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Xiangkhouang

Coordinates:19°25′0″N103°30′0″E / 19.41667°N 103.50000°E /19.41667; 103.50000
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Province of Laos
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Province in Laos
Xiangkhouang province
ແຂວງ ຊຽງຂວາງ
Phonsavan Hills
Phonsavan Hills
Map of Xiangkhouang province
Map of Xiangkhouang province
Map showing location of Xiangkhouang province in Laos
Location of Xiangkhouang province in Laos
Coordinates:19°25′0″N103°30′0″E / 19.41667°N 103.50000°E /19.41667; 103.50000
CountryLaos
CapitalPhonsavan
Area
 • Total
14,751 km2 (5,695 sq mi)
Population
 (2020 census)
 • Total
267,172
 • Density18/km2 (47/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)
ISO 3166 codeLA-XI
HDI(2022)Increase 0.647[1]
medium ·4th

Xiangkhouang (Lao:ຊຽງຂວາງ, meaning 'Horizontal City') is a province ofLaos on theXiangkhoang Plateau, in the nation's northeast.[2] The province has the distinction of being the most heavily-bombed place on Earth.[3]

Historically, the province was formerly the independentprincipality ofMuang Phuan. Its later capital isPhonsavan. The population of the province as of the 2015 census was 244,684.[4]

Xiangkhouang province covers an area of 15,880 square kilometres (6,130 sq mi) and is mountainous. Apart fromfloodplains, the largest area of level land in the country is on the province's Xiangkhoang Plateau. The plateau is characterized by rolling hills and grassland whose elevation averages 1,300 metres (4,300 ft). The country's highest peak,Phou Bia (2,820 metres (9,250 ft)), rises at the south side of the plateau.Nam Et-Phou Louey is aNational Biodiversity Conservation Area (NBCA) in the province, covering an area of 5,959 km2, and overlaps intoHouaphanh andLuang Prabang provinces.

The province'sPlain of Jars was designated as aUNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019.[5]

History

[edit]
Plain of Jars, women and girls of Houang

The Tai Phuan or Phuan people are aBuddhist Tai-Lao ethnic group that migrated to Laos from southern China. According to thePongsawadan Meuang Puan ("Muang Puan Chronicles"), they were the first people who migrated in the 13th century from China to settle this province, forming the independent principality ofMuang Phuan on the Plain of Jars, with Xieng Khouang (contemporaryMuang Khoun) as its capital. They established an overland trade in metals and forest products withIndia andChina; the Xieng Khouang Plateau was the center of trade for an area of uplandSoutheast Asia, extending as far asDa Nang inVietnam,Samrong Sen inCambodia, theKhorat Plateau in northeastThailand, and theNorth Cachar Hills ofnortheastern India.[6]

In the 14th century, Muang Phuan was subsumed into theLan Xang kingdom under KingFa Ngum.[7][6][8]Siamese invasions in 1777–1779, 1834–1836, and 1875–1876 sought to resettle the Phuan population into regions under firm Siamese control.[6]

In the 1890s, the province came underFrench colonial rule following the1893 Franco-Siamese crisis. During theSecond Indochina War of the 1960s and 1970s, the province was a battleground in theLaotian Civil War, fought betweenroyalist forces and the communistPathet Lao until 1975, when the Pathet Lao emerged victorious and seized power over all of Laos. Xiangkhouang was the Lao province most bombed by theUnited States Air Force in support of royalist forces led byHmong generalVang Pao, who was born in the province.[9] As a result of thisextensive air campaign,Muong Khoun, the original capital of the province, was virtually razed to the ground, resulting in the capital being moved toPhonsavan. During the wars, most of the 16th–19th century temples were completely destroyed, with onlyWat Phia Wat temple having partially survived.[6]

Geography

[edit]
Phonsavan

Xiangkhouang province covers an area of 15,880 square kilometres (6,130 sq mi) and has a largely mountainous topography.[10] The province bordersLuang Prabang province to the northwest,Houaphanh province to the northeast,Vietnam to the east,Bolikhamsai province to the southeast, andVientiane province to the southwest. The capital is Phonsavan. Xiangkhouang and Vientiane provinces are part of theNam Ngum River watershed.[11]

