, Dong Si Maha Phot, Dong Lakhon, and Ban Khu Muang. Dvaravati coins have been found at U-Tapao.[4]:302,309
Toponymy
Its name "Bang Pakong" is believed to be distorted from the word "Bang Mangkong" (บางมังกง), refers to "place of Mangkong", for "Mangong" is Thai word meaning long whiskers catfish (Mystus gulio), a species of brackish water catfish that used to be found in this river.[5]
This name has been mentioned in Sunthorn Phu's poem Nirat Mueang Klaeng (นิราศเมืองแกลง, "journey to Klaeng") since early Rattanakosin period.[5]
Anyway, it is also proposed that the name may have a Khmer origin as a mixture of "Bang" in Thai, meaning "estuary community", and the word "Bongkong" (បង្កង) in Khmer meaning "prawn". Overall, it means "the river full of prawn".[6]
Moreover, this river is known locally in Chachoengsao Province as Jolo River (แม่น้ำโจ้โล้, Chinese:左鲈河, pinyin: zuǒ lú hé), from the Teochew name for the barramundi (Lates calcarifer) because of the abundance of this species of fish.[7] Famous temples along the river include Wat Pak Nam Jolo and Wat Sothonwararam with Wat Saman Rattanaram.
History
Located in modern-day Na Phra That Subdistrict in Phanat Nikhom District, Chonburi province, the city of Mueang Phra Rot (Phra That Noen That) was established closed to the Bang Pakong river's mouth during the Dvaravati period. The city was in the shape of an irregular rectangle and was surrounded by a moat. Excavations from archeology sites in the former city revealed that it was inhabited from the 600s to the 1000s, and had ceramics imported from the Tang and Song dynasties, and early Islamic turquoise-blue glazed earthenware jars from either Persia or lower Mesopotamia.[8]
To the east of Phra Rot was Mueang Sri Phalo, established near the end of Phra Rot in the 11th century.[9] The settlement was located near the river's mouth and became a wealthy port and fishing town as such. Sri Phalo served as a stopping point for Khmer, Vietnamese and Chinese barques before they ventured into the Chao Phraya river.[10] But during the 1300s, its prominance declined as the mouth of the Bang Pakong became shallower and moved away from the settlement. As a result of its economy declining, the inhabitants of Sri Phalo relocated south to Bang Pla Soi along the Gulf of Thailand. Construction of Sukhimvit road erased the town's eastern wall.[11]
"บางปะกง แม่น้ำกุ้งชุม กลายคําจากภาษาเขมร?"[Bang Pakong the river full of prawn distorted from the Khmer?]. Arts & Culture Magazine (in Thai). 2020-12-31. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Bang_Pakong_River, and is written by contributors.
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