Celadon Kiln Site Study and Conservation Centre (Thuriang Kiln)
Celadon Kiln Site Study and Conservation Centre (Thuriang Kiln)
Celadon Kiln Site Study and Conservation Centre (Thuriang Kiln)
4.2
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Most Recent: Reviews ordered by most recent publish date in descending order.
Detailed Reviews: Reviews ordered by recency and descriptiveness of user-identified themes such as wait time, length of visit, general tips, and location information.
4.2
5 reviews
Excellent
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Very good
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Average
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TravelerTrecker
Houston827 contributions
Nov 2017 • Friends
It is located 5 kms from si Satchanalai Park. You need a car. We have a driver who took us here and to the Si Satchanalai Park and several other temples. Our hotel was in Sukhothai.
The site has value as it tells you about the origins of the Thai people and their expression through ceramic production. People from these region produced nice glazed pottery and the manufacturing is a very interesting and complicated process. Very few people visit this site. You have to pay a 100 Baht ticket. The museum is well-presented. It has a roof and you have to remove your shoes. It looks clean. There are many explanations. They are in English and Thai. I found it interesting. It is not mandatory. However, it adds knowledge to a cultural visit to Thailand. It reminds you of an old important economic activity that was important to the region and went into decline after trading with other cultures like China. The ceramics production has reactivated in this region again and is known as the Sanghkalok ceramics.
I think, the Thai authorities should include this visit in the ticket to the Sukhothai park. In reality is not an impressive site and its inclusion within the ticket may attract foreign visitors.
The site has value as it tells you about the origins of the Thai people and their expression through ceramic production. People from these region produced nice glazed pottery and the manufacturing is a very interesting and complicated process. Very few people visit this site. You have to pay a 100 Baht ticket. The museum is well-presented. It has a roof and you have to remove your shoes. It looks clean. There are many explanations. They are in English and Thai. I found it interesting. It is not mandatory. However, it adds knowledge to a cultural visit to Thailand. It reminds you of an old important economic activity that was important to the region and went into decline after trading with other cultures like China. The ceramics production has reactivated in this region again and is known as the Sanghkalok ceramics.
I think, the Thai authorities should include this visit in the ticket to the Sukhothai park. In reality is not an impressive site and its inclusion within the ticket may attract foreign visitors.
Written December 11, 2017
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