Non Mueang ancient city
16°30′51″N 102°05′51.1″E / 16.51417°N 102.097528°E
เมืองโบราณบ้านคูเมือง | |
Location | Chum Phae, Khon Kaen, Thailand |
---|---|
Type | Human settlement |
Area | 0.38 square kilometres (38 ha) |
History | |
Material | Brick, Laterite, Sandstone, Ceramics |
Founded | c. 8th century BCE |
Abandoned | c. 12th century CE |
Periods | Pre-history |
Cultures | |
Associated with | |
Site notes | |
Discovered | 1970 |
Excavation dates | 1982 |
Archaeologists | Fine Arts Department |
Condition | Mostly destroyed |
Ownership | Private |
Public access | Yes |
Mueang Boran Non Mueang or Non Mueang Ancient Town (Thai: เมืองโบราณโนนเมือง) was a moated ancient settlement in Chum Phae, Khon Kaen, northeastern Thailand.[1][2] It was first inhabitate around the 8th century BCE[2] and evolved into a complex society in the 7th century during the Dvaravati period, then was abandoned around the 12th century.[1]
Non Mueang was a supra-regional center of the Dvaravati civilization, together with Si Thep, Champasri, Mueang Fa Daet Song Yang, Dong Mueang Aem, and others, but little known about its political structure.[3]: 152 It could have previously been the center of an ancient kingdom.[3]: 151–52
Non Mueang has been listed as an ancient site of Khon Kaen Province since it was discovered in 1970.[1]
Layout and location
[edit]Mueang Boran Non Mueang is located in the Chum Phae subdistrict in Khon Kaen province of Thailand. The inner city is an oval-shaped mound covering an area of approximately 27 hectares, surrounded by a 15–40-meter wide moat, whereas the outer city has a 650-meter diameter defined by a 40-meter width moat.[4] However, only the southeast side of the outer moat survives; the rest has been filled in and destroyed, but the furrows remain visible from overhead views.[2]
The mound is approximately five meters above the surrounding agricultural fields. The presence of a large moat indicates that the city was the center of smaller communities in the area.[1]
Findings
[edit]Archaeological surveys and excavations performed in 1970, 1982–83, and 1991–92[1] found the site was inhabited since the prehistory era; 17 human skeletons dated 2,500 years were burial with tools, and utensils, such as pots and pottery containers with both painted and scratched designs and rope-marked designs, as well as bronze bracelets, animal bone bracelets, shells, colored stone beads, etc.[1][4] Some Dvaravati's sandstone Bai Semas were found in the inner city. Small pieces of pottery are scattered across the mound. These pottery pieces were either red painted, scratched, or rope-patterned in the soil layers of the Dvaravati period (7th-10th centuries). No evidence of burial was found in this layer.[4]
The site was continuously occupied during the Lopburi period and was abandoned after the 12th century.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Dek Chai Phak Elert. ""โนนเมือง" ชุมชนโบราณยุคก่อนประวัติศาสตร์ในพื้นที่อีสานตอนบน" [“Non Muang”, a prehistoric community in the upper northeastern region]. www.silpa-mag.com (in Thai). Retrieved 5 January 2025.
- ^ a b c "โนนเมือง" [Non Mueang]. suvarnabhumi.psu.ac.th (in Thai). 2024. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
- ^ a b Pariwat Chiamchit; Thanik Lertcharnri (12 July 2019). "การตั้งถิ่นฐานสมัยโบราณในพื้นที่ลุ่มแม่น้ำชีตอนบน ก่อนพุทธศตวรรษที่ 19" [Ancient Settlement Pattern in the Upper Chi River Basin Prior to the 14th Century A.D.] (PDF). Silpakorn University (in Thai). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 January 2025. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
- ^ a b c d "เมืองโบราณโนนเมือง" [Non Mueang Ancient Town]. Tourism Authority of Thailand (in Thai). Archived from the original on 5 January 2025. Retrieved 5 January 2025.