What’s Under Our Feet

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What’s Under Our Feet

Hidden Archaeological Treasures

When you first arrive in Thailand, it’s natural to gaze upward at the shimmering temples, the rugged mountains, the endless palm-fringed skylines. But beneath your feet lies a deeper story, one of dinosaur bones scattered across ancient wetlands, prehistoric villages humming with early farmers, lost civilizations rising and falling, and entire cities layered one atop another like forgotten manuscripts.

These places don’t announce themselves. You have to seek them out, and when you do, Thailand transforms from a postcard paradise into a living puzzle you’re piecing together.

Rice Field Revelation
The Latest Thrill: Phetchaburi’s Rice Field Revelation (February 2026)
Just months ago, in a humble rice paddy in Ban Don Phlap, Phetchaburi, farmers stumbled upon something extraordinary beneath them – two bronze war drums called klong mohorathuek, alongside the remains of a high-status individual from 1,500 to 2,000 years ago wearing a gold bracelet.

How the drums could have looked (AI Re-creation)
How the drums could have looked (AI Re-creation)

 

These aren’t ordinary finds; the drums, cast using the intricate lost-wax method with frog motifs and rope-handled grips, represent the province’s first link to distant Dong Son cultures which flourished in what is now Vietnam, and also links to similar finds in Ratchaburi. The burial, dug 120 centimeters deep and surrounded by bronze vessels and seven pottery jars, speaks of a respected and important local leader.

Too New To Tell: As this is a brand new find, there’s no knowing what else might be found, or how big the site might end up being. The Fine Arts Department in Ratchaburi, alongside Phetchaburi Rajabhat University and local villagers, is carefully excavating this thrilling site, but public access remains limited for now.

Venture from Phetchaburi’s Ban Lat district office on foot, and chat with locals who guard these secrets, then you could extend your day into Kaeng Krachan National Park’s elephant trails and misty waterfalls. Dry season (November to April) is ideal for this as in the rainy months paths turn into slick mud.

Dinosaur Echoes In Isaan
Travel to Isaan (The North-east region of Thailand), and you’re stepping into a world millions of years old where vast wetlands once teemed with long-necked giants, and long before humans walked on the earth. Kalasin and Khon Kaen provinces are littered with signs of these ancient monsters.

The Sirindhorn Dinosaur Museum in Kalasin isn’t your dusty relic hall – it’s a sleek, interactive hub blending real prehistoric skeletons with life-sized mockups, all built around active excavation zones. Peer through a massive window into the adjacent research lab, where experts meticulously restore bones unearthed nearby, like those of the raptor Phuwiangvenator yaemniyomi, which was first discovered here.

From there a short drive leads to Phu Wiang National Park, where quiet trails wind past 16 fossil sites, red sandstone stamped with sauropod footprints – simple signs marking the digs amid whispering scrub, and making you feel the reality of the past.

Red sandstone slabs with footprints of sauropods
Red sandstone slabs with footprints of sauropods (AI image for illustration only)

 

Era of Humans
In 2025, PrachuapkhiriKhan’s Samroiyod caves yielded Thailand’s oldest human remains at 29,000 years old, early migrants whose replicas now sit in the local cultural center.

At this mountainous National Park you can also paddle through mangrove tunnel and scramble along monkey-haunted cliffs for that raw connection, but don’t be found there in 29,000 years time by some intrigued archeologists.

Ban Chiang: A Prehistoric Village Frozen in Time
Ban Chiang, near Udon Thani, must be the most famous prehistoric site in Thailand but it greets you modestly – an initially uninspiring cluster of low mounds and thatched displays, but linger and its power soon unfolds. This UNESCO gem reveals a sophisticated society from 5,000 years ago: red-spiral pottery from rice-farming innovators, early bronze tools predating Europe’s, and over 200 burials in pit houses that whisper of daily life. It should be on your bucket list.

AI image of ancient burial pit
(AI image of ancient burial pit for illustration only)

Hands-on workshops let you fire pottery together with local villagers, bridging millennia and giving you a hint of life in times long passed. Nearby Hoabinhian (10000-2000 BCE) shelters add layers of hunter-gatherer mystery, as very little is known about them.

Mysteries in Stone: Rock Art and Cliff Carvings
Phu Phrabat Historical Park in Udon Thani feels like a prehistoric playground – massive mushroom rocks sheltering faint red ochre paintings of animals and handprints from 6,000 years ago, best spotted in the soft glow of golden hour as you weave between boulders. It was a site also known to have had a religious significance to the Dvaravati people, who later built Hindu and Buddhist shrines there.

