While millions of tourists know this metropolis as "Bangkok," its official ceremonial name contains 168 letters, describing a city given by the god Indra and built by Vishvakarman. In April 2026, as regional travel hits record highs, more visitors are discovering that the "short" name we use is actually a historical misnomer for a city with a much more divine identity.
Deconstructing the “City of Angels” and why locals never call it “Bangkok.”
Think “Bangkok” is already enough to remember? Its full ceremonial name is actually a 168-letter tongue twister recognized by the Guinness World Records as the longest place name in the world.
The name isn’t just long—it’s poetic. It roughly translates to:
“City of angels, great city, residence of the Emerald Buddha, impregnable city of God Indra, grand capital of the world endowed with nine precious gems, happy city, abundant in enormous royal palaces which resemble the heavenly abode where reigns the reincarnated god, a city given by Indra and built by Vishvakarman.”
No surprise then that locals simply call it Krung Thep (“City of Angels”), while the rest of the world thankfully sticks to Bangkok—because let’s be honest, nobody has time to memorize all that.
Think ‘Bangkok’ is a mouthful? Try memorizing its 168-letter ceremonial name. From ‘impregnable cities’ to ‘heavenly abodes,’ discover the poetic meaning behind the world’s longest place name and why locals just call it Krung Thep.