Trat province
| Statistics | |
|---|---|
| Capital: | Trat |
| Area: | 2,819.0 km² Ranked 61st |
| Inhabitants: | 219,345 (2000) Ranked 73rd |
| Pop. density: | 78 inh./km² Ranked 54th |
| ISO 3166-2: | TH-23 |
| Map | |
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Trat (Thai ตราด) is a province (changwat) of Thailand. It is located in the east of Thailand, at the border to Cambodia, at the shore to the Gulf of Thailand. The neighboring province is Chanthaburi to the northeast.
History
During the Paknam crisis in 1893 the French colonist army occupied the western part of Chantaburi. In 1904 in order to get back Chantaburi Siam had to give Trat to French Indochina. Trat became part of Thailand on March 23, 1906 as a exchange with many areas east of the Mekong river like Pratabong, Siam Reap and Srisophon.
Geography
The Buntud Mountain Range forms the boundary to Cambodia in the east of the province. The second biggest island of Thailand is Ko Chang, belonging to the province. The island, together with more than 40 surrounding smaller islands, forms the Mu Ko Chang Marine National Park. Trat is most famous for gemstone mining as well as gem trading.
Symbols
| The provincial seal shows the sea with a mountain in the background.
Provincial tree is the Tropical Almond (Terminalai catappa). |
Administrative divisions
The province is subdivided in 5 districts (Amphoe) and two minor district (King Amphoe). These are further subdivided into 38 communes (tambon) and 254 villages (mubaan).
| Amphoe | King Amphoe | |
|---|---|---|
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External links
- Province page from the Tourist Authority of Thailand (http://www.tat.or.th/province/central/trat/index.htm)
- Golden Jubilee Network province guide (http://kanchanapisek.or.th/cgi-bin/kp8/oncc/province.cgi?prov=c7)
nl:Changwat Trat
ja:トラート県
fi:Trat