Apart from floodplains, the largest expanse of level land in the country is on the province's Xiangkhoang Plateau. This area is characterized by rolling hills and grassland whose elevation averages 1,300 metres (4,300 ft). The country's highest peak,Phou Bia (2,820 metres (9,250 ft)), rises at the southern side of the plateau, while the Plain of Jars is at the plateau's centre.[12]

The province is 400 km northeast ofVientiane.Phou Bia, at 2,700 m elevation, is the highest peak in the province, and the highest in Laos. The capital city is at an elevation of about 1,000 mabove mean sea level (AMSL), with Kham District in a low-laying basin at an elevation of about 600 m AMSL.[13]

Protected areas

[edit]

Nam Et-Phou Louey is aNational Biodiversity Conservation Area (NBCA) which covers an area of 5,959 km2 in Xiangkhouang, Houaphanh, and Luang Prabang provinces.[14] The park consists mainly of mountains and hills, with elevations ranging between 336 and 2257 metres. The area is the source of some rivers. It is named after the Nam Et River and Phou Louey ("Forever") Mountain.[15]

The area has a number of endangered species includingtiger,leopard,clouded leopard,Asian golden cat,marbled cat,civet,gaur,Sambar deer,white-cheeked gibbon,sun bear,black bear,Asian elephant,dhole,hornbill and three species ofotter.[15]

Administrative divisions

[edit]

The province is composed of eight districts which cover a total land area of 15,880 square kilometres (6,130 sq mi).[13]Thathom District was moved toXaisomboun province in January 2006.

MapCodeNameLao script
09-01Pek District (Phonsavan)ເມືອງແປກ
09-02Kham Districtເມືອງຄຳ
09-03Nong Het Districtເມືອງໜອງແຮດ
09-04Khoune Districtເມືອງຄູນ
09-05Mok May Districtເມືອງໝອກໃໝ່
09-06Phou Kout Districtເມືອງພູກູດ
09-07Phaxay Districtເມືອງຜາໄຊ

Economy

[edit]
A spoon seller, Ban Napia

Xiangkhouang province is the mainmaize-producing area of Laos.[16] The centre for trade and tourism isPhonsavan. In the village ofBan Napia near Phonsavan, villagers re-use scrap metal fromunexploded ordnance (UXO) to make spoons to be sold as souvenirs. The scrap metal is checked for safety beforehand by UXO Lao. This community-based project provides income for the villagers. As of 2012, three accidents involving UXO had been reported.[17]

Ethnic groups

[edit]
  • Hmong girls
    Hmong girls
  • Bullfight, Hmong New Year
    Bullfight, Hmong New Year
  • Phuan girls in traditional clothing
    Phuan girls in traditional clothing

Tai Dam

[edit]
Main article:Tai Dam people

Tai Dam,Tai Daeng andTai Phuan belong to theTai language family, spoken by 60% of the national population. The Tai Dam migrated from northern Vietnam to Laos 80–300 years ago. They are not Buddhists. Instead, they practice a form of ancestor and spirit worship. Tai Dam are producers of silk and cotton textiles and some women export to overseae markets. Older Tai Dam women wear the traditional blue indigo cotton shirt, skirt, and black turban woven with colored patterns. They produce rice alcohol, calledlao lao that is consumed socially and used for ritual purposes.

Tai Dam settled in upland valleys near streams and irrigable and accessible plains scattered among Lao and Phuan villages. They built rectangular symmetric houses on pilings, with a rice granary under the house. Villages are composed of 15¬60 houses and are not fenced. The people subsist on wet rice, vegetables, poultry, weaving, sewing and hunting.

The ancestors of theTai Phuan once founded the kingdom of the same name.[18]

Khmu

[edit]
Main article:Khmu people

Part of the Mon-Khmer branch of theAustro-Asiatic linguistic family, the Khmu settled in the area some thousand years ago.

Khmu houses are built on stilts. Each village has a communal house where men gather for political discussions, or work together on basket making and other crafts. Like some ethnic groups in Lao the Khmu practice their own form ofanimism. The Khmu are known for their skill at making baskets, fish traps, and other objects from bamboo. Their material culture, their tools, utensils, baskets and netbags reflect their continued reliance on the forest. Growing rice, hunting, gathering forest products and producing handicrafts provide some cash income. They distilllao hai ("jar alcohol").

