Merong Maha Wangs was the founding director of the lost city of Langkawi, but sorting the myth of history leaves us wondering how it is possible, as little evidence to survive the existence of gold in the Malay Peninsula.
Between 100 and 300 AD Merong Maha Wangs decided to create a link between the two superpowers of the moment, Rome and China, and by selecting the Malay Peninsula as the location for the power play, forced all trade in the street between the lucrative silk Arabia, Langka Lanka and India and China. He persuaded Rome to give China a Roman prince and a princess to offer. In those days trade with China has no risk on the straights, but through the peninsula of Malacca, Malaysia rafting and elephant Pattani (now Thailand). Marriage creates Langkasuka, a realm that stretches around Kuala Lumpur to Thailand in the South. There is also a myth surrounding the base of Langkasuka. This is a Garuda (a mythical half man and half eagle) to attack the prince’s fleet. The island of Langkawi, now part of Malaysia, located at the entrance to assist Kedah and its occupants a steady flow of ships carrying commodities, gold and jewelry in the world.
Langkawi is also the borders of the islands of Thailand Ko Lipe, Ko Adang and Ko Rawi. Ships leaving the Sri Langka be found in Langkawi and Lipe, the first and is certainly not impossible that more than 1300 years that Kedah is dominated by a few commercial ships were finally crushed in Langkawi and Lipe rocky islands off the coast, but it is suspicious of the sea a few excavations of ancient shipwrecks.
No one has found the lost capital city of gold, or evidence that the Roman prince, but the fact is that there Langkasuka and controlled the trade along the Silk Road from 300 to 500 years. Garuda was actually sinking a pirate fleet Langkawi to try to prevent the union.