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			Phichit (พิจิตร) 
																												
Thai.
‘Beautiful city’. 
Name of the provincial capital of a   
jangwat (map) of the same name in North Thailand situated, 344 
kilometeres to the North of 
			
			Bangkok. 
According to legend, the city was founded by 
																												Phaya Kotabong (โคตรบอง) 
during the period when the  
	Khmer were in power, though it is uncertain 
on which date precise, yet some sources mention the year 1058 AD. The word kot (โคตร) 
means ‘lineage’  and bong (บอง) 
refers to a kind of ‘tiger’, 
but is also a Khmer equivalent for the Thai 
word phih (พี่), meaning ‘elder 
brother’, whereas the ‘a’ in between those 
words is merely used as a connection vowel to ease pronunciation. The 
name Kotabong could hence be interpreted as the 
‘elder brother of the tiger lineage’, 
implying that he was probably a descendant of a heroic family or recognized as a 
person with a certain brave background. In the   
 Sukhothai period 
the city was called Meuang Sra Luang (เมืองสระหลวง), meaning 
‘City of the Royal Pond’. During this period it was an important 
metropolis and a front for Sukhothai. Later, in the
 
 Ayutthaya 
Period, King Trailohkanat (1448-1488 AD) of the 
Suphannaphumi Dynasty, 
changed the city's name into Meuang Ohkaburi (เมืองโอฆบุรี), literally meaning 
‘Inundated City’ or 
‘Flooded City’, most likely 
referring to the area's low and fertile river plains. Phichit is the birthplace 
of the Ayutthayan king Somdet Phra Sanphet VIII (1703-1708 AD) of the 
Ban Phlu Luang 
Dynasty, 
who was nicknamed  
 
																												
			Phra Chao Seua, meaning the ‘Tiger King’, 
a title reminiscent of that of the city's legendary founder. The province is also the hometown of the story 
  
 Kraithong about the crocodile 
  
Chalawan, and has nine 
  
amphur and three 
  
king amphur. 
See also
Phichit data file.  
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