At Khao Phra Viharn National Park, near the Cambodian border, ancient carvings pre-dating the Khymer empire perch on the side of sheer 500-meter cliffs, reached by a nerve-testing iron walkway amid lingering geopolitical worries. In the current climate as this is written, it’s too close to the Cambodian border for comfort.

Prehistoric cave and rock paintings can be found in numerous areas of Isaan, some lesser known but quite significant places are pretty remote, including many spread across Sakon Nakhon province dating between 3000-5000 years ago.

Mueang Sing: Layers of Empires
Mueang Sing Historical Park in Kanchanaburi reveals its Khymer prangs rising from the surroundings, but dig deeper because beneath lie settlements from centuries earlier, moats and burials stacked like historical palimpsests. What you see isn’t the full story.

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The visible ruins are from the Khymer period – but underneath that, archaeologists have found evidence using lidar scans of much older settlements and burial sites through from prehistoric times, the Dvaravati period, Mon, and finally to the Khymer Empire. The earth mounds surrounding the park are the remnants of Dvaravati defensive walls, now mostly overgrown or demolished in the past.

This happens a lot in Thailand. A good location stays a good location. So instead of moving, people just rebuild on top of what’s already there. Same ground, different era.

Dvaravati Whispers Near Bangkok
Dong Lakhon Ancient City in Nakhon Nayok preserves the subtle traces of Dvaravati life – earthen defensive ramparts, ancient moats outlining a vanished 6th-11th century city, reservoirs, holy wells, laterite paths. Only minor excavations have taken place here, next to the entrance, but out of an original city of 6sq kilometers, you can still wander freely over 2sq kilometers and imagine what life might have been like here.

YouTube Video

In Ratchaburi’s Ku Bua village, glazed tiles and stucco Buddhas peek from quiet fields, echoing Phetchaburi’s drums, while large remains nearby of a Dvaravati brick and stone settlement sit impressively on the edge of the village. Very few foreign visitors get to see these historic places, which is sad considering how easy it is to get there.

Khmer Majesty on Ancient Ground
Phimai Historical Park’s 12th-century corridors, a ‘petite Angkor Wat’ in Nakhon Ratchasima, rise over Dvaravati ponds and is built partly on or near a well established Dvaravati settlement, while Buriram’s Phanom Rung perches on a volcanic ridge, its lintels capturing solstice sunrises and Vishnu tales.

Venturing Further: Thailand’s Wildest Hidden Layers
For the bold, Spirit Cave in Mae Hong Son cradles 12,000-year-old plant remains in its limestone embrace, you could make a 3-4 day trek from Pai, with hill tribe homestays en route – although most hill tribes these days are very much integrated with the greater local culture.

Tham Lod’s river cave, also in Mae Hong Son, shelters bamboo-spiked coffins and ancient petroglyphs, a flashlight-lit raft away, but it’s a ticket only ride so plan ahead.

Laem Pho in Surat Thani, half way down the country, hides a Dvaravati-Srivijaya port beneath mangroves, which can be kayaked to in gulf serenity. This was a major trading center even before the Dvaravati era, and also a Hindu culture that ultimately spread it’s beliefs to the Funan Empire, which included today’s Cambodia.

A Lasting Unearthing
These sites demand an effort, some along faint trails with an absence of signs, some with a sense of gentle neglect, forgotten even.
But that’s kind of the point – because once you start noticing what’s underneath it all, Thailand stops being just a place you visit, and starts feeling like a place you’re slowly uncovering. When you step out tomorrow, look down.

(Google and Wikipedia can give you more details about all these places and where they are.)

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Chud Thai History

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Chud Thai History

A Journey through Time

1. Early Influence – The Sabai in the Dvaravati Era (6th–10th Century)

The origins of Thai traditional attire can be traced back to the Dvaravati Empire, which flourished in central Thailand between the 6th and 10th centuries.

Sculptural evidence from this period reveals the early use of the “Sabai”, a cloth draped elegantly over the shoulder. This garment was simple yet refined, reflecting both practicality and aesthetic sensibility. The Sabai became a foundational element of Thai dress and continues to influence modern Chud Thai styles.

2. Ayutthaya Period – Foreign Observations (1687)

In 1687, Simon de La Loubère, a French envoy to the Ayutthaya Kingdom, documented Thai customs and clothing. His records describe how Thai people wore wrapped lower garments with a draped upper cloth similar to the Sabai. These accounts provide valuable historical insight, confirming that Thai attire had already developed a distinctive identity admired by foreigners.

