Cambodian History
No one knows for certain how long people have lived in what is now
Cambodia, as studies of its prehistory are undeveloped. A carbon-l4
dating from a cave in northwestern Cambodia suggests that people using
stone tools lived in the cave as early as 4000 bc, and rice has been
grown on Cambodian soil since well before the 1st century ad. The first
Cambodians likely arrived long before either of these dates. They
probably migrated from the north, although nothing is known about their
language or their way of life.
By the beginning of the 1st century ad, Chinese traders began to report
the existence of inland and coastal kingdoms in Cambodia. These kingdoms
already owed much to Indian culture, which provided alphabets, art
forms, architectural styles, religions (Hinduism and Buddhism), and a
stratified class system. Local beliefs that stressed the importance of
ancestral spirits coexisted with the Indian religions and remain
powerful today.
Cambodia's modem-day culture has its roots in the 1st to 6th centuries
in a state referred to as Funan, known as the oldest Indianized state in
Southeast Asia. It is from this period that evolved Cambodia's
language, part of the Mon-Khmer family, which contains elements of
Sanskrit, its ancient religion of Hinduism and Buddhism. Historians have
noted, for example, that Cambodians can be distinguished from their
neighbors by their clothing - checkered scarves known as Kramas are worn
instead of straw hats.
Funan
gave way to the Angkor Empire with the rise to power of King Jayavarman
II in 802. The following 600 years saw powerful Khmer kings dominate
much of present day Southeast Asia, from the borders of Myanmar east to
the South China Sea and north to Laos. It was during this period that
Khmer kings built the most extensive concentration of religious temples
in the world - the Angkor temple complex. The most successful of
Angkor's kings, Jayavarman II, Indravarman I, Suryavarman II and
Jayavarman VII, also devised a masterpiece of ancient engineering: a
sophisticated irrigation system that includes barays (gigantic man-made
lakes) and canals that ensured as many as three rice crops a year. Part
of this system is still in use today.
The Khmer Kingdom (Funan)
Early Chinese writers referred to a kingdom in Cambodia that they called
Funan. Modern-day archaeological findings provide evidence of a
commercial society centered on the Mekong Delta that flourished from the
1st century to the 6th century. Among these findings are excavations of
a port city from the 1st century, located in the region of Oc-Eo in
what is now southern Vietnam. Served by a network of canals, the city
was an important trade link between India and China. Ongoing excavations
in southern Cambodia have revealed the existence of another important
city near the present-day village of Angkor Borei.
A group of inland kingdoms, known collectively to the Chinese as Zhenla,
flourished in the 6th and 7th centuries from southern Cambodia to
southern Laos. The first stone inscriptions in the Khmer language and
the first brick and stone Hindu temples in Cambodia date from the Zhenla
period.
Angkor Era
Bayon Temple, Angkor Thom The giant faces carved on the Bayon temple at
the Angkor Thum complex in northwestern Cambodia represent both the
Buddha and King Jayavarman VII (ruled about 1130-1219). Although a
Buddhist temple, Angkor Thum was modeled after the great Hindu temple
complex of Angkor Wat.
In the early 9th century a Khmer (ethnic Cambodian) prince returned to
Cambodia from abroad. He probably arrived from nearby Java or Sumatra,
where he may have been held hostage by island kings who had asserted
control over portions of the Southeast Asian mainland.
In a series of ceremonies at different sites, the prince declared
himself ruler of a new independent kingdom, which unified several local
principalities. His kingdom eventually came to be centered near
present-day Siemreab in northwestern Cambodia. The prince, known to his
successors as Jayavarman II, inaugurated a cult honoring the Hindu god
Shiva as a devaraja (Sanskrit term meaning "god-king"). The cult, which
legitimized the king's rule by linking him with Shiva, persisted at the
Cambodian court for more than two hundred years.
Between the early 9th century and the early 15th century, 26 monarchs
ruled successively over the Khmer kingdom (known as Angkor, the modern
name for its capital city).
King Jayavarman VII
The successors of Jayavarman II built the great temples for which Angkor is famous.
