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CHIENG See also: state of the same name and of the provincial division of Siam called Bayap, situated in 990 0' E., 18° 46' N
.
The See also: town, enclosed by massive but decaying walls, lies on the right See also: bank of the See also: river Me Ping, one of the branches of the Me Nam, in a plain Boo ft. above See also: sea-level, surrounded by high, wooded mountains
.
It has streets intersecting at right angles, and an enceinte within which is the palace of the Chao, or hereditary chief
.
The See also: east and west See also: banks of the river are connected by a See also: fine See also: teak See also: bridge
.
The See also: American Presbyterian See also: Mission, established here in 1867, has a large number of converts and has done much See also: good educational See also: work
.
Chieng See also: Mai, which the Burmese have corrupted into Zimme, by which name it is known to many Europeans, has long been an important See also: trade centre, resorted to by See also: Chinese merchants from the See also: north and east, and by Burmese, See also: Shans and Siamese from the west and See also: south
.
It is, moreover, the centre of the teak trade of Siam, in which many Burmese and several Chinese and See also: European firms are engaged
.
The See also: total value of the import and export trade of the Bayap division amounts to about £2,500,000 a See also: year
.
The Siamese high See also: commissioner of Bayap division has his See also: head-quarters in Chieng Mai, and though the hereditary chief continues as the nominal ruler, as is also the See also: case in the other Lao states of Nan, Pre, Lampun, Napawn Lampang and Tern, which make up the division, the See also: government is entirely in the hands of that official and his staff
.
The government See also: forest department,
i founded in 1896, has done good work in the division, and the conservator of forests has his headquarters in Chieng Mai
.
The headquarters of an army division are also situated here
.
A See also: British See also: consul resides at Chieng Mai, where, in addition to the ordinary See also: law courts, there is an See also: international See also: court having jurisdiction in all cases in which British subjects are parties
.
The population, about 20,000, consists mainly ofSee also: Laos,with many Shans, a few Burmese, Chinese and Siamese and some fifty Europeans
.
See also: Hill tribes (Ka) inhabit the neighbouring mountains in large numbers
.
Chieng Mai was formerly the capital of a
See also: united Lao See also: kingdom, which, at one See also: time See also: independent, afterwards subject to See also: Burma and then to Siam, and later broken up into a number of states, has finally become a provincial division of Siam
.
In 1902 a rising of discontented Shans took place in Bayap which at one time seemed serious, several towns being attacked and Chieng Mai itself threatened
.
The disturbance was quelled and the malcontents eventually hunted out, but not without losses which included the commissioner of Pre and a European officer of See also: gendarmerie
.
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