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Thantlang Township

Coordinates: 22°40′N 93°24′E / 22.667°N 93.400°E / 22.667; 93.400
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Thantlang Township
ထန်တလန်မြို့နယ်
Thantlang Township
Location in Hakha district (in red)
Location in Hakha district (in red)
Country Burma
State Chin State
DistrictHakha District
CapitalThan Tlang
Population
 (2008)[1]
56,323
Time zoneUTC+6:30 (MST)

Thantlang Township (Burmese: ထန်တလန်မြို့နယ်) is one of the nine townships in Chin State.[2] Thantlang is the administrative town of inclusive nine circles (also called mountain ranges) attributed to the geographical and dialectical arrangements of the area. They are Khualhring Tlang (Khualhring circle), Vanzang Tlang (Vanzang circle), Zahnak Tlang (Zahnak circle), Bual Tlang (Bual circle), Vailam Tlang ( Vailam circle ) Lautu Tlang (Lautu circle), Mara Tlang (Mara circle), Vailam Tlang (Vailam circle), Zophei Tlang (Zophei circle) and Bawipa Tlang (Bawipa circle). Only four circles speak Lai dialect. Zophei(Zophei and Bawipa circles), Lautu (Lautu circle), HawThai (Mara circle) speak their tribal language. The other fives circles and in Thantlang town speak Lai dialect. In Thantlang township, Lai dialect is the common use dialect. Lai dialect is also spoken at Hakha township and Falam township.

A variety of languages and different accents are spoken in Thantlang township, including Lautu, Zophei, Senthang, Lai and Lochei and Sizo. The western border of the township that separates it from India is formed by the Tiau River from the north, and the Kaladan River (known locally as the Boinu/Beino/Chhimtuipui River) from the south which flow together at 22°47′10″N 93°05′45″E / 22.78611°N 93.09583°E / 22.78611; 93.09583.

History

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"Thlantlang" means cemetery mountain. Prior to 1995, there were many old cemeteries on the south side of the mountain above the main town, where subsequently the Burmese military build a camp and a pagoda. Briefly, in the early 2000s, a small piece of northeastern Thantlang Township, namely the village tracts of: Lungding, Tikhuangtum, Tlangkhua, Tlangpi, Tlangte, northern Vanzang (Farrawn), and Zangtlang, was transferred to Falam Township. However, in 2008, in the reorganization of Chin State townships, these village tracts were restored.[3]

Borders

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Thantlang Township borders on:[1]

Communities

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Thantlang is the major town in the township, with four smaller towns (larger villages) Leitak,[4][5] Lungler (Lonle in Burmese transliteration), Hnaring (main town of Lautu tribe) and Ngaphepi (biggest village of the HawThai tribe). Lungler and Leitak have 16-bed hospitals (clinics).[6] There are 37 village tracts and 76 villages in Thantlang Township.[1]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c "Htantlang Township Profile" Myanmar Information Management Unit, September 2009, population figures State General Administration Department, October 2008
  2. ^ "Myanmar States/Divisions & Townships Overview Map" Archived 2010-12-03 at the Wayback Machine Myanmar Information Management Unit (MIMU)
  3. ^ Note that the Maplandia map shows the older borders, the 2007 township map Archived 2010-12-03 at the Wayback Machine shows the transfer, and the 2009 Htantlang Township map shows the restoration.
  4. ^ "Leitak, Chin State, Myanmar" Geonames.org
  5. ^ Leitak is the first village in Zophei tribe, "Htantlang Township, Chin State" map, Myanmar Information Management Unit (MIMU), 6 August 2009
  6. ^ "Health Facilities Map" Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine, Myanmar Information Management Unit, May 2009
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22°40′N 93°24′E / 22.667°N 93.400°E / 22.667; 93.400