Historians have dated more than a thousand temple sites and over a
thousand stone inscriptions (most of them on temple walls) to this era.
Notable among the Khmer builder-kings were Suyavarman II, who built the
temple known as Angkor Wat in the mid-12th century, and Jayavarman VII,
who built the Bayon temple at Angkor Thum and several other large
Buddhist temples half a century later. Jayavarman VII, a fervent
Buddhist, also built hospitals and rest houses along the roads that
crisscrossed the kingdom. Most of the monarchs, however, seem to have
been more concerned with displaying and increasing their power than with
the welfare of their subjects.
Ancient City of Angkor This map shows the layout of the ancient city of
Angkor, capital of the Cambodian Khmer kingdom from the 9th century to
the 15th century. The city's huge stone temples were both civic centers
and religious symbols of the Hindu cosmos. Historians believe that
Angkor's network of canals and barays (reservoirs) were used for
irrigation.
At its greatest extent, in the 12th century, the Khmer kingdom
encompassed (in addition to present-day Cambodia) parts of present-day
Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar (formerly Burma), and the Malay
Peninsula. Thailand and Laos still contain Khmer ruins and inscriptions.
The kings at Angkor received tribute from smaller kingdoms to the
north, east, and west, and conducted trade with China. The capital city
was the center of an impressive network of reservoirs and canals, which
historians theorize supplied water for irrigation. Many historians
believe that the abundant harvests made possible by irrigation supported
a large population whose labor could be drawn on to construct the
kings' temples and to fight their wars. The massive temples, extensive
roads and waterworks, and confident inscriptions give an illusion of
stability that is undermined by the fact that many Khmer kings gained
the throne by conquering their predecessors. Inscriptions indicate that
the kingdom frequently suffered from rebellions and foreign invasions.
Historians have not been able to fully explain the decline of the Khmer
kingdom in the 13th and 14th centuries. However, it was probably
associated with the rise of powerful Thai kingdoms that had once paid
tribute to Angkor, and to population losses following a series of wars
with these kingdoms. Another factor may have been the introduction of
Theravada Buddhism, which taught that anyone could achieve enlightenment
through meritorious conduct and meditation. These egalitarian ideas
undermined the hierarchical structure of Cambodian society and the power
of prominent Hindu families. After a Thai invasion in 1431, what
remained of the Cambodian elite shifted southeastward to the vicinity of
Phnom Penh.
Cambodia Dark Age
This
map of Southeast Asia in the mid-16th century shows the major centers
of power in the region prior to the arrival of Europeans. During this
period, these kingdoms were constantly at war. Eventually the Kingdom of
Ayutthaya (modern Thailand) expanded to the north and east, absorbing
much of Lan Na and Lan Xang (modern Laos). Dai Viet (modern Vietnam)
expanded to the south, taking over the remaining territory of the
Kingdom of Champa and the southern tip of the Kingdom of Lovek (modern
Cambodia). Toungoo evolved into modern Myanmar.
The four centuries of Cambodian history following the abandonment of
Angkor are poorly recorded, and therefore historians know little about
them beyond the bare outlines. Cambodia retained its language and its
cultural identity despite frequent invasions by the powerful Thai
kingdom of Ayutthaya and incursions by Vietnamese forces. Indeed, for
much of this period, Cambodia was a relatively prosperous trading
kingdom with its capital at Lovek, near present-day Phnom Penh. European
visitors wrote of the Buddhist piety of the inhabitants of the Kingdom
of Lovek. During this period, Cambodians composed the country's most
important work of literature, the Reamker (based on the Indian myth of
the Ramayana).
In the late 18th century, a civil war in Vietnam and disorder following a
Burmese invasion of Ayutthaya spilled over into Cambodia and devastated
the area. In the early 19th century, newly established dynasties in
Vietnam and Thailand competed for control over the Cambodian court. The
warfare that ensued, beginning in the l830s, came close to destroying
Cambodia.
