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HISTORY OF CAMBODIA
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.
While in power, the Khmer Rouge murdered,
worked to death, or killed by starvation
close to 1.7 million Cambodians.
The Khmer Rouge also attacked neighboring
countries in an attempt to reclaim
territories lost by Cambodia many centuries
before. After fighting broke out with
Vietnam (then united under the Communists)
in 1977, DK's ideology became openly racist.
Ethnic minorities in Cambodia, including
ethnic Chinese and Vietnamese, were hunted
down and expelled or massacred. Purges of
party members accused of treason became
widespread. People in eastern Cambodia,
suspected of cooperating with Vietnam,
suffered severely, and hundreds of thousands
of them were killed. While in power, the
Khmer Rouge murdered, worked to death, or
killed by starvation close to 1.7 million
Cambodians-more than one-fifth of the
country's population.
The war with Vietnam went badly for
Cambodia, and in the second half of 1978 the
DK tried to open the country up to the wider
world, inviting journalists to visit and
extending diplomatic recognition to several
non-socialist countries. In December 1978
the Vietnamese launched a blitzkrieg assault
on Cambodia, using more than l00,000 troops.
A group of Cambodian Communist rebels, the
Khmer National United Front for National
Salvation (KNUFNS), accompanied them. On
January 7, 1979, the invading forces
occupied Phnom Penh, which the Khmer Rouge
leaders had abandoned the day before. Pol
Pot, his colleagues, and hundreds of
thousands of followers sought refuge over
the next few months along the Thai-Cambodian
border. There they were protected by the
Thai regime, which was hostile to Vietnam.
Vietnam Domination
Vietnam established a satellite regime
called the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK)
in January 1979. The new government included
many former members of the Khmer Rouge who
had defected to Vietnam, as well as some
Cambodians who had sought refuge in Vietnam
before the Khmer Rouge victory in 1975.
After coming to power, the regime restored
much of Cambodia's pre-1975 way of life,
including the practice of Buddhism and a
nationwide education system. For the time
being, however, agriculture remained
collectivized. Like all previous regimes,
the new government treated its opponents
harshly; like the Khmer Rouge, it severely
limited people's freedom of expression. The
pro-Vietnamese Kampuchean Peoples'
Revolutionary Party (KPRP) monopolized
political power and swept the 1981 elections
for the National Assembly.
Meanwhile, remnants of the Khmer Rouge and
other Cambodians who had fled to Thailand
formed an anti-Vietnamese government in
exile, which continued to be known as DK.
China, Thailand, and the United States had
disapproved of the overthrow of DK, viewing
it as Vietnamese aggression, and encouraged
the formation of the government in exile.
With the support of these countries, DK
retained Cambodia's seat in the United
Nations (UN). Only a few foreign
governments, including the USSR and India,
recognized the PRK as Cambodia's legitimate
government. Foreign aid to Cambodia was
largely limited to the Soviet-led bloc of
Communist nations.
Throughout the 1980s, Vietnam maintained
more than 100,000 troops in Cambodia.
Conflict between PRK and DK forces, combined
with Cambodia's relative isolation, produced
continuing economic instability. Thousands
of people were killed in battle or maimed by
landmines. In 1985 Cambodia's foreign
minister, Hun Sen, became prime minister of
the PRK.
Weary of socialism and the harsh conditions
inside Cambodia, more than 500,000
Cambodians sought asylum in Thailand in the
1980s. More than 300,000 of these people
eventually resettled in other countries,
especially France and the United States.
This outflow deprived Cambodia of thousands
of trained personnel and removed many
members of the small elite, whose ranks had
already been thinned through execution and
fatal illnesses under the Khmer Rouge.
Recent Development
In September 1989, as the Cold War ended and
Soviet financing of the Vietnamese forces in
Cambodia fell sharply, Vietnam withdrew its
troops from Cambodia. The withdrawal left
the Cambodian regime, under young prime
minister Hun Sen, in a precarious position,
deprived of all substantial foreign aid and
threatened militarily by the forces of the
Khmer Rouge and their allies on the
Thai-Cambodian border. Soon afterward the
PRK officially abandoned socialism, renamed
itself the State of Cambodia (SOC), and
introduced a range of reforms aimed at
attracting foreign investment and increasing
the popularity of the ruling KPRP, renamed
the Cambodian People's Party (CPP).
