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				Narathiwat (นราธิวาส)  
			Thai. ‘Residence of wise people’. Name of  
			a province 
				(map) 
				and its provincial capital in South Thailand. 
				The city has a population of 
            approximately 41,000, and is situated 1,149 kms
            from 
			
			
			Bangkok. The province borders 
			the state of Kelantan in   
				 
			 Malaysia, 
				and the majority of its inhabitants speaks 
			Yawi, a Malay dialect. The name Narathiwat, 
			which derives from the Sanskrit words narah (नराः), 
			meaning ‘men’ or ‘people’, and adhi-vas (अधि-वस्), 
			meaning ‘to live’ or ‘to dwell’, is in use only since 1915. Formerly it was called Bang Nara and before that Meuang Ra Ngae, 
			though some sources also mention the name Menara, a word said to 
			mean ‘tower’ in Malay and which perhaps refers to the Sankalakhiri (สันกาลาคีรี) 
			mountain range. Historically Narathiwat was the part of the 
			Sultanate of 
							
			Pattani, 
			paying tribute to the Thai Kingdoms of  
				 
			Sukhothai 
			and  
 Ayutthaya. 
			After Ayutthaya fell in 1767, the Sultanate of Patani gained 
			independence, but some 20 years later, during the reign of King 
			 
				
            
			Rama I it again came under Thai control and in 1909, it 
			was fully integrated into Siam as part of the Anglo-Siamese Treaty 
			of 1909, that was negotiated with the British Empire, then 
			colonizing peninsular Malaya. Along with  
							
							Yala, 
			Narathiwat became part of the 
    
			
			monthon
			 
			Pattani. Today there is still a small but active 
			Muslim separatist movement that, after being dormant for many years, 
			erupted again on 4 January 2004, trying once again to liberate the 
			deep South from Thai rule. The province 
              has 13  
				 
			amphur. 
			See also
			
			
			Narathiwat data file. 回     
     
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