French Rule
Phnom Penh, as planned by the French, came to resemble a town in
provincial France. By the second half of the 19th century, France had
begun to expand its colonial penetration of Indochina (the peninsula
between India and China). In 1863 France accepted the Cambodian king's
invitation to impose a protectorate over his severely weakened kingdom,
halting the country's dismemberment by Thailand and Vietnam. For the
next 90 years, France ruled Cambodia. In theory, French administration
was indirect, but in practice the word of French officials was final on
all major subjects-including the selection of Cambodia's kings. The
French left Cambodian institutions, including the monarchy, in place,
and gradually developed a Cambodian civil service, organized along
French lines. The French administration neglected education but built
roads, port facilities, and other public works. Phnom Penh, as planned
by the French, came to resemble a town in provincial France.
The French invested relatively little in Cambodia's economy compared to
that of Vietnam, which was also under French control. However, they
developed rubber plantations in eastern Cambodia, and the kingdom
exported sizable amounts of rice under their rule. The French also
restored the Angkor temple complex and deciphered Angkorean
inscriptions, which gave Cambodians a clear idea of their medieval
heritage and kindled their pride in Cambodia's past. Because France left
the monarchy, Buddhism, and the rhythms of rural life undisturbed,
anti-French feeling was slow to develop.
King
Sihanouk, through skillful maneuvering, managed to gain Cambodia's
independence peacefully in 1953. During World War II (1939-1945),
Japanese forces entered French Indochina but left the compliant French
administration in place.
King Norodom Sihanouk
On the verge of defeat in 1945, the Japanese removed their French
collaborators and installed a nominally independent Cambodian government
under the recently crowned young king, Norodom Sihanouk. France
reimposed its protectorate in early 1946 but allowed the Cambodians to
draft a constitution and to form political parties.
Soon afterward, fighting erupted throughout Indochina as nationalist
groups, some with Communist ideologies, struggled to win independence
from France. Most of the fighting took place in Vietnam, in a conflict
known as the First Indochina War (1946-1954). In Cambodia, Communist
guerrilla forces allied with Vietnamese Communists gained control of
much of the country. However, King Sihanouk, through skillful
maneuvering, managed to gain Cambodia's independence peacefully in 1953,
a few months earlier than Vietnam. The Geneva Accords of 1954, which
marked the end of the First Indochina War, acknowledged Sihanouk's
government as the sole legitimate authority in Cambodia.
Modern State
Sihanouk's campaign for independence sharpened his political skills and
increased his ambitions. In 1955 he abdicated the throne in favor of his
father to pursue a full-time political career, free of the
constitutional constraints of the monarchy. In a move aimed at
dismantling Cambodia's fledgling political parties, Sihanouk inaugurated
a national political movement known as the Sangkum Reastr Niyum
(People's Socialist Community), whose members were not permitted to
belong to any other political group. The Sangkum won all the seats in
the national elections of 1955, benefiting from Sihanouk's popularity
and from police brutality at many polling stations. Sihanouk served as
prime minister of Cambodia until 1960, when his father died and he was
named head of state. Sihanouk remained widely popular among the people
but was brutal to his opponents.
In the late 1950s the Cold War (period of tension between the United
States and its allies and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, or
USSR, and its allies) intensified in Asia. In this climate, foreign
powers, including the United States, the USSR, and China, courted
Sihanouk. Cambodia's importance to these countries stemmed from events
in neighboring Vietnam, where tension had begun to mount between a
Communist regime in the north and a pro-Western regime in the south. The
USSR supported the Vietnamese Communists, while the United States
opposed them, and China wanted to contain Vietnam for security reasons.
Each of the foreign powers hoped that Cambodian support would bolster
its position in the region. Sihanouk pursued a policy of neutrality that
drew substantial economic aid from the competing countries.
In 1965, however, Sihanouk broke off diplomatic relations with the
United States. At the same time, he allowed North Vietnamese Communists,
then fighting the Vietnam War against the United States and the South
Vietnamese in southern Vietnam, to set up bases on Cambodian soil. As
warfare intensified in Vietnam, domestic opposition to Sihanouk from
both radical and conservative elements increased. The Cambodian
Communist organization, known as the Workers Party of Kampuchea (later
renamed the Communist Party of Kampuchea, or CPK), had gone underground
after failing to win any concessions at the Geneva Accords, but now they
took up arms once again. As the economy became unstable, Cambodia
became difficult to govern single-handedly. In need of economic and
military aid, Sihanouk renewed diplomatic relations with the United
States. Shortly thereafter, in 1969, U.S. president Richard Nixon
authorized a bombing campaign against Cambodia in an effort to destroy
Vietnamese Communist sanctuaries there.
