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Bangkok
Bangkok
Bangkok
Ebook145 pages37 minutes

Bangkok

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Bangkok by night draws its lifeblood from the realms of the steamy and the seamy. The capital of Thailand is world-famous for its innumerable massage parlours, yet at the same time the city is rich in historical treasures. Some of its Buddhist temples are more than 400 years old, and contrast strangely with Bangkok’s otherwise cutting-edge modernity. Its unique charm stems also from the winding presence of the Chao Phraya river, a waterway that can hardly be seen due to the multitude of small vessels that ply up and down it daily carrying a vast horde of passengers and goods, representing a cameo of the multiplicity of colours and styles that correspond to everyday life throughout Thailand.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 17, 2024
ISBN9798894050324
Bangkok

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    Bangkok - Caren Weiner Campbell

    BANGKOK

    Caren Weiner Campbell - Klaus H. Carl

    Publishing Director: Jean-Paul Manzo

    Text: Caren Weiner-Campbell

    Design and layout: Newton Harris Design Partnership

    Cover and jacket: Cédric Pontes

    Publishing assistant: Aurélia Hardy

    Photograph credits: Klaus H. Carl, The Thai Tourist Office

    © 2024, Confidential Concepts, Worldwide, USA

    © 2024, Parkstone Press USA, New York

    © Image-Bar www.image-bar.com

    All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or adapted without the permission of the copyright holder, throughout the world.

    Unless otherwise specified, copyright on the works reproduced lies with the respective photographers. Despite intensive research, it has not always been possible to establish copyright ownership. Where this is the case, we would appreciate notification.

    ISBN: 979-8-89405-032-4

    Contents

    City of Angels

    The Grand Palace and Environs

    The Wats of Central Bangkok

    Thon Buri and its Waterways

    The Dusit

    A Mosaic of Ethnicities

    Thai Life

    Modern Bangkok

    List of pictures

    City of Angels

    Friendly yet elusive, up-to-date yet quaint, Bangkok is a city of confounding contradictions. Its relentless 21st-century modernity, manifested in traffic snarls and industrial-strength pollution, manages to coexist with Buddhist temples and flower-festooned spirit houses that serve as quiet reminders of spiritual tranquility. High-decibel motorized water taxis share the Chao Phraya with ornate, intricately carved royal barges. Thais blend music with their boxing and turn kite-flying into a battle. The government indulges the anything-goes carnality of the Patpong red-light district – and yet bans the movie The King and I for its irreverence to the monarchy.

    For these reasons and many more, Bangkok has consistently piqued, charmed, and mystified visitors. Indeed, as the capital of a country never colonized by a European power (the name Thailand, in fact, translates to Land of the Free), it has held a special mystique for Westerners. Among the European sojourners who have tried to capture the city’s allure was novelist Joseph Conrad. Here and there in the distance, he wrote in the 1880s, above the crowded mob of low, brown roof ridges, tower great piles of masonry, giant palaces, temples, gorgeous and dilapidated, crumbling under the vertical sunlight, tremendous, overpowering, almost palpable. More puckishly, American humorist S. J. Perelman noted in the middle of the 20th century that Bangkok seems to combine the Hannibal, Missouri, of Mark Twain’s boyhood with Beverly Hills, the Low Countries and Chinatown. And latter-day travel writer Pico Iyer has called the Thai metropolis every Westerner’s synthetic, five-star version of what the Orient should be: all the exoticism of the East served up amidst all the conveniences of the West.

    1. A weather beaten barge floats down the Chao Phraya, passing the Grand Palace.

    2. This ornate doorway marks the entrance to a minor Bangkok wat – one of some 400 throughout the city.

    3. Thai artistry is expressed in this temple’s mural and the musical instrument just in front of it.

    It’s rather fitting that so many outsiders have struggled to divine and define Bangkok’s true nature. After all, foreigners don’t even call the city by its real name. Thais refer to their capital – home to roughly 15 percent of the country’s population – as Krung Thep (City of Angels), a shortened version of its true, 175-letter name, which translates to "Great city

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