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Places of attraction
Khon Kaen National Museum
Phra That Kham Kaen
Non Muang
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Khon Kaen is a large commercial city, the most
important in the northeast. It is the home of the largest university in the region
and is also the administrative centre for the region. This is accredited to the
government's effort to help develop the region in the 1960s. It also played an important
role during the Vietnam war, with a nearby airbase facilitating the US Air Force.
At the turn of this millenium a small
town had developed near Phra That Kham Kaen. The town never
really flourished and was abandoned several times through the centuries. In 1789 a ruler
from Suwwanaphum founded the present-day city and named it Kham Kaen, after the chedi. The
name was later changed to Khon Kaen.
As it the centre hub of transportation in the area, most travellers will end up passing
through here. Although it doesn't offer the same interests as the villages and towns of
the region, it still has something for those wishing to stop over.
Places of Attraction
Khon Kaen National Museum
The museum is situated at the junction of Kasikhon and Lungsun Rachakhan
roads. It has a superb collection of artefacts from the region, especially the
archaeological finds from Ban Chiang in Udon Thani province. There are also collections
from the Dvaravati and Lopburi(Khmer) periods of Thai history on show.
Phra
That Kham Kaen
This 19 m-high chedi at Wat Chotiyaphun is located 30 km from the city centre. The chedi
was built over the stump of a tamarind tree, that allegedly flowered after been dead for a
long time. The spot was were a group of monks, carrying Buddha relics, stopped
overnight. On their later return, the relics were enshrined in the chedi.
Non Muang
This archaeological site is located about 85km
from Khon Kaen. The site was an ancient Chumpae habitat, believed to have been inhabited
up until the 10th century. Excavators have found human skeletons and bronze tools from
over 3,000 years ago.
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