Hmong

[edit]
Main article:Hmong people

Hmong people migrated from China to Laos between 1800 and 1900. Having a desire for independence, they rebelled against Chinese attempts to control and settle them and fled in successive waves southwards. During the Lao Civil war in the 1960s and 1970s, Hmong were recruited by the CIA's "Secret Army", commanded by Hmong General Vang Pao. Hmong villages were relocated in free-fire zones, and some died during these evacuations or due to fighting. When the communists came to power in 1975, tens of thousands of Hmong fled to Thailand or emigrated to the US. Today, remittances from the diaspora are an economic factor in the province, fueling construction activity.

The Hmong accounts for 6-10% of the total population of Laos, and remain most numerous and concentrated in eastern Xiangkhouang. In the province the White Hmong, the Striped Hmong, and the Green Hmong can be distinguished. A way to differentiate these groups is by looking at the women's dresses.

Hmong live in forested mountains between 800 and 1,500 meters elevation, and in Laos they are categorized as Lao Soung ("highland people"). Hmong villages range in size from 15 to over 60 houses; they are not fenced and are organized by clan. The rectangular houses are on beaten soil and have one room without windows. The walls are made of vertical wood planks and bamboo and a thatched roof. Hmong are known for their knowledge of the forest, herbal medicines, and expertise in raising animals. Their agricultural system is based on rain-fed slope cultivation withslash-and-burn techniques. They live on rice, corn and vegetable production, swine and poultry husbandry, gathering, hunting, embroidery, and basket work.

Their religion is a form of shamanistic animism with a cult of ancestors and spirits, and a belief in three souls. Certain spirits protect the people within the village boundaries, while others maintain their influence over the plant and animal kingdom outside the village.

Hmong women are known for their embroidery and weaving. Traditionally, clothes are made from hemp and cotton. Batik is used only by Green Hmong for their skirts. Before dying, the cloth the pattern is marked with wax. The wax is then removed to reveal the pattern. The wax is applied with a batik pen and the design is completed square by square. Some geometric patterns exist and are passed on from mother to daughter. The material is pleated by running a sharp-edged stone along the pleat lines on alternate sides of the cloth, and sewing the poles into place at the waistband. These skirts and some other items of Hmong clothing are embroidered. Embroidery and applique is a social activity, a time for women to sit together and exchange views and news.

Hmong New Year celebrations in December, starting from the 15th day of the ascending moon, are accompanied by activities including top-spinning competitions, dances, songs, and bull fights. It is one of the occasions for finding a wife or a husband. Men and women toss themakkono, a fabric ball, as part of a courting ritual which can go on for hours. During the festivities, Hmong women wear their traditional dresses, adorned with embroidery and silver jewelry.

Landmarks

[edit]

The tourism department of Laos has listed 63 “notable landmarks” in the province. 32 are natural sites, 18 are cultural sites, and 13 are historical sites.[13] Of these, some are the following:[19]

Plain of Jars archaeological site 1

The first landmark is thePlain of Jars. The "jars" are 2,100 tubular-shapedmegalithic stone jars used for funerary purposes. The jars range from 1–3 metres (3 ft 3 in – 9 ft 10 in) in height. They are found throughout the province in clusters containing from one to some hundred jars each. The jars date from theIron Age (500 BCE–500 CE).[20] Nearest to Phonsavan is Jar Site 1, with an area of 25hectares (ha). The largest jar found here is 2.5 m x 2.5 m, while the rest are half this size. One jar has decorations on it.[19][21] The megalithic jar sites of Xiangkhouang were inscribed on UNESCO's list ofWorld Heritage Sites in July 2019.[20]

The ruins of Wat Phia Wat Temple and its Buddha statue, which was almost completely destroyed during the First and Second Indochina Wars

Muang Khoun was the capital of the Phuan Kingdom of the 14th century. It is southeast of Phonsavan. At the Wat Phia Wat Temple, destroyed during the conflicts of the First Indochina War (1946–1954) and theSecond Vietnam War (1955–1975), the ruins of a stone wall with brick archways, relics of French colonial rule of over this part of Laos and from the whole country, a statue of Buddha, broken pillars and sections of walls remain and are visible and accessible. Once buried in the tropical forest, the That Founstupa, dating back some 450 years, can be seen near the road outside Phonsavan.[19] In an ethnic village of the Phuan, to the south of Phonsavan,Ban Napi mounds of war scrap can be seen buried in tableware. During the 1980s, eight families came together and assembled bits and pieces of aluminum from damaged, crashed or shot-downUnited States Air Force aircraft, and aircraft from US-aligned air forces (such as theRoyal Lao Air Force) in mounds of melted metal, lack, wood and ash. Such war debris and wreckage can be found scattered between the Lang Waterfall and Jar Site 3 of the Plain of Jars.[19]