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3. Symbol of Strength – Thao Suranari Monument (1934)

The monument of Thao Suranari (Khun Ying Mo) in Nakhon Ratchasima, completed in 1934, reflects both national pride and traditional dress. Her attire, featuring a Sabai-style drape, symbolizes courage and patriotism. This representation highlights how traditional clothing is deeply connected with Thai identity and historical memory.

4. Royal Influence – Queen Debsirindra of Siam (19th Century)

Queen Debsirindra, consort of King Mongkut (Rama IV), is depicted wearing formal Siamese attire that blends tradition with royal elegance. Her clothing represents a transitional phase where Thai dress became more structured while maintaining its cultural roots. Royal influence played a crucial role in preserving and refining traditional garments.

 

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5. Cultural Heritage in Media – “The King of the White Elephant” (1940)

The 1940 film The King of the White Elephant showcases traditional Thai costumes in cinematic form. As the only surviving pre-World War II Thai feature film, it preserves visual references of historical attire. The costumes seen in the film reflect national identity and were later recognized by UNESCO for their cultural significance.

6. Modern Standardization – Chud Thai in the 1960s

During the 1960s, Her Majesty Queen Sirikit played a vital role in developing and promoting “Chud Thai” as a formal national costume. Inspired by historical garments such as the Sabai, she helped standardize various styles, making them internationally recognized. This effort ensured that Thai traditional dress would remain relevant in both cultural and global contexts.

Conclusion
From the ancient Sabai of the Dvaravati period to the refined Chud Thai of the modern era, Thai national costume reflects a continuous evolution shaped by history, culture, and royal influence. Each stage tells a story of identity, elegance, and resilience—making Chud Thai not just clothing, but a symbol of Thailand’s rich heritage.

We are proud to be Thai
#ชุดไทย, #ChudThai, #ThaiDress, #ThaiCostume, #ThaiTraditionalDress, #ThaiHeritage, #ThaiCulturalHeritage, #SoftPower, #ใส่ไทยให้โลกเห็น, #ชุดไทยพระราชนิยม #ชุดไทย4ภาค #ชุดไทย8แบบ #หนังใหญ่ #Songkran #สงกรานต์ #รดน้ำดำหัว #Chudthaichakkraphat

Muang Sing Historical Park

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Muang Sing Historical Park

Whispers in the Jungle:

Hi Fellow Explorers!
Imagine driving far away from the hustle of the busy tourist town of Kanchanaburi, winding through forest covered mountains until the noise fades into the chirping of birds and the rustle of leaves.

Then you find yourself at a place that feels so remote and forgotten by the rush of modern life, Muang Sing Historical Park.

There are no queues for a ticket here, although there is a very modest admission fee. No tour buses honking. Just you, the ancient stones, the gentle birdsongs, and the murmuring waters of the Kwae Noi River that forms part of the city defences.

As you drive through the main gate, the first thing you notice is the beautifully maintained woodland garden environment, the overgrown city walls, a good road (it’s a big place), and lots of pathways through the greenery.

YouTube Video

Although you won’t see it immediately, the grand Khymer era Prasat standing tall amongst breeze blessed trees is literally the center point of this serene park.

It’s built in true Khmer style, reminiscent of the great temples of Angkor, with that same Bayon shape and weathered sandstone. It looks majestic, sturdy, and proud. But if you look closely, you’ll realize this tower is just the newest chapter in a much older book.

The Layers Beneath Your Feet:

As you wander the grounds, you’re walking on a timeline. The Khmer builders who raised that tower didn’t start from scratch. They stepped onto a city that was already centuries old.

Underneath the grass and the soil lies the footprint of an older Dvaravati settlement, a bustling town that existed on the site from the 6th to 11th centuries. A remnant of a powerful civilisation that covered much of present day Thailand.

While their wooden homes have long since turned to dust, the brick foundations remain, hiding in plain sight like secrets waiting to be found.

And if you go deeper still, to the quiet corners where the ground is marked by mounds, you’re stepping into the past of the very first people here.

Between 10,000-2,000 years ago, during the Neolithic period, families buried their loved ones with care on the banks of the Kwai Noi River. You can see some of the protected burial sites, enclosed and preserved. They feel a bit clinical, yes, but they hold the stories of the ancestors who first chose this valley as home.

The rest of those ancient burial mounds with hundreds of skeletons are off limits, and items buried with those bygone people are on show at the Ban Kao Museum about a 30 minute drive from the city.

The Beauty of the Unknown:

Part of the charm of Muang Sing Historical Park is what you can’t see. Some areas are outside the park and fenced off, guarded by archaeologists who are still piecing together the puzzle. It adds a sense of mystery.

