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Phnom Penh

Phnom Penh (/pəˌnɒm ˈpɛn, ˌpnɒm -/;[6][7][8] Khmer: ភ្នំពេញ, Phnum Pénh [pʰnomˈpɨɲ]) is the capital and most populous city of Cambodia. It has been the national capital since the French protectorate of Cambodia and has grown to become the nation's primate city and its economic, industrial, and cultural centre.

Phnom Penh
ភ្នំពេញ
  • Phnom Penh Capital
  • រាជធានីភ្នំពេញ
From top, left to right: Royal Throne Hall, Silver Pagoda, a street in Koh Pich, Sisowath Quay, Riverside Park, National Museum, Wat Phnom, Royal Stupas, Hotel Le Royal, Supreme Court Building
Nicknames: 
  • Pearl of Asia (pre-1960s)
  • The Charming City
Map
Phnom Penh
Location within Cambodia
Phnom Penh
Location within Asia
Coordinates: 11°34′10″N 104°55′16″E / 11.56944°N 104.92111°E / 11.56944; 104.92111Coordinates: 11°34′10″N 104°55′16″E / 11.56944°N 104.92111°E / 11.56944; 104.92111
Country Cambodia
Settled5th century[2]
Founded1372
Capital status1434–1497
Capital re-established1865
Named forWat Phnom and Lady Penh
Subdivisions14 khans[3]
Government
 • TypeMunicipal council
 • GovernorKhuong Sreng (CPP)
 • National Assembly
12 / 125
Area
 • Total679 km2 (262 sq mi)
 • Rank24th
Elevation
11.89 m (39.01 ft)
Population
 (2019 census)[4]
 • Total 2,281,951
 • Rank1st
 • Density3,361/km2 (8,700/sq mi)
  • Rank1st
Demonyms
  • Phnom Penher
  • (French: Phnom Penhois(e))
Time zoneUTC+07:00 (ICT)
Area code+855 (023)
HDI (2019)
Websitephnompenh.gov.kh
Phnom Penh
Khmer name
Khmerភ្នំពេញ
UNGEGN: Phnum Pénh
GD: Phnum Penh
ALA-LC: Bhnaṃ Beñ
IPA: [pʰnomˈpɨɲ]

Phnom Penh succeeded Angkor Thom as the capital of the Khmer nation but was abandoned several times before being reestablished in 1865 by King Norodom. The city formerly functioned as a processing center, with textiles, pharmaceuticals, machine manufacturing, and rice milling. Its chief assets, however, were cultural. Institutions of higher learning included the Royal University of Phnom Penh (established in 1960 as Royal Khmer University), with schools of engineering, fine arts, technology, and agricultural sciences, the latter at Chamkar Daung, a suburb. Also located in Phnom Penh were the Royal University of Agronomic Sciences and the Agricultural School of Prek Leap.[9]

The city was nicknamed the "Pearl of Asia" for its early 20th century colonial French architecture, which included Art Deco works.[10] Phnom Penh, along with Siem Reap and Sihanoukville, are significant global and domestic tourist destinations for Cambodia. Founded in 1372, the city is noted for its historical architecture and attractions. It became the national capital in 1434 following the fall of Angkor, and remained so until 1497.[11] It regained its capital status during the French colonial era in 1865. There are a number of surviving colonial-era buildings scattered along the grand boulevards.

On the banks of the Tonlé Sap, Mekong, and Bassac Rivers, Phnom Penh is home to more than 2 million people, approximately 14% of the Cambodian population.[4] The Greater Phnom Penh area includes the nearby Ta Khmau city and some districts of Kandal province.[12]

Etymology

Phnom Penh (lit. 'Penh's Hill') takes its name from the present Wat Phnom (lit. 'Hill Temple') or from the former Funan Kingdom, an ancient kingdom that existed from 1st to 7th century AD in Southeast Asia and the forerunner of the current Cambodian monarchy. Legend has it that in 1372, a wealthy widow named Penh found a Koki tree floating down the Tonlé Sap river after a storm.[13] Inside the tree were four bronze Buddha statues and a stone statue of Vishnu. Penh ordered villagers to raise the height of the hill northeast of her house and used the Koki wood to build a temple on the hill to house the four Buddha statues, and a shrine for the Vishnu image slightly lower down. The temple became known as Wat Phnom Daun Penh, which is now known as Wat Phnom, a small hill 27 metres (89 ft) in height.

Phnom Penh's former official name is Krong Chaktomuk Serei Mongkol (Khmer: ក្រុងចតុមុខសិរីមង្គល, lit. 'City of the Brahma's Faces'), in its short form as Krong Chaktomuk (lit. "City of Four Faces"). Krong Chaktomuk is an abbreviation of the full name which was given by King Ponhea Yat, Krong Chaktomuk Mongkol Sakal Kampuchea Thipadei Serei Theakreak Bavar Intabat Borei Roat Reach Seima Moha Nokor (Khmer: ក្រុងចតុមុខមង្គលសកលកម្ពុជាធិបតី សិរីធរបវរ ឥន្ទបត្តបុរី រដ្ឋរាជសីមាមហានគរ [kɾoŋ catomuk mɔŋkɔl sakɑl kampuciətʰəpaɗəj serəj tʰeareaɓɑːʋɑː ʔenteapat ɓorəj rɔətʰariəcsəjmaː mɔhaːnɔkɔː]). This loosely translates as "The place of four rivers that gives the happiness and success of Khmer Kingdom, the highest leader as well as impregnable city of the God Indra of the great kingdom".[14]

History

The initial settlement of Phnom Penh is believed to have been established since the 5th century AD, according to the discovery of ancient kiln site in Choeung Ek commune of Dangkao district, southern part of central Phnom Penh in the early 2000s. Choeung Ek archaeological site was one of the largest kiln pottery center in Cambodia and the earliest known kiln sites in Southeast Asia to produce the ceremonial vessels known as kendi from 5th to 13th century. Archaeologist stated that a large community is surrounded by a circular earthwork structure that is 740 metres in diameter and 4 metres high, built in the 11th century. In addition, there are remnants of other ancient village infrastructure, irrigation system, inscription, Shiva linga as well as an ancient brick temple foundation and its ornate remains which dated back to Funan era.[2][15]

First recorded a century after it is said to have taken place, the legend of the founding of Phnom Penh tells of a local woman, Penh (commonly referred to as Daun Penh (Lady Penh in Khmer), living at Chaktomuk, the future Phnom Penh. It was the late 14th century, and the Khmer capital was still at Angkor near Siem Reap 350 km (217 mi) to the north. Gathering firewood along the banks of the river, Lady Penh spied a floating koki tree in the river and fished it from the water. Inside the tree she found four Buddha statues and one of Vishnu.

 
Phnom Penh from east drawn in 1887.
 
Stupa of King Ponhea Yat on the top of Wat Phnom

The discovery was taken as a divine blessing, and to some a sign that the Khmer capital was to be brought to Phnom Penh from Angkor.[citation needed] To house the new-found sacred objects, Penh raised a small hill on the west bank of the Tonle Sap River and crowned it with a shrine, now known as Wat Phnom at the north end of central Phnom Penh. "Phnom" is Khmer for "hill" and Penh's hill took on the name of the founder, and the area around it became known after the hill.

