Originally named
Takola (), the town was one of the historic city states (
mueang) dating back to
Srivijaya times in the 13th century. It was also known as
Takkolam () which is the
Tamil word for "piper cubeba" and "calyptranthes jambalana". There is also a place in the
Tamil country which up to now carries the same name
Takkolam. Takua Pa could have either abounded in the spices "calyptranthese jambalana" and "piper cubeba" or it could have been occupied by settlers from the Takkolam of the
Tamil country, or both. Takua Pa is said to have been the finest harbor on the west coast of the peninsula for trade between the kingdom of Srivijaya and the early
Tamil kingdoms of the
Cholas and
Pallavas during different times in history. It was later renamed
Takua Pa due to the rich ores found near the town:
takua (ตะกั่ว) is the Thai word for
lead, even though
tin was the most important ore found there. Laem Pho Beach in the
Chaiya district of
Surat Thani province, on the other side of the
isthmus 200 km distant, is thought to have been a
Srivijaya Kingdom seaport in the 7th to 13th centuries. Srivijaya was an Indonesian city-state that grew to become an influential maritime power in what is now
Southeast Asia.
Tang dynasty (7th–10th centuries) ceramics have been found in the area as well as pottery from India and glassware from
Persia. Similar finds have been made in Ban Thung Tuek of Takua Pa District, indicating that there may have been an overland route connecting the Gulf of Thailand with the
Andaman Seacoast. This route would have enabled traders to avoid piracy in the narrow
Strait of Malacca. There was a Hindu/Vishnu temple there in the 8th century CE. An important mercantile organisation called
Kodumbalur Manigramam, built a water tank for this temple. They left an inscription in Tamil. The tank was called "Avani Naaranam", the name of one of the Pallava emperors of Tamil Nadu. The town was long administered by
Nakhon Si Thammarat. In 1892 it was converted to a province, part of the
Monthon Phuket. This province was merged into Phang Nga Province on 1 April 1932. The district, Talat Yai ('big market', ตลาดใหญ่), was then renamed Takua Pa. The district was an important tin-dredging area in the first half of the 20th century, with the English company, Siamese Tin Syndicate Ltd., and the Australian company, Satupulo No Liability Co., both operating dredges in the rivers, with narrow-gauge tramways following them upstream. The Asiatic Company also had a dredge and tramway further inland in Kapong District, depicted in the Thai film,
The Tin Mine. Siamese Tin operated here at least as late as 1967, but Thai firms assumed operations by the early-1980s. By 2008 there were no remaining signs of mining, as plantations, particularly rubber, covered the former dredged areas. The public library at Takua Pa town has photographs on display of the dredging and sluicing operations in their heyday in the 1920s and 1930s. The former Asiatic Company workshops can also still be seen in Kapong town. The centre for the identification of bodies found after the 2004 tsunami is in the district. Opposite the identification centre is the cemetery where all unidentified foreign bodies have been buried. Laid out somewhat like the Commonwealth War Graves cemetery at Kanchanaburi. By late-2008 the cemetery was overgrown, run down, and inhabited by feral dogs. == Administration ==