Hua Hin
About Hua Hin
Hua Hin District is one of the eight districts Amphi of Prachuap Kheri Khan Province in the northern part of the Malay Peninsula in Thailand. Its seat of government, also called Hua Hin, is a beach resort town. In the area of 911 km2, the district administration had a population of 63,091 in December 2017 by the Registration Bureau. By road, it is 199 km south-southwest of Bangkok. In 1834, before the name of Hua Hin, some agricultural areas of Fatechouri province were in the grip of severe drought.
A group of farmers moved towards the south until they found a small village, with a bright white sand and a line of rocks along the coastline. They settled there and named it Riyang Samo Riyang in front of it, which means' rocks of rocks. In 1921, Prince Purachatra, the director of the State Railway, made the railway hotel close to the coast. Prince Chrome Fra Nreserve was the first member of the Royal Family, who built a group of palaces in Ban Lem Hin, which was called Sukewes, and named "Hua Hin" next to his palace.
King Prasadipok Ram VII liked this place so much that he built a summer palace there, which was later named as Kali Kang Won from the concerns. From 2004 to 2006, this was the full-time residence of Raja Bhumibol Adulyadej Ram IX, till the issues of health forced him to return to Siraj Hospital in Bangkok, where medical facilities and doctors were in charge. In 1949 Hua Hin was part of the Pran Bari district Raja Amphi as a minor district. Hina had become a separate district in 1949, which was of Khachari Khan of Prichip.