Phnom Penh first became the capital of Cambodia after Ponhea Yat, king of the Khmer Empire, moved the capital from Angkor Thom after it was captured and destroyed by Siam a few years earlier. There is a stupa behind Wat Phnom that houses the remains of Ponhea Yat and the royal family as well as the remaining Buddhist statues from the Angkorean era. In the 17th century, Japanese immigrants also settled on the outskirts of present-day Phnom Penh.[16] A small Portuguese community survived in Phnom Penh until the 17th century, undertaking commercial and religious activity in the country.

Phnom Penh remained the royal capital for 73 years, from 1432 to 1505. It was abandoned for 360 years (from 1505 to 1865) by subsequent kings due to internal fighting between the royal pretenders. Later kings moved the capital several times and established their royal capitals at various locations in Tuol Basan (Srey Santhor), Pursat, Longvek, Lavear Em and Oudong.

It was not until 1866, under the reign of King Norodom I (1860–1904), the eldest son of King Ang Duong, who ruled on behalf of Siam, that Phnom Penh became the permanent seat of government and capital of Cambodia, and also where the current Royal Palace was built. Beginning in 1870, the French colonial authorities turned a riverside village into a city where they built hotels, schools, prisons, barracks, banks, public works offices, telegraph offices, law courts, and health services buildings. In 1872, the first glimpse of a modern city took shape when the colonial administration employed the services of French contractor Le Faucheur to construct the first 300 concrete houses for sale and rental to Chinese traders.

By the 1920s, Phnom Penh was known as the "Pearl of Asia", and over the next four decades, Phnom Penh continued to experience rapid growth with the building of railways to Sihanoukville and Pochentong International Airport (now Phnom Penh International Airport). Phnom Penh's infrastructure saw major modernisation under the rule of Sihanouk.[17]

During the Vietnam War, Cambodia was used as a base by the People's Army of Vietnam and the Viet Cong, and thousands of refugees from across the country flooded the city to escape the fighting between their own government troops, the People's Army of Vietnam, the Viet Cong, the South Vietnamese and their allies, the Khmer Rouge, and American air strikes. By 1975, the population was 2–3 million, the bulk of whom were refugees from the fighting.[18] The Khmer Rouge cut off supplies to the city for more than a year before it fell on April 17, 1975.[13] Reports from journalists stated that the Khmer Rouge shelling "tortured the capital almost continuously", inflicting "random death and mutilation" on millions of trapped civilians.[19] The Khmer Rouge forcibly evacuated the entire city after taking it, in what has been described as a death march: François Ponchaud wrote that "I shall never forget one cripple who had neither hands nor feet, writhing along the ground like a severed worm, or a weeping father carrying his ten-year old daughter wrapped in a sheet tied around his neck like a sling, or the man with his foot dangling at the end of a leg to which it was attached by nothing but skin";[20] Jon Swain recalled that the Khmer Rouge were "tipping out patients from the hospitals like garbage into the streets....In five years of war, this is the greatest caravan of human misery I have seen".[21] All of its residents, including the wealthy and educated, were evacuated from the city and forced to do difficult labour on rural farms as "new people".[22] Tuol Sleng High School was taken over by Pol Pot's forces and was turned into the S-21 prison camp, where people were detained and tortured. Pol Pot sought a return to an agrarian economy and therefore killed many people perceived as educated, "lazy", spies, or political enemies. Many others starved to death as a result of failure of the agrarian society and the sale of Cambodia's rice to China in exchange for bullets and weaponry. The former high school is now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, where Khmer Rouge torture devices and photos of their victims are displayed. Choeung Ek (the Killing Fields), 15 kilometers (9 mi) away, where the Khmer Rouge marched prisoners from Tuol Sleng to be murdered and buried in shallow pits, is also now a memorial to those who were killed by the regime.

 
Phnom Penh skyline in 2022
 
Skyline of Phnom Penh with aerial view of the Royal Palace in late 2022


The Khmer Rouge were driven out of Phnom Penh by the People's Army of Vietnam in 1979,[23] and people began to return to the city. Vietnam is historically a state with which Cambodia has had many conflicts, therefore this liberation was and is viewed with mixed emotions by the Cambodians. A period of reconstruction began, spurred by the continuing stability of government, attracting new foreign investment and aid by countries including France, Australia, and Japan. Loans were made from the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank to reinstate a clean water supply, roads and other infrastructure. The 1998 Census put Phnom Penh's population at 862,000;[24] and the 2008 census was 1.3 million.[25] By 2019, its population reached over 2.2 million, based on general population census.[4]

Geography

Phnom Penh is in the south-central region of Cambodia, and is fully surrounded by the Kandal province. The municipality is on the banks of the Tonlé Sap, Mekong, and Bassac Rivers. These rivers provide freshwater and other natural resources to the city. Phnom Penh and the surrounding areas consist of a typical flood plain area for Cambodia. Although Phnom Penh is at 11.89 metres (39 ft) above the river, monsoon season flooding is a problem, and the river sometimes overflows its banks.

The city, at 11°33′00″N 104°55′00″E / 11.55°N 104.91667°E / 11.55; 104.91667 (11°33' North, 104°55' East),[26] covers an area of 678.46 square kilometres (262 sq mi), with some 11,401 hectares (28,172 acres) in the municipality and 26,106 ha (64,509 acres) of roads. The agricultural land in the municipality amounts to 34.685 km2 (13 sq mi) with some 1.476 km2 (365 acres) under irrigation.

Climate

Phnom Penh has a tropical wet and dry climate (Köppen climate classification Aw). The climate is hot year-round with only minor variations. Temperatures typically range from 22 to 35 °C (72 to 95 °F) and weather is subject to the tropical monsoons. The southwest monsoon blows inland bringing moisture-laden winds from the Gulf of Thailand and Indian Ocean from May to November. The northeast monsoon ushers in the dry season, which lasts from December to April. The city experiences the heaviest precipitation from September to October with the driest period in January and February.

The city has two distinct seasons. The rainy season, which runs from May to November, sees high temperatures accompanied by high humidity. The dry season lasts from December to April; when overnight temperatures can drop to 22 °C (72 °F).

