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Phnom
Penh
The
City
Phnom
Penh is situated at the confluence of the Tonle Sap
and Bassac rivers with the Mekong. It was founded as
a small monastery in 1372 by the rich Khmer woman
Penh, after she had found four Buddha statues
in a tree trunk on the banks of the Mekong. She set
up the monastery on a hill near the bank of the Mekong.
The Cambodian word for hill is Phnom. Therefore
the name of the town correctly translates as Hill
of Penh.
Rather
significantly Phnom Penh's history is founded on an
episode, in which the Buddhist religion played
a part, contrary to the Khmer capital of that time,
Angkor, which was shaped, and literally so, by
Hinduism. Nevertheless, Buddhism had, since the
beginning of the 13th century, become the dominant religion.
(In Southeast Asia both religions are entwined to a
much higher degree than first appears to be the case.
For instance, numerous Buddhist temples in Thailand
house altars of Hindu deities, especially Brahma,
and the details of the royal ploughing ceremony in
Bangkok are determined by Brahman, not Buddhist, palace
priests... just like Thai coronation modalities).
In
1434, after the Siamese conquest of Angkor in
1431, the Khmer nobility unwilling to submit
to Siamese overlords fled from Angkor and established
Phnom Penh as the new Khmer capital, just 64 years after
the Buddhist monastery had been founded on Penh Hill.
However, the Khmer never succeeded in setting up a new
kingdom to come close to the glamour of Angkor.
In
fact, for long periods of time the Khmer kingdom centered
in Phnom Penh wasn't a sovereign country but alternatively
a satellite state of, or directly ruled by, the Vietnamese
or the Thais. For more than 400 years - until
the French made Cambodia their protectorate - the art
of politics in Phnom Penh was just an exercise of balancing
between the two powerful neighbours.
On
April 17, 1864, the Cambodian king Norodom accepted
for his country the status of a French protectorate.
King Norodom expected the French to protect Cambodia
from the neighbouring countries Siam (Thailand) and
Vietnam.
However,
the French protectors did not prevent politically strong
Siam from temporarily annexing western parts of the
country, including the town of Battambang. Nevertheless,
by recognizing French rule, King Norodom preempted moves
of Siam and Vietnam to entirely divide his country between
them. In past centuries the loss of territory
to Vietnam had been more significant. The Mekong delta,
or rather the entire present-day South Vietnam,
had been settled by Cambodians until well into the 18th
century.
During
almost 90 years of colonial rule the French reshaped
and extended Phnom Penh according to their architectural
taste. They built broad boulevards and the city
received a touch of Mediterranean atmosphere.
During
the Vietnam war the city grew to more than 2 Million
inhabitants, creating an atmosphere of an overcrowded
refugee camp rather than a French metropolis.
On
April 17, 1975, 20 years after the end of French
colonial rule, the Khmer Rouge marched into Phnom
Penh. Within weeks the city was emptied, its population
forced into provincial labour camps; Phnom Penh became
a ghost town.
After
an increasing number of incidents at the Cambodian-Vietnamese
border, Vietnamese troops move into Cambodia
and on January 7, 1979, take Phnom Penh. Since then,
many of the city's former inhabitants have returned,
and new folks have arrived. The city now, once more,
counts over a Million inhabitants.
Since
the signing of the Paris Peace Treaty in 1991,
Phnom Penh experienced a great economic boom,
despite the civil war still smoldering in far-off parts
of the country. Although streets and canalization -
destroyed by the Khmer Rouge - are not yet fully
repaired, a large number of modern hotels have been
built.
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on Cambodia:
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