Trang was an important seaport in southern Thailand. Legend says that ships always arrived in the morning, which led to the town's name. "Trang" derives from the
Malay word for light or dawn (
terang). But in another explanation it says that it comes from
Sanskrit (
tarangque) which means wave or gallop. In addition, the landscape of Trang is characterized by mounds interspersed with plains that look like waves. Thus, the provincial seal features sea waves and a lighthouse bridge. The province was once a part of the
Srivijaya empire, an ancient Hindu-Buddhist
Melayu Kingdom and the Malay Sultanate of
Kedah until 1810. According to cultural records Trang was one of 12 satellite towns that existed about 900 years ago, but it was during the reign of King
Rama II in 1811 that Trang got its first governor. The first Westerner to arrive in Trang was Captain
James Low, who came in 1824 to negotiate commercial benefits. The original town was in Khuanthani (now a
tambon in
Kantang district). In 1893, the governor,
Phraya Ratsadanupradit Mahison Phakdi, also known as Khaw Sim Bee na Ranong, decided to make Trang an important seaport and relocated the town to Kantang district on the Trang River delta. It was moved again to its present location 26 km inland in 1916 by King
Rama VI because of repeated flooding. Trang was the first area of Thailand where
rubber trees were planted, brought there by governor Phraya Ratsadanupradit Mahison Phakdi from
British Malaya in 1899. ==Symbols==