Climate data for Phnom Penh (temperature: 1988–2013, extremes: 1906–2013)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.1
(97.0)
38.1
(100.6)
40.0
(104.0)
40.5
(104.9)
40.0
(104.0)
39.2
(102.6)
37.2
(99.0)
37.8
(100.0)
35.5
(95.9)
36.1
(97.0)
34.4
(93.9)
37.2
(99.0)
40.5
(104.9)
Average high °C (°F) 31.6
(88.9)
33.2
(91.8)
34.6
(94.3)
35.3
(95.5)
34.8
(94.6)
33.8
(92.8)
32.9
(91.2)
32.7
(90.9)
32.2
(90.0)
31.4
(88.5)
31.1
(88.0)
30.8
(87.4)
32.9
(91.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) 26.6
(79.9)
28.0
(82.4)
29.4
(84.9)
30.2
(86.4)
30.0
(86.0)
29.2
(84.6)
28.7
(83.7)
28.5
(83.3)
28.2
(82.8)
27.2
(81.0)
27.1
(80.8)
26.3
(79.3)
28.3
(82.9)
Average low °C (°F) 21.8
(71.2)
22.8
(73.0)
24.3
(75.7)
25.5
(77.9)
25.6
(78.1)
24.9
(76.8)
24.8
(76.6)
24.6
(76.3)
24.4
(75.9)
24.2
(75.6)
23.2
(73.8)
21.9
(71.4)
24.0
(75.2)
Record low °C (°F) 12.8
(55.0)
15.2
(59.4)
19.0
(66.2)
17.8
(64.0)
20.6
(69.1)
21.2
(70.2)
20.1
(68.2)
20.0
(68.0)
21.1
(70.0)
17.2
(63.0)
16.7
(62.1)
14.4
(57.9)
12.8
(55.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 12.1
(0.48)
6.6
(0.26)
34.8
(1.37)
78.8
(3.10)
118.2
(4.65)
145.0
(5.71)
162.1
(6.38)
182.7
(7.19)
270.9
(10.67)
248.1
(9.77)
120.5
(4.74)
32.1
(1.26)
1,411.9
(55.58)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 1.2 1.1 3.4 6.8 15.9 17.0 18.1 18.3 21.5 19.3 10.2 4.5 137.3
Average relative humidity (%) 73 71 71 73 77 78 80 81 84 84 78 73 77
Mean monthly sunshine hours 260 226 267 240 202 192 143 174 129 202 213 242 2,490
Source 1: Deutscher Wetterdienst[27]
Source 2: Danish Meteorological Institute (sun, 1931–1960)[28]

Administration

 
Phnom Penh Capital Hall
 
Sections (khans) of Phnom Penh.

Phnom Penh is an autonomous municipality of area 678.46 square kilometres (261.95 sq mi) with a government status equal to that of the provinces. The autonomous municipality is subdivided into 14 administrative divisions called khans (sections). The district s are subdivided into 105 sangkats (quarters), and further subdivided into 953 phums (villages).[29] All khans are under the governance of Phnom Penh. Dangkao, Meanchey, Porsenchey, Sen Sok and Russey Keo are considered the outskirts of the city.

Phnom Penh is governed by the governor who acts as the top executive of the city as well as overseeing the Municipal Military Police, Municipal Police, and Bureau of Urban Affairs. Below the governor is the first vice governor and five vice governors. The chief of cabinet, who holds the same status as the vice governors, heads the cabinet consisting of eight deputy chiefs of cabinet who in turn are in charge of the 27 administrative departments. Every khans also has a chief.[30]

Phnom Penh administrative sections
ISO code Name Khmer Quarters Villages Population
1201 Chamkar Mon ខណ្ឌចំការមន 5 40 70,772
1202 Doun Penh ខណ្ឌដូនពេញ 11 134 155,069
1203 Prampir Makara ខណ្ឌប្រាំពីរមករា 8 66 71,092
1204 Tuol Kouk ខណ្ឌទួលគោក 10 143 145,570
1205 Dangkao ខណ្ឌដង្កោ 12 81 159,772
1206 Mean Chey ខណ្ឌមានជ័យ 7 59 248,464
1207 Russey Keo ខណ្ឌឫស្សីកែវ 7 30 274,861
1208 Sen Sok ខណ្ឌសែនសុខ 6 47 182,903
1209 Pou Senchey ខណ្ឌពោធិ៍សែនជ័យ 7 75 226,971
1210 Chroy Changvar ខណ្ឌជ្រោយចង្វារ 5 22 159,233
1211 Prek Pnov ខណ្ឌព្រែកព្នៅ 5 59 188,190
1212 Chbar Ampov ខណ្ឌច្បារអំពៅ 8 49 164,379
1213 Boeng Keng Kang ខណ្ឌបឹងកេងកង 7 55 66,658
1214 Kamboul ខណ្ឌកំបូល 7 93 75,526

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1950334,000—    
1960398,000+1.77%
1970457,000+1.39%
1975370,000−4.14%
197832,000−55.78%
1980189,000+143.03%
1985351,000+13.18%
1990634,000+12.55%
1995925,000+7.85%
20001,284,000+6.78%
20051,677,000+5.49%
20102,101,725+4.62%
20192,129,371[4]+0.15%

As of 2019, Phnom Penh had a population of 2,129,371 people, with a total population density of 3,136 inhabitants per square kilometre in a 679 square kilometres (262 sq mi) city area.[4] The population growth rate of the city is 3.92%. The city area has grown fourfold since 1979, and the metro area will continue to expand in order to support the city's growing population and economy.

A survey by the National Institute of Statistics in 2017 showed that 95.3% of the population in Phnom Penh are Khmer, 4% Chams, and 0.7% others, predominantly Chinese, Vietnamese, and other small ethnic groups who are Thai, Budong, Mnong Preh, Kuy and Chong.[31]

The official language is Khmer, but English and French are widely used in the city.

The number of slum-inhabitants at the end of 2012 was 105,771, compared with 85,807 at the start of 2012.[32]

Note: As stated in the "History" paragraph (The 1998 Census put Phnom Penh's population at 862,000;[24] and the 2008 census was 1.3 million.[25]) the information collides with the information provided in the "Historical population" table. Needs editing.

Religion

Religion in Phnom Penh (2019 census)[33]

  Buddhism (97.8%)
  Islam (1.6%)
  Christianity (0.5%)
  Animism and Other religions (0.1%)

The state religion is Theravada Buddhism. More than 97.8% of the people in Phnom Penh are Buddhists. Chams have been practicing Islam for hundreds of years. A small percentage follow Christianity.

Politics

 
The National Assembly building of Cambodia
 
Supreme Court Building

Phnom Penh is allocated 12 seats in the National Assembly, making it the largest constituency.

Members of Parliament

Economy

 
Phnom Penh Skyline
 
The Central Post Office Building
 
The Hong Kong Center, headquarters of oil producer TotalEnergies in Cambodia

Phnom Penh is Cambodia's economic centre as it accounts for a large portion of the Cambodian economy. Double-digit economic growth rates in recent years have triggered an economic boom in Phnom Penh, with new hotels, restaurants, schools, bars, high rises and residential buildings springing up in the city.

The economy is based on commercial interests such as garments, trading, and small and medium enterprises. In the past few years the property business has been booming, with rapidly increasing real estate prices. Tourism is also a major contributor in the capital as more shopping and commercial centres open, making Phnom Penh one of the major tourist destinations in South East Asia along with Siem Reap and Sihanoukville. According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, tourism made up 19.2 percent (US$2,053 million) of Cambodia's GDP in 2009 and accounts for 13.7 percent of total employment.[34] One of the most popular areas in Phnom Penh for tourists is Sisowath Quay, alongside the Tonle Sap River. Sisowath Quay is a five kilometre strip of road that includes restaurants, bars, and hotels.[35]

The US$2.6 billion new urban development, Camko City, is meant to bolster the city landscape. The Bureau of Urban Affairs of Phnom Penh Municipality has plans to expand and construct new infrastructure to accommodate the growing population and economy. High rise buildings will be constructed at the entrance of the city and near the lakes and riverbanks. Furthermore, new roads, canals, and a railway system will be used to connect Camko City and Phnom Penh.[36]


Other projects include:

  • Grand Phnom Penh International City (under construction)
  • De Castle Royal Condominium[37] (Completed)
  • Gold Tower 42 (On hold 32 floors construction begins again in the mid of 2018)
  • OCIC Tower (Completed)
  • Kokling super second floor house
  • Vattanac Capital Tower (completed)
  • The Bridge (Completed)
  • The Peak (Completed)

With booming economic growth seen since the 1990s, new shopping venues have opened, such as Sorya Center Point, Aeon Mall Phnom Penh, Aeon Mall Sen Sok City, Aeon Mall Mean Chey and Olympia Mall. Many international brands have opened such as Mango, Salvatore Ferragamo, Hugo Boss, Padini Concept Store, Lily, Timberland, Jimmy Choo, CC Double O, MO, Brands Outlet, Nike, Converse, Pony, Armani Exchange, and Super Dry.

