Ku Daeng


Ku Daeng, or Ban Ku Daeng, is a village in Nong Faek Subdistrict, Saraphi District, in Chiang Mai Province, Thailand.

Studies

Ku Daeng has been extensively documented in various ethnographic studies conducted by American and Thai anthropologists during the mid and late 20th century.
Ku Daeng village is known for being the subject of Konrad Kingshill's classic 1960 ethnography book Ku Daeng: The Red Tomb, based on his fieldwork in the village in 1953 and 1954. A revised third edition, published in 1976, synthesizes the 1953–1954 study with later studies done in 1964 and 1974. In 1991, Kingshill published a follow-up monograph, Ku Daeng: Thirty Years Later.
From October 1971 to November 1972, Jack M. Potter and Sulamith Heins Potter conducted anthropological fieldwork in Ku Daeng village. Jack M. Potter published Thai Peasant Social Structure in 1976. In 1977, Sulamith Heins Potter published a study of family life in Ku Daeng, Family Life in a Northern Thai Village. Potter refers to Ku Daeng as "Chiangmai Village" rather than by its original name.
In 1985, two works containing sociological research results from Ku Daeng were published by Thai researchers Werasit Sittitrai and Malee Viriya.

Administration

Administratively, Ku Daeng consists of 2 administrative villages, namely village numbers 6 and 7.
No.NameThai
6.Ban Ku Daengบ้านกู่แดง
7.Ban Ku Daengบ้านกู่แดง

The village is governed by the subdistrict municipality Nong Faek.