Thailand Hotel Booking

Hotel in Thailand are often required for tourists who require short term accommodation. Some may want to stay at large or small hotels in the nation. Some may want to stay at high quality hotels in the country. Some may want to stay at old or new hotels in the nation. Hotels in the nation are often needed for people who want to visit the nation. Some may want to stay at top quality hotels. Some may want to stay hotels that have new or old designs. They may want to stay at hotels that have Thailand design features.

Hotels in Thailand are often required for tourists who need a place to stay.

The Kingdom of Thailand is an independent country that lies in the heart of Southeast Asia. It is bordered to the north by Laos and Myanmar, to the east by Laos and Cambodia, to the south by the Gulf of Thailand and Malaysia, and to the west by the Andaman Sea and Myanmar. By the maritime boundary, the country is bordered to the southeast by Vietnam in the Gulf of Thailand, to the southwest by Indonesia and India in the Andaman Sea.

The capital and largest city of Thailand is Bangkok. It is also the country's center of political, commercial, industrial and cultural activities. Bangkok is known in Thai as Krung Thep Mahanakorn, or, more colloquially, Krung Thep.

The earliest speakers of the Tai language migrated from southern China, following rivers into northern Thailand and southward to the Mekong and the Chao Phraya Valley.

The fertile floodplain and tropical monsoon climate, ideally suited to wet rice (thamna) cultivation, attracted settlers to this central area rather than to the marginal uplands and mountains of the northern region or the Khorat Plateau to the northeast.

By the 12th century, a number of loosely connected rice-growing and trading states flourished in the upper Chao Phraya Valley. Starting in the middle of the 14th century, these central chiefdoms gradually came under the control of the Ayutthaya kingdom at the southern extremity of the floodplain. Successive capitals, built at various points along the river, became centers of great Thai kingdoms based on rice cultivation and foreign commerce. Unlike the neighboring Khmer and Burmese, the Thai continued to look outward across the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea toward foreign ports of trade. When European imperialism brought a new phase in Southeast Asian commerce in the late 1800s, Thailand (known then as Siam) was able to maintain its independence as a buffer zone between British-controlled Burma to the west and French dominated Indochina to the east.

The earliest speakers of the Tai language migrated from southern China, following rivers into northern Thailand and southward to the Mekong and the Chao Phraya Valley. The fertile floodplain and tropical monsoon climate, ideally suited to wet-rice cultivation, attracted settlers to this central area rather than to the marginal uplands and mountains of the northern region or the Khorat Plateau to the northeast. By the 12th century, a number of loosely connected rice-growing and trading states flourished in the upper Chao Phraya Valley. Starting in the middle of the 14th century, these central chiefdoms gradually came under the control of the Ayutthaya kingdom at the southern extremity of the floodplain. Successive capitals, built at various points along the river, became centers of great Thai kingdoms based on rice cultivation and foreign commerce. Unlike the neighboring Khmer and Burmese, the Thai continued to look outward across the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea toward foreign ports of trade.

The most conspicuous features of Thailand's terrain are high mountains, a central plain, and an upland plateau. Mountains cover much of northern Thailand and extend along the Myanmar border down through the Kra Isthmus and the Malay Peninsula. The central plain is a lowland area drained by the Chao Phraya River and its tributaries, the country's principal river system, which feeds into the delta at the head of the Bay of Bangkok. The Chao Phraya system drains about one-third of the nation's territory. In the northeastern part of the country the Khorat Plateau, a region of gently rolling low hills and shallow lakes, drains into the Mekong through the Mun River. The Mekong system empties into the South China Sea and includes a series of canals and dams.

Sukhumvit Road is a major highway in Thailand, and a major surface road of Bangkok and other cities it winds through. It follows a coastal route from Bangkok to Trat and is just over 400km in length.

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Thailand Hotel Booking

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