The tallest skyscraper in Phnom Penh is Vattanac Capital Tower at a height of 188 metres (617 ft), dominating Phnom Penh's skyline with its neighbour skyscraper Canadia Tower (OCIC Tower).[38] The tower was completed in December 2014. Modern high rises have been constructed all around the city, not concentrated in any one particular area.

The Central Market Phsar Thmei is a tourist attraction. The four wings of the yellow colored market are teeming with numerous stalls selling gold and silver jewelry, antique coins, clothing, clocks, flowers, food, fabrics and shoes. Phsar Thmei is undergoing under a major renovation, along with the creation of newer stalls.

Education

Universities and colleges

Name Khmer
American University of Phnom Penh សាកលវិទ្យាល័យអាមេរិកាំងភ្នំពេញ
BELTEI International University សាកលវិទ្យាល័យប៊ែលធីអន្តរជាតិ
University of Cambodia (UC) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យកម្ពុជា
International University (IU) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យអន្តរជាតិ
École Royale d'Administration (ERA) សាលាភូមិន្ទរដ្ឋបាល
Royal University of Phnom Penh (RUPP) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យភូមិន្ទភ្នំពេញ
Royal University of Law and Economics (RULE) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យភូមិន្ទនីតិសាស្រ្ត និងវិទ្យាសាស្រ្តសេដ្ឋកិច្ច
Royal University of Fine Arts (RUFA) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យភូមិន្ទវិចិត្រសិល្បៈ
Royal University of Agriculture (RUA) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យភូមិន្ទកសិកម្ម
National University of Management (NUM) សាកលវិទ្យាល័យជាតិគ្រប់គ្រង
Institute of Technology of Cambodia (ITC) វិទ្យាស្ថានបច្ចេកវិទ្យាកម្ពុជា
Buddhist Institute វិទ្យាស្ថានពុទ្ធសាសនបណ្ឌិត្យ
Royal Academy of Cambodia រាជបណ្ឌិត្យសភាកម្ពុជា
Cambodian Agricultural Research and Development Institute វិទ្យាស្ថានស្រាវជ្រាវ និងអភិវឌ្ឍកសិកម្មកម្ពុជា
National Institute of Business វិទ្យាស្ថានជាតិពាណិជ្ជសាស្រ្ត
National Institute of Education វិទ្យាស្ថានជាតិអប់រំ
National Polytechnic Institute of Cambodia វិទ្យាស្ថានជាតិពហុបច្ចេកទេសកម្ពុជា
National Technical Training Institute វិទ្យាស្ថានជាតិបណ្តុះបណ្តាលបច្ចេកទេស
Paññāsāstra University of Cambodia សាកលវិទ្យាល័យបញ្ញាសាស្ត្រកម្ពុជា
Preah Sihanouk Raja Buddhist University ពុទ្ធិកសាកលវិទ្យាល័យព្រះសីហនុរាជ
Prek Leap National College of Agriculture សាលាជាតិកសិកម្មព្រែកលៀប
University of Health Sciences សាកលវិទ្យាល័យវិទ្យាសាស្រ្តសុខាភិបាល
University of Puthisastra សាកលវិទ្យាល័យពុទ្ធិសាស្ត្រ
Preah Kosomak Polytechnic Institute វិទ្យាស្ថានពហុបច្ចេកទេសព្រះកុសុមៈ
Industrial Technical Institute វិទ្យាស្ថានបច្ចេកទេសឧស្សាហកម្ម
Paragon International University សាកលវិទ្យាល័យអន្តរជាតិផារ៉ាហ្គន
Institute For Development of Economy (IDE) វិទ្យាស្ថានអភិវឌ្ឍន៍សេដ្ឋកិច្ច
Western University[39] សាកលវិទ្យាល័យវេស្ទើន
Student Development Institute (SDI) វិទ្យាស្ថានអភិវឌ្ឍន៍និស្សិត
Asia Euro University សាកលវិទ្យាល័យអាស៊ី អឺរ៉៉ុប

Primary and secondary schools

Name Name in Khmer
Bak Touk High School វិទ្យាល័យបាក់ទូក
Chaktomuk Secondary School អនុវិទ្យាល័យចតុមុខ
Chbar Ampov High School វិទ្យាល័យច្បារអំពៅ
Chea Sim Boeng Kang Kang High School វិទ្យាល័យជាស៊ីមបឹងកេងកង
Chea Sim Chroy Changvar High School វិទ្យាល័យជាស៊ីមជ្រោយចង្វារ
Chea Sim Samaky High School វិទ្យាល័យជាស៊ីមសាមគ្គី
Chea Sim Santhormok High School វិទ្យាល័យជាស៊ីមសន្ធរម៉ុក
Hun Sen-Bun Rany Phsar Daeum Thkov High School វិទ្យាល័យហ៊ុនសែនប៊ុនរ៉ានីផ្សារដើមថ្កូវ
Indradevi High School វិទ្យាល័យឥន្ទ្រទេវី
Lycée Sisowath វិទ្យាល័យព្រះស៊ីសុវត្ថិ
Tuol Svay Prey High School វិទ្យាល័យទួលស្វាយព្រៃ
Wat Koh High School វិទ្យាល័យវត្តកោះ

International schools

Name Name in Khmer
Abundant Life International School (ALIS) សាលាអន្តរជាតិអាប៊ែនឌែនឡៃ
American Intercon School American Intercon School (AIS) សាលារៀនអន្តរទ្វីបអាមេរិកាំង, Salariĕn Ántărătvib Amérĭkăng
Australian International School Phnom Penh (AISPP)
Beijing International School សាលាអន្តរជាតិប៉េកាំង, Sala Ántărăchéatĕ Pékăng
BELTEI International School សាលាប៊ែលធីអន្តរជាតិ, Sala Bêlthi Ántărăchéatĕ
British International School of Phnom Penh
CIA First International School សាលាអន្តរជាតិស៊ីអាយអេហ្វឺសត៍, Sala Ántărăchéatĕ Si'ay'é Fœst
East-West International School សាលាអន្តរជាតិអ៊ិសវ៉េស, Sala Ántărăchéatĕ 'Ĭs Vés
Footprint International School
Harrods International Academy
Home of English International School
iCAN British International School
International School of Phnom Penh (ISPP) សាលារៀនអន្តរជាតិភ្នំពេញ
International School of Singapore
Invictus International School Phnom Penh
Japanese School of Phnom Penh 金边日本学校
Lycée français René Descartes de Phnom Penh
New Gateway International School
Northbridge International School
Paragon International School សាលារៀនអន្តរជាតិផារ៉ាហ្គន, Salariĕn Ántărăchéatĕ Pharagân
Singapore (Cambodia) International Academy
Southbridge International School
Advanced International School សាលារៀនអន្តរជាតិអ៊ែតវ៉ាន់, 顶尖国际学校