Some members of the government became
millionaires overnight, while the national
economy was still stumbling to its feet.
A program of privatization, which ended
collectivized agriculture, and a headlong
rush toward free-market economics from 1989
to 1992 widened the inequities in Cambodian
society. Some members of the government
became millionaires overnight, while the
national economy was still stumbling to its
feet. As markets opened in Thailand and
Vietnam, exploitation of Cambodia's gem and
timber resources by foreign businesses
became widespread. Meanwhile, fighting
between government and Khmer Rouge forces
intensified, as the Khmer Rouge occupied
large areas in the relatively inhospitable
northern part of the country.
In October 1991 Cambodia's warring factions,
the UN, and a number of interested foreign
nations signed an agreement in Paris
intended to end the conflict in Cambodia.
The agreement provided for a temporary
power-sharing arrangement between a United
Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC)
and a Supreme National Council (SNC) made up
of delegates from the various Cambodian
factions. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the
former king and prime minister of Cambodia,
served as president of the SNC.
The Paris accords and the UN protectorate
pushed Cambodia out of its isolation and
introduced competitive politics, dormant
since the early 1950s. UNTAC sponsored
elections for a national assembly in May
1993, and for the first time in Cambodian
history a majority of voters rejected an
armed, incumbent regime. A royalist party,
known by its French acronym FUNCINPEC, won
the most seats in the election, followed by
the CPP, led by Hun Sen. Reluctant to give
up power, Hun Sen threatened to upset the
election results. Under a compromise
arrangement, a three-party coalition formed
a government headed by two prime ministers;
FUNCINPEC's Prince Norodom Ranariddh, one of
Sihanouk's sons, became first prime
minister, while Hun Sen became second prime
minister.
In September 1993 the government ratified a
new constitution restoring the monarchy and
establishing the Kingdom of Cambodia.
Sihanouk became king for the second time.
After the 1993 elections, no foreign
countries continued to recognize the DK as
Cambodia's legal government. The DK lost its
UN seat as well as most of its sources of
international aid.
The unrealistic power-sharing relationship
between Ranariddh and Hun Sen worked
surprisingly well for the next three years,
but relations between the parties were never
smooth. The CPP's control over the army and
the police gave the party effective control
of the country, and it dominated the
coalition government. In July 1997 Hun Sen
staged a violent coup against FUNCINPEC and
replaced Prince Ranariddh, who was overseas
at the time, with Ung Huot, a more pliable
FUNCINPEC figure. Hun Sen's action shocked
foreign nations and delayed Cambodia's entry
into the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN). By the end of 1997,
Cambodia was the only nation in the region
that was not a member.
Despite the coup, elections scheduled for
July 1998 proceeded as planned. Hundreds of
foreign observers who monitored the
elections affirmed that voting was
relatively free and fair; however, the CPP
harassed opposition candidates and party
workers before and after the elections, when
dozens were imprisoned and several were
killed. The election gave the CPP a
plurality of votes, but results, especially
in towns, where voting could not be dictated
by local authorities, indicated that the
party did not enjoy widespread popular
support. Prince Ranariddh and another
opposition candidate, Sam Rainsy, took
refuge abroad and contested the outcome of
the election. In November the CPP and
FUNCINPEC reached an agreement whereby Hun
Sen became sole prime minister and Ranariddh
became president of the National Assembly.
The parties formed a coalition government,
dividing control over the various cabinet
ministries. In early 1999 the constitution
was amended to create a Senate, called for
in the 1998 agreement. These signs that
Cambodia's political situation was
stabilizing encouraged ASEAN to admit
Cambodia to its membership a short time
later.
Pol Pot died in 1998, and by early 1999 most
of the remaining Khmer Rouge troops and
leaders had surrendered. Rebel troops were
integrated into the Cambodian army. In 1999
two Khmer Rouge leaders were arrested and
charged with genocide for their part in the
atrocities.
Since the Paris Accords of 1991, Cambodia's
economic growth has depended on millions of
dollars of foreign aid. Foreign interest in
Cambodia has decreased, however, and the
country has received diminishing economic
assistance. This development, along with the
continued lack of openness in Cambodian
politics, has made Cambodia's prospects for
democratization dim, as well as its chances
for sustained economic growth.
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