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Vientiane, Thailand travel blogs - travel stories and photos about ...
Travel blogs about Vientiane, Thailand - Read 4 travel stories, see 23 travel ... A travel blog entry by bjkat81. Vientiane. Mar 20, 2007 ...www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-city/Thailand/Vientiane/tpod.h...Vientiane Travel Blogs, Photos, Accommodation, Reviews, Forum
Background: Laos was under the control of Siam (Thailand) from the late 18th century until the late 19th ... Travel Blog " Asia " Laos " West " Vientiane ...www.travelblog.org/Asia/Laos/West/Vientiane/Vientiane, Lao Peoples Dem Rep travel blogs - travel stories and photos ...
Travel blogs about Vientiane, Lao Peoples Dem Rep - Read 1,079 travel stories, see 8,292 travel photos, watch 37 videos, and read 46 forum discussions about ...www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-city/Lao%20Peoples%20Dem%20Rep...Vientiane — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
Vientiane ... Vientiane and the Long Ride — 4 comments ... Vientiane, Laos ...en.wordpress.com/tag/vientiane/vientiane " Exotissimo News Blog
Exotissimo News Blog - News about our destinations for our partner companies ... New Rail Link Connects Vientiane and Nongkhai ... New Luxury Manager in Vientiane ...www.exotissimo.com/eblog/tag/vientiane/Expand: date=October 2007
Vientiane ( , Lao Viang-chan ) is the capital city of Laos, situated in the Mekong Valley. It is also Laos's largest city. The estimated population of the city is 200,000 (2005) while the number of people living in the Vientiane metropolitan area (the entire Vientiane Prefecture and parts of Vientiane Province) is believed to be over 730,000. Vientiane is located at 17°58' North, 102°36' East (17.9667, 102.6).
Sri Sattanak, or Sisattanak ( ), is a former name of Vientiane. It is often confused with Sri Sattanakanahut, the Pali name of Lan Xang, the Kingdom of the Million Elephants. Sisattanak now is the name of one of the five districts of the city Vientiane.
Origin of the name
The name of the city is derived from Pali, the liturgical language of Theravada Buddhism. Its original meaning is "royal sandalwood grove" or "city of sandalwood", this tree being highly valued in classical India for its fragrance. In modern Lao, the meaning of Vientiane is ambiguous, and is often mistakenly believed to mean "city of the moon", because the words for 'moon' and 'sandalwood' are written and pronounced identically. However, the name in Thai, เวียงจันทน์, retains the etymologically correct spelling, and clearly indicates "city of sandalwood" as the meaning. The romanized spelling "Vientiane" is of French origin, and reflects the difficulty the French had in pronouncing the hard "ch" sound in the Lao word; a common English-based spelling is "Viangchan", or occasionally "Wiangchan".
History


The great Laotian epic, the Phra Lak Phra Lam, claims that Prince Thattaradtha founded the city when he left the legendary Lao kingdom of Muong Inthapatha Maha Nakhone because he was denied the throne in favor of his younger brother. Thattaradtha founded a city called Maha Thani Si Phan Phao on the western banks of the Mekong River; this city was told to have later become today's Udon Thani, Thailand. One day, a seven-headed Naga told Thattaradtha to start a new city on the eastern bank of the river opposite Maha Thani Si Phan Phao. The prince called this city Chanthabuly Si Sattanakhanahud; which was told to be the predecessor of modern Vientiane.
Contrary to the Phra Lak Phra Ram, most historians believe Vientiane was an early Khmer settlement centered around a Hindu temple, which the Pha That Luang would later replace. In the 11th and 12th centuries, the time when the Lao and Thai people are believed to have entered Southeast Asia from Southern China, the few remaining Khmers in the area were either killed, removed, or assimilated into the Lao civilization, which would soon overtake the area.

