Supplementary and extra schools

English Original Name
Japanese Supplementary School of Phnom Penh (プノンペン補習授業校, Punonpen Hoshū Jugyō Kō)
Rodwell Learning Center សាលាបង្រៀនគួររ៉ដវែល, Sala Bángriĕn Kuŏr Râdvêl

The Japanese Supplementary School of Phnom Penh, formerly known in English as the Phnom Penh Japanese School,[40][41] is a part-time Japanese School, operated by the Japanese Association of Cambodia (JACAM;カンボジア日本人会 Kambojia Nihonjin-kai).[42] It is in Sangkat Toek Thla in Sen Sok.[43] It was established in 2002. It had 60 students in June 2011.[44]

Culture

 
"Dried" version of Phnom Penh noodles with soup broth on the side.

Phnom Penh also has its own dialect of Khmer. Speakers of the Phnom Penh dialect often elide syllables, which has earned it a reputation for being lazy speech. Phnom Penh is also known for its influence on New Khmer Architecture. Phnom Penh is notable for Ka tieu Phnom Penh, its variation on rice noodle soup, a dish available in sit-down cafes as well as street cafes.

The city hosts a number of music events throughout the city. Indie bands have grown in number due also in part to the emergence of private music schools such as SoundsKool Music (also operating in the city of Siem Reap), and Music Arts School (registered as a non-governmental organization). The Cambodian fishing dance originated in Phnom Penh at the Royal University of Fine Arts in the 1960s.[45]

 
The Cambodian fishing dance originated from Phnom Penh.

The two most visited museums in the city are the National Museum, which is the country's leading historical and archaeological museum, and Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, a former Khmer Rouge prison. The National Museum hosts celebrations of Cambodian dance and music, including a popular classic Apsara dance show of traditional folk dances as well as original creations.

Cambodian New Year

At this time, Phnom Penh celebrates Cambodian New Year, an occasion increasingly popular with tourists. During this typically hottest part of the year, water gets thrown around adding to the party atmosphere along with dancing and music. The precise date changes year-by-year but this holiday lasts, at least, three days. This festival marks the turn of the year based on the ancient Khmer calendar and also marks the end of the prior year harvest.

Water Festival

 
Colorful boats during Bon Om Touk.

The largest annual festival in Phnom Penh, this lively gathering celebrates the reversing of the flow of the Tonlé Sap River. The holiday lasts three days as people flood into the city to enjoy the fireworks, boat races, live concerts, eating and partying. The boat racing dates back to ancient times marking the strengths of the Khmer marine forces during the Khmer Empire.

On November 22, 2010, at least 348 people were crushed to death in a bridge stampede at the festival.[46]

Ancestors' Day

Ancestors' Day, also called Pchum Ben, is a very important aspect of Cambodian culture. It may be translated as "gathering together" to make offerings and is a time of reunion, commemoration, express love and appreciation for one's ancestors. By offering food and good karma to those possibly trapped in the spirit world, living relatives help assuage their misery and guide them back into the cycle of reincarnation.

Visak Bochea

Vesākha is an annual holiday observed traditionally by Buddhists in Cambodia. Sometimes informally called "Buddha's Birthday", it actually encompasses the birth, enlightenment (nirvāṇa), and passing away (Parinirvāna) of Gautama Buddha.

Cityscape and architecture

The oldest structure is Wat Phnom from the founding days of the city, constructed in 1373. The main tourist attractions are the Royal Palace with the Silver Pagoda, and the National Museum, constructed during the French colonial era in the late-19th century in the classical Khmer style and hosting a vast collection of Khmer antiquities. The Independence Monument (Khmer: Vimean Akareach), although from the 1950s, is also constructed in the ancient Khmer style.

The French, who were the colonial masters from the 19th century to the 1940s, also left their mark, with various colonial villas, French churches, boulevards, and the Art Deco market Phsar Thom Thmei. A notable landmark of the colonial era is the Hotel Le Royal.

Starting with independence from the French in the 1950s and lasting until the era of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s, Phnom Penh underwent tremendous growth as the capital city of a newly independent country. King Sihanouk was eager to present a new style of architecture and thus invigorate the process of nation building. A new golden era of architecture took off, with various projects and young Khmer architects, often educated in France, given opportunities to design and construct. This new movement was called "New Khmer Architecture" and was often characterised by a fusion of Bauhaus, European post-modern architecture, and traditional elements from Angkor. The most prominent architect was Vann Molyvann, who was nominated chief national architect by the king himself in 1956. Molyvann created landmark buildings such as the Preah Suramarit National Theatre or the Vann Molyvann House. Other architects helped construct the newly founded Royal Khmer University, the Institute of Foreign Languages, and the National Sports Centre. With the growth of the upper and entrepreneurial middle

 
Statue of Lady Penh, the city's founder.

classes, new suburbs were built in the 1950s and 1960s. Although these buildings survived the Khmer Rouge era and the civil war, today they are under threat due to economic development and financial speculation.[47] Villas and gardens from that era are being destroyed and redeveloped to make place for bigger structures. The landmark National Theatre by Molyvann was razed in 2008.[48] A movement is rising in Cambodia to preserve this modernist heritage. Old villas are sometimes being converted into boutique hotels, such as the Knai Bang Chatt.

Monuments and memorials to the genocide of the Khmer Rouge era in the 1970s are the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum (a former high school used as a concentration camp) and, on the outskirts of the city, the Choeung Ek Genocide Center. The Cambodia-Vietnam Friendship Monument was commissioned by the Vietnamese communists as symbol of Khmer-Vietnamese friendship during the late-1970s following the liberation of Cambodia from the Khmer Rouge.

The population, foreign investment, and urban development in Phnom Penh grew dramatically during the 1990s and early-2000s. The rapid growth resulted in the city's infrastructure distinctly lacking (the drainage system is particularly notorious, and Phnom Penh frequently floods during the wet season), and a need for both residential and commercial spaces. The simultaneous demand for residential and commercial housing and the increase of international investment has led to the planning, if not construction, of several satellite cities. The largest of these cities are: Grand Phnom Penh International City, CamKo City, Diamond Island City, Boeung Kak Town, and Chruy Cangva City.

On the outskirts of the city, farmland has been developed into garment factories and housing for lower economic classes and those displaced by the new development in the city center.

 
Panoramic view of Phnom Penh from City Center
         
National Museum, designed in the early-1920s by George Groslier. Royal Throne Hall, constructed in the 1860s under King Norodom I. Façade, Hotel Le Royal, built in 1929 in the reign of King Sisowath Monivong. Colonial villa in Phnom Penh. Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction.
 
Phnom Penh city at night revealing skylines and the royal palace, viewed from the east bank of Tonle Sap river in September 2019.

