Food vendors sell out along the street
Mom-and-pop-store in front of the temple
Night market in Luang Prabang
Daughter Sylvia buys a textile blanket
Night market offerings
Laotian breakfast tea and khanom khu
Selling baguettes for breakfast
A visit at the Hmong festival
Hmong girls in their dressing
Ball game between the Hmong villagers
Two lovely tribe girls
Hmong girl in her action
Hmong teeny
Three Hmong girls in different costumes
Nam Ou
Nam Ou
Nam Ou at Pak Nga
Pak Mong
Wild foxes offered for Laotian dish
Pak Mong intersection
Pak Mong and a Chinese store
Hmong people in the mist
Luang Namtha main road
Simple nice restaurant to relax
Restaurants and coffee bars along Sakkarine Road
Stupas in front of Wat Pa Phai
Monks in the yard of Wat Pa Phai
The entrance door into the Wat Pa Phai
Inside Wat Pa Phai
Wat Paphaimisaiyaram
Mekong the heart of Laos
Beside the river bank of Mekong
Wat Choumkhongsourintharame
Look out the window too long?
Shop by shop along the cities mainroad
Walking street in Luang Prabang
Restaurant with amazing view
New Year greetings 2010
Neujahrs Grüße 2010
Chinese New Year in Bangkok Jan. 2009
Dragon costume at the Chinese New Year January 200…
Chinese New Year January 2009 in Bangkok
At China Town in Bangkok
Kitchen of Nai Sow Restaurant
Automation on main roads in Bangkok
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National Museum Luang Prabang


Built by the French colonial government for King Sisavangvong between 1904 and 1909 on the foundations of a much older palace building, the former Royal Palace was taken over by the revolutionary government in 1975 and reopened to the public as a national museum on 13 March 1976. Located in the centre of town opposite Mount Phousi, the building features a blend of French and Lao architectural styles. The long front wing houses the king's reception hall to the right of the main entrance and the reception area for the chief secretary to the left. Decorated with murals depicting scenes of everyday life in the city executed by a French artist in the 1930s, the king's reception room contains busts and paintings of past Lao monarchs. To the left of the main entrance is the reception area for the chief secretary, which now displays gifts from various heads of state to the Lao monarchy, and beyond this the queen's reception room. Connecting the reception wing with the residential wing is the throne hall. In addition to the throne of the king and queen, on display is the king's howdah or elephant chair. Glass cases contain many crystal Buddha images recovered in 1914 from the collapsed chedi of That Makmo in the grounds of Wat Wisun. The walls of the throne room are decorated with cut mirrored tile mosaics, which may also be seen on the rear walls of the sim at Wat Xieng Thong. The royal apartments have been preserved more or less as they were when occupied by the king and queen. The include bedrooms and the dining room, as well as a music room displaying Lao classical instruments and masks. In the compound of the royal palace is a large ornate pavilion, opened in 2003, which houses the sacred pha bang standing Buddha image.
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