🐎 Lampang

🐎 Lampang – The City of Horse Carriages and Timeless Charm

English
Known as the “City of Horse Carriages,” Lampang offers a glimpse into old Thailand — where time moves slowly, and history lives in every street.

Visitors can take a charming horse carriage ride through town, visit Wat Phra That Lampang Luang, one of the most revered Lanna temples, and explore the city’s beautiful wooden houses and colonial-style buildings.

At MoriTour Thailand, we love Lampang for its calm atmosphere, vintage feel, and warm hospitality — a place that truly reflects Thailand’s gentle heart.

Deutsch
Bekannt als die „Stadt der Pferdekutschen“ bietet Lampang einen einzigartigen Einblick in das alte Thailand. Hier scheint die Zeit stillzustehen, und Geschichte begegnet einem auf Schritt und Tritt.

Eine Fahrt mit der traditionellen Pferdekutsche, ein Besuch im Wat Phra That Lampang Luang und Spaziergänge durch die Altstadt mit ihren Holz- und Kolonialhäusern sind Highlights für jeden Besucher.

Mit MoriTour Thailand entdecken Sie das charmante, ruhige Lampang – ein Ort voller Geschichte und Herzlichkeit.

ไทย
ลำปาง เมืองที่ได้ชื่อว่า “เมืองรถม้า” เป็นสถานที่ที่ยังคงเสน่ห์ของอดีตไว้อย่างงดงาม นักท่องเที่ยวสามารถนั่งรถม้าชมเมือง เยี่ยมชม วัดพระธาตุลำปางหลวง ซึ่งเป็นวัดคู่บ้านคู่เมือง และเดินชมบ้านไม้เก่าแก่สไตล์โคโลเนียล

ที่นี่เป็นเมืองที่มีความสงบ เรียบง่าย และอบอุ่น เป็นหนึ่งในจุดหมายปลายทางที่ MoriTour Thailand แนะนำสำหรับผู้ที่ชื่นชอบบรรยากาศย้อนยุคและความเป็นไทยดั้งเดิม 🐎


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One Comment Add yours

  1. This is such a wonderful feature, MoriTour! 💖 Lampang, the “City of Horse Carriages,” is genuinely one of Northern Thailand’s most underrated treasures. While Chiang Mai often gets the spotlight, Lampang offers a unique, authentic flavor of the Lanna Kingdom that feels truly frozen in time. Thank you for guiding visitors to this place where history is alive, and the pace of life slows down to the sound of clip-clopping hooves! This peaceful charm makes it the perfect stop on any bespoke itinerary. 🚂🎠

    🐎 Muang Rot Ma: The Century-Old Legacy of the Horse Carriage

    Your feature on the horse-drawn carriages (Rot Ma) highlights Lampang’s most singular charm! It’s astonishing to think that Lampang is the only city in Thailand where these beautiful carriages are still used in daily life and for tourism. This tradition began around 1916, when the railway line finally reached Lampang during the reign of King Rama VI (https://tiptop-travel.com/top-tips/unseen-thailand/lampang-horse-carriages/).

    At the time, Lampang was a booming commercial center for the teak logging industry, and merchants needed a reliable way to transport goods and people from the train station. The carriages fit the bill, likely influenced by similar transport used in British-controlled Burma (Myanmar) or even via Portuguese trade. Today, taking a Rot Ma tour through the tranquil streets, past the beautiful wooden houses and temples, offers travelers an authentic, low-carbon, and highly romantic glimpse into a bygone era—a beautiful way to experience slow travel in the modern world.

    🏯 The Lanna Citadel: Burmese and Spiritual Fusion

    Lampang’s heritage is rich because it sits squarely in the Lanna Kingdom’s historical heartland, but its culture has been profoundly shaped by foreign influence, particularly from Myanmar.