2035 master plan

Originally intended to be completed by 2020, the 2035 master plan[49] is a French-funded project for the development of Phnom Penh. Although the plan was approved by the Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Construction in 2005, it has yet to be ratified by the Cabinet of Cambodia. The original plan details five edge-city projects connected to the historical city centre by waterways and tree-lined corridors.[50]

Media

Dailies

Khmer

English

  • Phnom Penh Post, a daily English-language newspaper published in Phnom Penh.
  • The Cambodia Daily, an English-language daily newspaper (closed in 2017).
  • The Khmer Times, an English-language daily newspaper.

Chinese

  • 《柬華日報》(Jianhua Daily), a daily Chinese-language newspaper published in Phnom Penh.
  • 《星洲日報》(Sin Chew Daily), a Chinese-language daily newspaper, the Cambodian edition of the Malaysian Chinese daily of the same name.
  • 《華商日報》(Huashang Daily), a Chinese-language daily newspaper.
  • 《高棉日报》(Khmer Daily), a Chinese-language daily newspaper.
  • 《新柬埔寨》(New Cambodia), a Chinese-language daily newspaper.

Magazines

  • AsiaLIFE Guide Phnom Penh, a monthly English-language lifestyle magazine published in Phnom Penh. (Ceased in 2018)
  • F Magazine, the first fashion-forward magazine in Cambodia. Bi-lingual, written in English and Khmer.
  • SOVRIN Magazine, is the fashion glossy magazine in Cambodia which written in khmer language.

Online news

  • Thmey Thmey Phnom Penh[51]
  • Sabay News Phnom Penh.
  • Fresh News Phnom Penh[52]

Sport

The martial arts of Bokator, Pradal Serey (Khmer kick boxing) and Khmer traditional wrestling have venues in Phnom Penh watched by dedicated spectators. Cambodia has increasingly become involved in modern sports over the last 30 years. As with the rest of the country, football and the martial arts are particularly popular. Ultimate fighting and freestyle boxing have also become more common in recent years.[citation needed]

The most prominent sporting venue in the city is the Phnom Penh National Olympic Stadium with a capacity of 50,000[53]—although the country never hosted the Olympic Games due to disruption by the civil war and the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. Built in 1964,[53] it is home to the Cambodian national football team.[54] On completion the stadium was one of the largest in Asia. Volleyball, basketball, and Tai-Kwon-Do games are often hosted at the stadium. The stadium closed in 2000,[53] but was redeveloped and reopened.

In footballing ventures, Phnom Penh is formally represented by Phnom Penh Crown FC despite being home to numerous football teams who plays in the Cambodian League. Including Visakha, Nagaworld, Boeungket and the aforementioned Phnom Penh Crown, amongst many others.

The National Sports Centre of Cambodia hosts swimming, boxing, and volleyball competitions. Noted local football clubs include Phnom Penh Empire, Khemara Keila FC and Military Police. The city will host the 2023 Southeast Asian Games and the 2023 ASEAN Para Games, this will mark the first time that Cambodia has hosted a multi-sport event.

Transport

Phnom Penh International Airport is the largest and busiest airport in Cambodia. It is seven kilometres west of central Phnom Penh. The airport is connected to the city center by taxi, train, and shuttle bus.

Cambodia's national flag carrier, Cambodia Angkor Air, launched in 2009, is headquartered in Phnom Penh and has its main hub there, with an additional hub at the Angkor International Airport.[55]

Air France used to serve Phnom Penh from Paris-Charles de Gaulle but this service has since stopped. Qatar Airways now flies to and from Phnom Penh, via Saigon.

Taxis, pick-ups, and minibuses leave the city for destinations all over the country, but are fast losing ground to cheaper and more comfortable buses. Phnom Penh also has a rail service.

There are numerous bus companies, including Phnom Penh Public Transport and GST Express, running services to most provincial capitals, including Sihanoukville, Kampong Chhnang, Oudong and Takéo. Phnom Penh Sorya Transport Co. offers bus service to several provincial destinations along the National Routes and to Saigon. Giant Ibis is another bus company based in Phnom Penh, which travels to Sihanoukville, Kampot, Siem Reap and Saigon, and has free Wi-Fi, air conditioning and modest pricing.

The city is Cambodia's main freshwater port, a major port on the Mekong River. It is linked to the South China Sea, 290 kilometres distant, via a channel of the Mekong in Vietnam.

Public transport

 
Phnom Penh BRT bus approaching Monivong-Sihanouk station

Phnom Penh is served by air conditioned public buses. Initial attempts by the Japanese government to develop a Phnom Penh bus service began in 2001. An update of the JICA urban transport master plan for Phnom Penh was completed and implemented in 2014.[56] The city is now served by 17 bus lines, operated by the Phnom Penh municipal government. Private transportation within the city include the cycle rickshaw, known in Khmer as "cyclo", the motorcycle taxi known in Khmer as "moto", the auto rickshaw known locally as "tuk-tuk", the trailer attached to a motorcycle taxi known in Khmer as "remorque", and the standard automobile taxicab known in Khmer as "taxi".[57] Private forms of transportation used by locals include bicycles, motorbikes, and cars.

Highways

 
Motorcycle traffic in Phnom Penh

As the capital of Cambodia, a number of national highways connect the city with various parts of the country:

National Highway Code Length Origin Terminal
National Highway 1 10001 167.10 km 103.83 mi Phnom Penh Vietnamese Border
National Highway 2 10002 120.60 km 74.94 mi Phnom Penh Vietnamese Border
National Highway 3 10003 202.00 km 125.52 mi Phnom Penh Veal Renh
National Highway 4 10004 226.00 km 140.43 mi Phnom Penh Sihanoukville
National Highway 5 10005 407.45 km 253.18 mi Phnom Penh Thai Border
National Highway 6 10006 416.00 km 258.49 mi Phnom Penh Banteay Meanchey
National Highway 7 10007 509.17 km 316.38 mi Skun (Cheung Prey District) Lao Border

Water supply

Water supply in Phnom Penh has improved dramatically in terms of access, service quality, efficiency, cost recovery and governance between 1993 and 2006. The number of customers has increased ninefold, service quality has improved from intermittent to continuous supply, water losses have been cut dramatically and the city's water utility went from being bankrupt to making a modest profit.[58] These achievements were recognized through international awards such as the 2006 Ramon Magsaysay Award and the 2010 Stockholm Industry Water Award.[59] The city's water utility is the Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority (PPWSA). Its main water sources are the Mekong River, the Tonle Sap river and the Tonle Bassac river.

Twin towns – sister cities

Phnom Penh is twinned with:

Notable people

See also

References

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Bibliography

  • Groslier, B.P. (2006). Angkor And Cambodia In the Sixteenth Century. Bangkok: Orchid Press.
  • Igout, Michel; Dubuisson, Serge (1993). Phnom Penh Then and Now. Bangkok: White Lotus. ISBN 978-974-8495-84-2. OCLC 29795478.
  • LeBoutillier, Kris; Ariff, Shahida (2004). Journey Through Phnom Penh: A Pictorial Guide to the Jewel of Cambodia. Singapore: Times Editions. ISBN 978-981-232-596-9. OCLC 55501046.
  • Leroy, Joakim; Hoskin, John (2005). AZU's Dreams of Cambodia. Phnom Penh. Hong Kong: AZU Editions Ltd. ISBN 978-988-98140-2-1. OCLC 62328690.
  • Kolnberger, Thomas (2020). Continuity and change: Transformations in the urban history of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, in: Southeast Asian Transformations. Urban and Rural Developments in the 21st Century, pp. 219-239, ed. by S. Kurfürst and S. Wehner. Transcript (Bielefeld). hdl:10993/43963.