You know there are more stories buried there, more pottery, more clues about how people lived, loved, and traded thousands of years ago in this remote corner of Thailand. It reminds you that history isn’t just what’s on display; it’s also what’s waiting to be discovered.

Why Visit?

In a world where every tourist spot feels crowded and commercialized, Muang Sing offers something rare: space to breathe. You’re unlikely to see many other people here, except perhaps on a weekend, as it’s a 100km very scenic drive from Kanchanaburi city.

It’s perfect for those who prefer a slow walk over a rushed checklist. You can sit on the steps of the ancient prang and watch the light change on the stones. You can imagine the monks who once walked these paths, or the traders who rested by the moat.

It’s not just about seeing ruins; it’s about feeling the weight of time in a place that hasn’t lost its soul. Whether you’re a history buff or just someone looking for a quiet afternoon in nature, Muang Sing welcomes you with open arms – and plenty of room to imagine the deep history this place emerged from.

The Dvaravati era stone walls around the city have crumbled and become overgrown, but are still visible as long high mounds.

Apart from the impressive Angkor style Prasat and fairly well preserved temple that goes with it, there are numerous other smaller ruins, all clearly marked on a numbered trail, which can be followed from a free map you get at the entrance.

Some archeologists suggest that as the Khymer Empire expanded, and Dvaravati era cities declined, that Muang Sing was the most western Khymer settlement in a strategic location as a buffer against the Burmese.

Opposite the stunning Prasat there’s a car park, clean toilets, a small cafe, and a wonderful display of stone artifacts, mainly from the Khymer era, that haven’t been hidden in a museum.

So, take a trip to Kanchanaburi, visit the bridge, and take the train ride. But to escape the typical tourist trails, drive away through the beautiful, quiet countryside to this gem of a place. Leave your worries behind, and let the jungle tell you its stories.

The park is open daily from 08.30-16.30, and come in the morning when it’s cooler to give yourself plenty of time to enjoy this amazing piece of multilayered history.

(A note about the video above from @yoyofellini. At the time the video was made we were not aware of the full long term history of the site, so some commentary may not be totally accurate. We found the historical park purely by chance.)

Getting There:

There’s no regular reliable transport links from Kanchanaburi city to the historical park, but there are a few options.

If you’re staying in the city, you could rent a car or ask your hotel to book a tour. You’ll have more freedom with a car as you are sure to get distracted by other sights en route.

If you’re staying in the very beautiful area of Sai Yok, your resort should be able to organise a car and driver for you.

Muang Sing Historical Park lies someway off Highway 323 in Sing Subdistrict, Sai Yok district, Google Maps location code is 26QV+GCJ.

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Si Thep World Heritage Gem

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Si Thep World Heritage Gem

Back in September 2023 the Dvaravati era city of Si Thep officially became Thailand’s 7th historical spot on UNESCO’s World Heritage list.

Si Thep World Heritage Gem rubs shoulders with other UNESCO heavy hitters like Sukhothai’s historic towns, Ayutthaya’s ruins, the Thungyai-Huai Kha Khaeng wildlife sanctuaries, Ban Chiang’s ancient digs, the Dong Phayayen-Khao Yai forests, and Kaeng Krachan Forest Complex.

Si Thep World Heritage Gem sits in Phetchabun Province and includes three connected sites: the main ancient town, Khao Klang Nok hill, and the Khao Thamorrat Cave monument. These spots go way back – over 1,500 years! The area’s perfect landscape has drawn people since prehistoric days, and folks have lived there right up to today.

A quick history note:

Si Thep bloomed during the Dvaravati period (around the 6th-11th centuries), a golden era for early Thai kingdoms influenced by Indian and Mon cultures.

The remains of these ancient Dvaravati Empire cities can be found all across Thailand, including Ratchaburi and Nakhon Nayok amongst others, predating the Khymer Empire by four-five centuries.

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What sets it apart?

Its unique art and architecture, think standout stupas and carvings that earned it the nickname “Si Thep Master of Art.” Unlike other Dvaravati cities, it mixes local flair with rare features, like double moats and massive reservoirs, showing off advanced engineering for back then.

This UNESCO nod had Thais buzzing with pride. It put Si Thep on the global map, highlighting its cultural awesomeness.

Now, it’s game on for teamwork to protect, maintain, and share this treasure, turning it into a learning hub for everyone, today and tomorrow.

How to get there:
Sri Thep Historical Park is in Si Thep district, Phetchabun Province (not to be confused with Phetchaburi), and Google’s maps reference is F4CW+JQ

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