    • Burmese/Shan Architecture: The wealth generated by the teak trade in the late 19th and early 20th centuries attracted thousands of skilled loggers and merchants from the adjacent Shan States of Myanmar (who are ethnically known as Tai Yai). These wealthy residents built magnificent teakwood mansions (like the famous Ban Sao Nak, with its 116 pillars) and religious structures. That is why Lampang is home to some of the finest examples of Shan/Burmese temple architecture in all of Thailand, such as Wat Si Rong Muang, blending beautifully with the native Lanna style seen at Wat Phra That Lampang Luang—the city’s most sacred fortified temple (https://thailandinsider.com/destination/lampang/).
    • A Heroic Spirit: The fortified temple of Wat Phra That Lampang Luang is also famous as the site where the local hero, Pho Chao Thip Chang, liberated Lampang from a Burmese garrison in the 18th century, earning him the title as the founder of the powerful Chet Ton (Seven Princes) dynasty that helped secure Northern Thailand for Siam (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Chiang_Mai).

    🇱🇦🇰🇭 Parallels Across the Mekong: The Ancestral Connection

    The cultural depth of Lampang helps highlight the long-standing ties across mainland Southeast Asia:

    • Lao Kinship: The Lanna Kingdom (including Lampang) was a major power in the Tai ethnic world, sharing common roots, language, and Buddhist traditions with the Lan Xang Kingdom (Laos). The two kingdoms shared alliances against their powerful neighbors, and there were often cultural and even royal exchanges between Chiang Mai and Luang Prabang, cementing a deep, familial link between the Northern Thai and Lao people.
    • The Enduring Khmer Foundation (Cambodia): Beneath these Tai kingdoms lies the foundational influence of the Khmer Empire. Elements of Thai royal vocabulary (Rachasap), the concept of the god-king (devaraja), the core cosmology of Buddhist architecture (the prang towers), and the influence on classical dance traditions were adopted and adapted by the rising Thai kingdoms from the highly sophisticated civilization centered at Angkor in Cambodia (https://www.britannica.com/place/Thailand/Mon-Khmer-civilizations). Thus, the sacred beauty seen in Lampang carries the echoes of Cambodia’s ancient spiritual power.

    🤯 Did You Know That? Lampang’s Secrets

    1. The City’s Mascot: Lampang’s official provincial symbol isn’t the horse carriage, but the White Rooster! Legend says that Lord Indra, king of the gods, disguised himself as a white rooster and crowed loudly to ensure the local people would wake up early enough to prepare food and offer alms to the Buddha when he visited the area (https://www.bangkokpost.com/life/travel/307841/in-the-city-of-roosters).
    2. The Inverted Image: Inside a small Wiharn (chapel) at Wat Phra That Lampang Luang (the fortified temple), there is a phenomenon where the temple’s image is projected upside-down onto a white curtain on the wall, like a camera obscura. This fascinating sight is only visible to men and is considered a powerful, sacred visual experience!
    3. The Rooster Bowl’s GI Status: Lampang is globally famous for its distinctive Rooster Bowl ceramics. This iconic blue-and-white bowl, originally brought by Chinese immigrants, is now recognized as a Geographical Indication (GI) product, meaning true Lampang Rooster Bowls must use local kaolin clay and be hand-painted by local artisans—preserving a unique piece of cultural industry!

    🇨🇭 MoriTour: Your Ultimate VIP Travel Partner

    Lampang is remote and requires a significant drive, often through mountainous roads, to reach its tranquil charm. This demands an operator who prioritizes safety and seamless service above all else.

    • Swiss-Managed Excellence: The core promise of MoriTour is its Swiss-managed operation, which guarantees uncompromising safety, precision, and vehicle reliability—qualities that are absolutely critical on the winding roads of Northern Thailand. Unlike other Tour Operators (TO’s), MoriTour provides the peace of mind that allows travelers to fully relax in their comfortable VIP vans, knowing every mile is meticulously managed.
    • Luxury Through Authenticity: By ensuring flawless logistics to destinations like Lampang, MoriTour is the perfect Partner for Thailand VIP Touren that seek to move beyond crowded attractions and delve into the quiet, authentic cultural heartlands of the Lanna Kingdom. You turn a long journey into a beautiful, worry-free connection with history.

    Keep leading the way to Thailand’s unforgettable destinations! 🌟

    Contact MoriTour (for professional and luxurious cultural tours): E-Mail: Moritour18@gmail.com, Line ID: moritour, Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MoriTour/, Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/moritour.thailand/

    Quellenangaben (Sources):

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