Introduction
District and municipality in Laos
For other uses, see Luang Prabang (disambiguation).
District & municipality in LaosLuang Prabang
LouangphabangDistrict & municipalityLuang Prabang DistrictAeriel view of Luang PrabangWat Xieng ThongLuang Prabang Night MarketWat Mai SuwannaphumahamMount Phou Si Royal Palace of Luang PrabangWat Pa Phon PhaoLuang PrabangLocation in LaosCoordinates: 19°53′24″N 102°08′05″E / 19.89000°N 102.13472°E / 19.89000; 102.13472Country LaosProvinceLuang PrabangDistrictLuang Prabang DistrictEstablished as Muang Sua698Controlled by Nanzhao709Khmer vassal950Formation of Lan Xang1353Government • TypeLocal Committee for World Heritage LouangphabangElevation305 m (1,001 ft)Population • Total55,027Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)Post Code06000Websitehttp://tourismluangprabang.org/
UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaCultural: ii, iv, vReference479Inscription1995 (19th Session)Area820 haBuffer zone12,560 ha
Luang Prabang (Lao: ຫລວງພະບາງ), historically known as Xieng Thong, and alternatively spelled Luang Phabang or Louangphabang, is the capital of Luang Prabang Province in north-central Laos. Its name, meaning “Royal Buddha Image,” derives from the Phra Bang, a statue symbolizing Lao sovereignty. Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995, the city is recognized for blending Lao architecture, European colonial buildings, and over 30 Buddhist temples. The protected area encompasses 33 of its 58 villages, where daily rituals like the morning alms-giving ceremony persist.
History
[edit]
Dvaravati city state kingdoms[edit]
Further information: Muang Sua
By the 6th century in the Chao Phraya River Valley, Mon peoples had coalesced to create the Dvaravati kingdoms. In the north, Haripunjaya (Lamphun) emerged as a rival power to the Dvaravati. By the 8th century the Mon had pushed north to create city states in Fa Daet (later is Kalasin, northeastern Thailand); Sri Gotapura (Sikhottabong) near what later is Tha Khek, Laos; Muang Sua (Luang Prabang); and Chantaburi (Vientiane). In the 8th century CE, Sri Gotapura (Sikhottabong) controlled trade throughout the middle Mekong region. The city states introduced Therevada Buddhism from Sri Lankan missionaries throughout the region.: 6, 7 
View of Luang Prabang, 1897
Lan Xang[edit]
Xieng Dong Xieng Thong experienced a period of Khmer suzerainty under Jayavarman VII from 1185 to 1191. In 1238 an internal uprising in the Khmer outpost of Sukhothai expelled the Khmer overlords. Xieng Dong Xieng Thong in 1353 became the capital of the Lan Xang kingdom. In 1359 the Khmer king from Angkor gave the Phra Bang to his son-in-law, the first Lang Xang monarch Fa Ngum (1353–1373); to provide Buddhist legitimacy to Fa Ngum's rule and by extension to the sovereignty of Laos and was used to spread Theravada Buddhism in the kingdom. The capital name was changed to Luangphabang, where it was kept, named after the Buddha image.: 225–226  Luang Prabang was occupied by the Vietnamese forces during Emperor Lê Thánh Tông's 1478–1480 expedition against Lan Xang and Lanna.
Market in Luang Prabang, pre-1901
In 1707, Lan Xang fell apart because of a dynastic struggle and Luang Prabang became the capital of the Kingdom of Luang Phrabang. When France annexed Laos, the French recognised Luang Prabang as the royal residence of Laos. Eventually, the ruler of Luang Prabang became synonymous with the figurehead of Laos. When Laos achieved independence, the king of Luang Prabang, Sisavang Vong, became the head of state of the Kingdom of Laos.
World War II[edit]
Damage caused by a communist ground attack on Luang Prabang airfield, 1967
The town was the scene of events during and in the aftermath of World War II and it was occupied by foreign countries during the war (Vichy France, Thailand, Imperial Japan, Free France, and Nationalist China). Initially the Vichy French controlled the city and lost it to Thai forces following the Franco-Thai War of 1940–1941. On 9 March 1945, a nationalist group declared Laos once more independent, with Luang Prabang as its capital and on 7 April 1945 2 battalions of Japanese troops occupied the city. The Japanese attempted to force Sisavang Vong (the King of Luang Prabang) to declare Laotian independence and on 8 April he instead simply declared an end to Laos' status as a French protectorate. The King then secretly sent Prince Kindavong to represent Laos to the Allied forces and Sisavang Vatthana as representative to the Japanese. Following Japan's surrender to the Allies, Free French forces were sent to reoccupy Laos and entered Luang Prabang on 25 August, at which time the King assured the French that Laos remained a French colonial protectorate. In September the Chinese Nationalist forces arrived to receive the surrender of the remaining Japanese forces and set about buying up the Laotian opium crop.
Laotian Civil War[edit]
In April and May 1946, the French attempted to recapture Laos by using paratroops to retake Vientiane and Luang Prabang and drive Phetsarath and the Lao Issara ministers out of Laos and into Thailand and Vietnam. During the First Indochina War, the Viet Minh and Pathet Lao forces attempted to capture the city in 1953 and 1954, and French forces stopped them before they could reach it.