External links

  • Official city website
  • Time in Phnom Penh
  •   Phnom Penh travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • 560229438 Phnom Penh on OpenStreetMap
  •   Geographic data related to Phnom Penh at OpenStreetMap

phnom, penh, khmer, phnum, pénh, pʰnomˈpɨɲ, capital, most, populous, city, cambodia, been, national, capital, since, french, protectorate, cambodia, grown, become, nation, primate, city, economic, industrial, cultural, centre, ញcapital, city, autonomous, munic. Phnom Penh p e ˌ n ɒ m ˈ p ɛ n ˌ p n ɒ m 6 7 8 Khmer ភ ន ព ញ Phnum Penh pʰnomˈpɨɲ is the capital and most populous city of Cambodia It has been the national capital since the French protectorate of Cambodia and has grown to become the nation s primate city and its economic industrial and cultural centre Phnom Penh ភ ន ព ញCapital city and autonomous municipality 1 Phnom Penh Capitalរ ជធ ន ភ ន ព ញFrom top left to right Royal Throne Hall Silver Pagoda a street in Koh Pich Sisowath Quay Riverside Park National Museum Wat Phnom Royal Stupas Hotel Le Royal Supreme Court BuildingSealNicknames Pearl of Asia pre 1960s The Charming CityMapPhnom PenhLocation within CambodiaShow map of CambodiaPhnom PenhLocation within AsiaShow map of AsiaCoordinates 11 34 10 N 104 55 16 E 11 56944 N 104 92111 E 11 56944 104 92111 Coordinates 11 34 10 N 104 55 16 E 11 56944 N 104 92111 E 11 56944 104 92111Country CambodiaSettled5th century 2 Founded1372Capital status1434 1497Capital re established1865Named forWat Phnom and Lady PenhSubdivisions14 khans 3 Government TypeMunicipal council GovernorKhuong Sreng CPP National Assembly12 125Area Total679 km2 262 sq mi Rank24thElevation11 89 m 39 01 ft Population 2019 census 4 Total2 281 951 Rank1st Density3 361 km2 8 700 sq mi Rank1stDemonymsPhnom Penher French Phnom Penhois e Time zoneUTC 07 00 ICT Area code 855 023 HDI 2019 0 731 5 high 1stWebsitephnompenh wbr gov wbr khPhnom PenhKhmer nameKhmerភ ន ព ញUNGEGN Phnum Penh GD Phnum Penh ALA LC Bhnaṃ Ben IPA pʰnomˈpɨɲ Phnom Penh succeeded Angkor Thom as the capital of the Khmer nation but was abandoned several times before being reestablished in 1865 by King Norodom The city formerly functioned as a processing center with textiles pharmaceuticals machine manufacturing and rice milling Its chief assets however were cultural Institutions of higher learning included the Royal University of Phnom Penh established in 1960 as Royal Khmer University with schools of engineering fine arts technology and agricultural sciences the latter at Chamkar Daung a suburb Also located in Phnom Penh were the Royal University of Agronomic Sciences and the Agricultural School of Prek Leap 9 The city was nicknamed the Pearl of Asia for its early 20th century colonial French architecture which included Art Deco works 10 Phnom Penh along with Siem Reap and Sihanoukville are significant global and domestic tourist destinations for Cambodia Founded in 1372 the city is noted for its historical architecture and attractions It became the national capital in 1434 following the fall of Angkor and remained so until 1497 11 It regained its capital status during the French colonial era in 1865 There are a number of surviving colonial era buildings scattered along the grand boulevards On the banks of the Tonle Sap Mekong and Bassac Rivers Phnom Penh is home to more than 2 million people approximately 14 of the Cambodian population 4 The Greater Phnom Penh area includes the nearby Ta Khmau city and some districts of Kandal province 12 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Administration 5 Demographics 5 1 Religion 6 Politics 6 1 Members of Parliament 7 Economy 8 Education 8 1 Universities and colleges 8 2 Primary and secondary schools 8 3 International schools 8 4 Supplementary and extra schools 9 Culture 9 1 Cambodian New Year 9 2 Water Festival 9 3 Ancestors Day 9 4 Visak Bochea 10 Cityscape and architecture 10 1 2035 master plan 11 Media 11 1 Dailies 11 1 1 Khmer 11 1 2 English 11 1 3 Chinese 11 2 Magazines 11 3 Online news 12 Sport 13 Transport 13 1 Public transport 13 2 Highways 14 Water supply 15 Twin towns sister cities 16 Notable people 17 See also 18 References 19 Bibliography 20 External linksEtymology EditPhnom Penh lit Penh s Hill takes its name from the present Wat Phnom lit Hill Temple or from the former Funan Kingdom an ancient kingdom that existed from 1st to 7th century AD in Southeast Asia and the forerunner of the current Cambodian monarchy Legend has it that in 1372 a wealthy widow named Penh found a Koki tree floating down the Tonle Sap river after a storm 13 Inside the tree were four bronze Buddha statues and a stone statue of Vishnu Penh ordered villagers to raise the height of the hill northeast of her house and used the Koki wood to build a temple on the hill to house the four Buddha statues and a shrine for the Vishnu image slightly lower down The temple became known as Wat Phnom Daun Penh which is now known as Wat Phnom a small hill 27 metres 89 ft in height Phnom Penh s former official name is Krong Chaktomuk Serei Mongkol Khmer ក រ ងចត ម ខស រ មង គល lit City of the Brahma s Faces in its short form as Krong Chaktomuk lit City of Four Faces Krong Chaktomuk is an abbreviation of the full name which was given by King Ponhea Yat Krong Chaktomuk Mongkol Sakal Kampuchea Thipadei Serei Theakreak Bavar Intabat Borei Roat Reach Seima Moha Nokor Khmer ក រ ងចត ម ខមង គលសកលកម ព ជ ធ បត ស រ ធរបវរ ឥន ទបត តប រ រដ ឋរ ជស ម មហ នគរ kɾoŋ catomuk mɔŋkɔl sakɑl kampucietʰepaɗej serej tʰeareaɓɑːʋɑː ʔenteapat ɓorej rɔetʰariecsejmaː mɔhaːnɔkɔː This loosely translates as The place of four rivers that gives the happiness and success of Khmer Kingdom the highest leader as well as impregnable city of the God Indra of the great kingdom 14 History EditThe initial settlement of Phnom Penh is believed to have been established since the 5th century AD according to the discovery of ancient kiln site in Choeung Ek commune of Dangkao district southern part of central Phnom Penh in the early 2000s Choeung Ek archaeological site was one of the largest kiln pottery center in Cambodia and the earliest known kiln sites in Southeast Asia to produce the ceremonial vessels known as kendi from 5th to 13th century Archaeologist stated that a large community is surrounded by a circular earthwork structure that is 740 metres in diameter and 4 metres high built in the 11th century In addition there are remnants of other ancient village infrastructure irrigation system inscription Shiva linga as well as an ancient brick temple foundation and its ornate remains which dated back to Funan era 2 15 First recorded a century after it is said to have taken place the legend of the founding of Phnom Penh tells of a local woman Penh commonly referred to as Daun Penh Lady Penh in Khmer living at Chaktomuk the future Phnom Penh It was the late 14th century and the Khmer capital was still at Angkor near Siem Reap 350 km 217 mi to the north Gathering firewood along the banks of the river Lady Penh spied a floating koki tree in the river and fished it from the water Inside the tree she found four Buddha statues and one of Vishnu Phnom Penh from east drawn in 1887 Stupa of King Ponhea Yat on the top of Wat Phnom The discovery was taken as a divine blessing and to some a sign that the Khmer capital was to be brought to Phnom Penh from Angkor citation needed To house the new found sacred objects