Thailand
In Brief : Thailand
is a Southeast Asian, predominantly
Buddhist kingdom almost equidistant
between India and China. For centuries
known by outsiders as Siam,

Thailand
has been something of a Southeast
Asian migratory, cultural and religious
cross-roads. With an area of some
510,000 square kilometres and a
population of some 57 million.
Thailand is approximately the same
size as France. Thailand shares
borders with Myanmar to the west
and north, Laos to the north-east,
Kampuchea to the west, and Malaysia
to the south. Geographically speaking,
Thailand is divided into six major
regions: the mountainous north where
elephants work forests and winter
temperatures are sufficiently cool
to permit cultivation of temperate
fruits such as strawberries and
peaches; the sprawling north-east
plateau, largely bordered by the
Mekong River, where the world's
oldest Bronze Age civilisation flourished
some 5,000 years ago; the central
plain, one of the world's most fertile
rice and fruit-growing areas; the
eastern coastal plain, where fine
sandy beaches support the growth
of summer resorts; western mountains
and valleys, suitable for the development
of hydro-electric power: and the
peninsular south where arresting
scenic beauty complements economically
vital tin mining, robber cultivation
and fishing.
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