Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pamaypay (Tagalog pronunciation: [pɐmaɪˈpaɪ], puh-my-PY), also known as paypay, payupas, buri fan, or anahaw fan, [1] [2] [3] is a type of traditional hand-held fan from the Philippines. It is typically made of woven buri palm or anahaw palm leaves.
Pamaypay La Paz, Abra handicrafts using mixture of bamboo, rono (Miscanthus sinensis), Lygodium Nito vine (Lygodium circinatum) and Rattan - Day 3 DTI Bureau of Market Development, Promotions, OTOP (BMDPO), Secretary Cristina Aldeguer-Roque and PHILCOA Administrator Dexter Respicio Buted with Christopher George Martin Perez de Venecia organized the 2024 Christmas Village National Fiesta Haraya ...
Students show art abanikos from Rizal province in February 2018. Francisco Iturrino, Mujer con mantón de Manila y abanico, c. 1910.. The abaniko is common accessory for the baro't saya, the traditional ladies’ attire.
This page was last edited on 2 December 2024, at 21:30 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
These mueang were Thai Buri, Ron Ka Ro, Klai, Mo Khlan, and Noppitham. [1] At its establishment in 1897 the district was named Klai (กลาย) and divided into the 10 tambons Tha Sala, Tha Khuen, Sa Kaeo, Klai, Thaiburi, Ka Ro, Noppitham, Hua Taphan, Mo Khlan, and Don Tako. The first district officer was Charoen (Mai Sap Nam Sakun), the ...
Neighbouring districts are (from the north clockwise): U Thong and Bang Pla Ma of Suphan Buri Province; Lat Bua Luang of Ayutthaya province; Bang Len and Kamphaeng Saen of Nakhon Pathom province; and Tha Maka and Phanom Thuan of Kanchanaburi province. The main water resource of the district is the Tha Chin River or Suphan River.
Si Ma Cai is a rural district of Lào Cai province in the Northeast region of Vietnam. As of 2003, the district had a population of 25,554. [ 1 ] The district covers an area of 241 km 2 .
According to traditional biographies, Luang Pu Sodh was born Sodh Mikaewnoi [note 4] on 10 October 1884 to a relatively well-off family of rice merchants in Amphoe Song Phi Nong, Suphan Buri, a province 102 kilometres (63 miles) west of Bangkok in central Thailand. His father was called Ngen and his mother Soodjai.