Khmer Republic
In March 1970 Cambodia's legislature, the National Assembly, deposed
Sihanouk while he was abroad. The conservative forces behind the coup
were pro-Western and anti-Vietnamese. General Lon Nol, the country's
prime minister, assumed power and sent his poorly equipped army to fight
the North Vietnamese Communist forces encamped in border areas. Lon Nol
hoped that U.S. aid would allow him to defeat his enemies, but American
support was always geared to events in Vietnam. In April U.S. and South
Vietnamese troops invaded Cambodia, searching for North Vietnamese, who
moved deeper into Cambodia. Over the next year, North Vietnamese troops
destroyed the offensive capacity of Lon Nol's army.
In October 1970 Lon Nol inaugurated the Khmer Republic. Sihanouk, who
had sought asylum in China, was condemned to death despite his absence.
By that time, Chinese and North Vietnamese leaders had persuaded the
prince to establish a government in exile, allied with North Vietnam and
dominated by the CPK, whom Sihanouk referred to as the Khmer Rouge
(French for "Red Khmers").
In 1975, despite massive infusions of U.S. aid, the Khmer Republic collapsed, and Khmer Rouge forces occupied Phnom Penh.
The United States continued bombing Cambodia until the Congress of the
United States halted the campaign in 1973. By that time, Lon Nol's
forces were fighting not only the Vietnamese but also the Khmer Rouge.
The general lost control over most of the Cambodian countryside, which
had been devastated by U.S. bombing. The fighting severely damaged the
nation's infrastructure and caused high numbers of casualties. Hundreds
of thousands of refugees flooded into the cities. In 1975, despite
massive infusions of U.S. aid, the Khmer Republic collapsed, and Khmer
Rouge forces occupied Phnom Penh. Three weeks later, North Vietnamese
forces achieved victory in South Vietnam.
Democratic Kampuchea
Pol
Pot Pol Pot is a pseudonym for the Cambodian guerrilla commander Saloth
Sar, who organized the Communist guerrilla force known as the Khmer
Rouge. The Khmer Rouge ousted General Lon Nol in 1975, establishing a
brutal Communist regime that ruled until 1979.
Immediately after occupying Cambodia's towns, the Khmer Rouge ordered
all city dwellers into the countryside to take up agricultural tasks.
The move reflected both the Khmer Rouge's contempt for urban dwellers,
whom they saw as enemies, and their utopian vision of Cambodia as a
nation of busy, productive peasants. The leader of the regime, who
remained concealed from the public, was Saloth Sar, who used the
pseudonym Pol Pot. The government, which called itself Democratic
Kampuchea (DK), claimed to be seeking total independence from foreign
powers but accepted economic and military aid from its major allies,
China and North Korea.
Khmer Rouge Carnage The Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, killed close to 1.7
million people in the mid- to late 1970s. In this photo, human bones
and skulls fill a museum in Cambodia that had been used as a prison and
torture center during Pol Pot's reign, Sygma.
Without
identifying themselves as Communists, the Khmer Rouge quickly
introduced a series of far-reaching and often painful socialist
programs. The people given the most power in the new government were the
largely illiterate rural Cambodians who had fought alongside the Khmer
Rouge in the civil war. DK leaders severely restricted freedom of
speech, movement, and association, and forbade all religious practices.
The regime controlled all communications along with access to food and
information. Former city dwellers, now called "new people," were
particularly badly treated. The Khmer Rouge killed intellectuals,
merchants, bureaucrats, members of religious groups, and any people
suspected of disagreeing with the party. Millions of other Cambodians
were forcibly relocated, deprived of food, tortured, or sent into forced
labor.
Cambodian History
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