Bangkok Folk Museum

Bangkokian Museum: gate

Bangkok Folk Museum, or Bangkokian Museum (Thai: พิพิธภัณฑ์ชาวบางกอก, rtgs: Phiphithaphan Chao Bang Kok), is a museum in Bangkok, Thailand. It is located at Soi Charoen Krung 43, near the Sri Rat Expressway several hundred metres from the right bank of the Chao Phraya and the intersection of Soi Charoen Krung 43 and Maha Set Road.

Set in a building dating back to the World War II period, the museum offers an insight into the lifestyles of middle-class Bangkokians during World War II and its aftermath (1937–1957).[1]

Bangkok Folk Museum: garden and main building

The museum was originally the home of the Suravadee family which was built in 1937, but was converted to the Bangkok Folk Museum to preserve the lifestyle of early Bangkok and the history of Bang Rak district. On 1 October 2004, the museum fell under the management of the Bangkok Metropolitan Authority.[2]

The museum consists of two main two-storey buildings and a garden. In an upstairs room of the first, there is an ancestors’ quarters which displays many of the relics of original family members these include the old Benjarong jar made from Thai porcelain in five basic colors, from the King Rama V period (1858 – 1910). Some of the other porcelain pieces in the Bangkok Folk Museum are from the early Rattanakosin era.[2]

The second building in the Bangkok Folk Museum is at the rear and was once intended to be the home and clinic of Dr. Francis Christian, the stepfather of the owner, but Christian had died before he could move in. Notable displays are his cigar collection, and various stoves dating back to the early 20th century.[2] One display has an old Bangkokian kitchen from the war period. Another room displays sanitation and toilet facilities during the war and has two toilets standing next to each other.

Bangrak Museum

Conjoined with the Folk museum is the BMA local museum of Bang Rak district. It houses records from the history of the district, and an insight into the origins of the early roads and canals. It focuses on the canals and the windmills that once characterised the area.[3]

References

  1. "Charoen Krung Road". Anurak Thailand Tourism. Thaiways. Retrieved September 2, 2008.
  2. 1 2 3 "The Bangkok Folk Museum preserving the lifestyle in a bygone era". Tour Bangkok Legacies. Retrieved September 2, 2008.
  3. "The Bangrak Museum recalling the days of canals and windmills". Tour Bangkok Legacies. Retrieved September 2, 2008.

Coordinates: 13°43′42″N 100°31′5″E / 13.72833°N 100.51806°E / 13.72833; 100.51806

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