A secret tunnel was constructed below the hills of the Phu Kheng Jar Quarry Site during the Second Indochina War. The tunnel is 70 metres (230 ft) in length and 1.6 metres (5 ft 3 in) in height. Reinforced-concrete bunkers with night-camps are visible nearby.[19]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab".hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved6 February 2025.[not specific enough to verify]
  2. ^"Base Map:Lao People's Democratic Republic (LPDR".UNOSAT. Retrieved4 December 2012.
  3. ^Gilhooly, Rob (5 July 2000)."The Plain of Jars: A place of war and death".The Japan Times. Retrieved16 May 2020.
  4. ^"Provinces of Laos".Statoids. Retrieved1 November 2012.
  5. ^"Megalithic Jar Sites in Xiengkhuang – Plain of Jars". UNESCO. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  6. ^abcd"Xieng Khouang History".Tourism Marketing Department, Lao PDR. Archived fromthe original on 1 July 2014. Retrieved6 December 2012.
  7. ^Provincial Tourism Department Xieng Khouang, A Guide to Xieng Khouang
  8. ^Stuart-Fox, Martin (1998).The Lao Kingdom of Lān Xāng: Rise and Decline. White Lotus Press.ISBN 9789748434339. Retrieved18 November 2020.
  9. ^Cranmer, Jeff; Martin, Steven; Coxon, Kirby (1 November 2002).Laos. Rough Guides. pp. 199–.ISBN 978-1-85828-905-2. Retrieved11 December 2012.
  10. ^"Xiengkhouang Province".Lao Tourism Organization. Archived fromthe original on 12 September 2012. Retrieved3 December 2012.
  11. ^Ahmed, M.; Hirsch, Philip (2000).Common Property in the Mekong: Issues of Sustainability and Subsistence. The World Fish Center. p. 62.ISBN 978-971-802-008-1.
  12. ^Mansfield, Stephen; Koh, Magdalene (1 September 2008).Laos. Marshall Cavendish. p. 9.ISBN 978-0-7614-3035-3. Retrieved3 December 2012.
  13. ^abc"Xieng Khouang Overview".Tourism Marketing Department, Lao PDR. Archived fromthe original on 1 July 2014. Retrieved6 December 2012.
  14. ^Kamler, Jan (10 November 2010)."The Ecology of Dholes in a Zoned Reserve in Laos".The Rufford Foundation. Retrieved16 May 2020.
  15. ^ab"Nam Et–Phou Louey National Protected Area".Nam Et–Phou Louey National Protected Area / Wildlife Conservation Society. 1 December 2012. Archived fromthe original on 4 April 2012.
  16. ^Lao People's Democratic Republic: Second Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (EPub). International Monetary Fund. 21 October 2008. p. 54.ISBN 978-1-4527-9182-1. Retrieved6 December 2012.
  17. ^"War Spoon Village Ban Napia". Tabeaglahs.wordpress.com. Retrieved11 December 2012.
  18. ^"Mekong Lao Phuan Profile". Archived from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved17 May 2020.
  19. ^abcde"Highlights in Xieng Khouang".Tourism Marketing Department, Lao PDR. Archived fromthe original on 28 May 2013. Retrieved18 November 2020.
  20. ^ab"Megalithic Jar Sites in Xiengkhuang – Plain of Jars".UNESCO World Heritage Centre. UN. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  21. ^"Xiengkhouang Province".The Lao National Tourism Administration. Archived fromthe original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved6 December 2012.

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
This article containsLao text. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead ofLao script.
Districts of Northern Laos
Bokeo province
Houaphanh province
Luang Namtha province
Luang Prabang province
Oudomxay province
Phongsaly province
Sainyabuli province
Xiangkhouang province
denotes provincial seat.
Places adjacent to Xiangkhouang
Prefecture
Flag of Laos
Province
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