Penh raised a small hill on the west bank of the Tonle Sap River and crowned it with a shrine now known as Wat Phnom at the north end of central Phnom Penh Phnom is Khmer for hill and Penh s hill took on the name of the founder and the area around it became known after the hill Phnom Penh first became the capital of Cambodia after Ponhea Yat king of the Khmer Empire moved the capital from Angkor Thom after it was captured and destroyed by Siam a few years earlier There is a stupa behind Wat Phnom that houses the remains of Ponhea Yat and the royal family as well as the remaining Buddhist statues from the Angkorean era In the 17th century Japanese immigrants also settled on the outskirts of present day Phnom Penh 16 A small Portuguese community survived in Phnom Penh until the 17th century undertaking commercial and religious activity in the country Phnom Penh remained the royal capital for 73 years from 1432 to 1505 It was abandoned for 360 years from 1505 to 1865 by subsequent kings due to internal fighting between the royal pretenders Later kings moved the capital several times and established their royal capitals at various locations in Tuol Basan Srey Santhor Pursat Longvek Lavear Em and Oudong It was not until 1866 under the reign of King Norodom I 1860 1904 the eldest son of King Ang Duong who ruled on behalf of Siam that Phnom Penh became the permanent seat of government and capital of Cambodia and also where the current Royal Palace was built Beginning in 1870 the French colonial authorities turned a riverside village into a city where they built hotels schools prisons barracks banks public works offices telegraph offices law courts and health services buildings In 1872 the first glimpse of a modern city took shape when the colonial administration employed the services of French contractor Le Faucheur to construct the first 300 concrete houses for sale and rental to Chinese traders By the 1920s Phnom Penh was known as the Pearl of Asia and over the next four decades Phnom Penh continued to experience rapid growth with the building of railways to Sihanoukville and Pochentong International Airport now Phnom Penh International Airport Phnom Penh s infrastructure saw major modernisation under the rule of Sihanouk 17 During the Vietnam War Cambodia was used as a base by the People s Army of Vietnam and the Viet Cong and thousands of refugees from across the country flooded the city to escape the fighting between their own government troops the People s Army of Vietnam the Viet Cong the South Vietnamese and their allies the Khmer Rouge and American air strikes By 1975 the population was 2 3 million the bulk of whom were refugees from the fighting 18 The Khmer Rouge cut off supplies to the city for more than a year before it fell on April 17 1975 13 Reports from journalists stated that the Khmer Rouge shelling tortured the capital almost continuously inflicting random death and mutilation on millions of trapped civilians 19 The Khmer Rouge forcibly evacuated the entire city after taking it in what has been described as a death march Francois Ponchaud wrote that I shall never forget one cripple who had neither hands nor feet writhing along the ground like a severed worm or a weeping father carrying his ten year old daughter wrapped in a sheet tied around his neck like a sling or the man with his foot dangling at the end of a leg to which it was attached by nothing but skin 20 Jon Swain recalled that the Khmer Rouge were tipping out patients from the hospitals like garbage into the streets In five years of war this is the greatest caravan of human misery I have seen 21 All of its residents including the wealthy and educated were evacuated from the city and forced to do difficult labour on rural farms as new people 22 Tuol Sleng High School was taken over by Pol Pot s forces and was turned into the S 21 prison camp where people were detained and tortured Pol Pot sought a return to an agrarian economy and therefore killed many people perceived as educated lazy spies or political enemies Many others starved to death as a result of failure of the agrarian society and the sale of Cambodia s rice to China in exchange for bullets and weaponry The former high school is now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum where Khmer Rouge torture devices and photos of their victims are displayed Choeung Ek the Killing Fields 15 kilometers 9 mi away where the Khmer Rouge marched prisoners from Tuol Sleng to be murdered and buried in shallow pits is also now a memorial to those who were killed by the regime Phnom Penh skyline in 2022 Skyline of Phnom Penh with aerial view of the Royal Palace in late 2022 The Khmer Rouge were driven out of Phnom Penh by the People s Army of Vietnam in 1979 23 and people began to return to the city Vietnam is historically a state with which Cambodia has had many conflicts therefore this liberation was and is viewed with mixed emotions by the Cambodians A period of reconstruction began spurred by the continuing stability of government attracting new foreign investment and aid by countries including France Australia and Japan Loans were made from the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank to reinstate a clean water supply roads and other infrastructure The 1998 Census put Phnom Penh s population at 862 000 24 and the 2008 census was 1 3 million 25 By 2019 its population reached over 2 2 million based on general population census 4 Geography EditPhnom Penh is in the south central region of Cambodia and is fully surrounded by the Kandal province The municipality is on the banks of the Tonle Sap Mekong and Bassac Rivers These rivers provide freshwater and other natural resources to the city Phnom Penh and the surrounding areas consist of a typical flood plain area for Cambodia Although Phnom Penh is at 11 89 metres 39 ft above the river monsoon season flooding is a problem and the river sometimes overflows its banks The city at 11 33 00 N 104 55 00 E 11 55 N 104 91667 E 11 55 104 91667 11 33 North 104 55 East 26 covers an area of 678 46 square kilometres 262 sq mi with some 11 401 hectares 28 172 acres in the municipality and 26 106 ha 64 509 acres of roads The agricultural land in the municipality amounts to 34 685 km2 13 sq mi with some 1 476 km2 365 acres under irrigation Climate Edit Phnom Penh has a tropical wet and dry climate Koppen climate classification Aw The climate is hot year round with only minor variations Temperatures typically range from 22 to 35 C 72 to 95 F and weather is subject to the tropical monsoons The southwest monsoon blows inland bringing moisture laden winds from the Gulf of Thailand and Indian Ocean from May to November The northeast monsoon ushers in the dry season which lasts from December to April The city experiences the heaviest precipitation from September to October with the driest period in January and February The city has two distinct seasons The rainy season which runs from May to November sees high temperatures accompanied by high humidity The dry season lasts from December to April when overnight temperatures can drop to 22 C 72 F Climate data for Phnom Penh temperature 1988 2013 extremes 1906 2013 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 1 97 0 38 1 100 6 40 0 104 0 40 5 104 9 40 0 104 0 39 2 102 6 37 2 99 0 37 8 100 0 35 5 95 9 36 1 97 0 34 4 93 9 37 2 99 0 40 5 104 9 Average high C F 31 6 88 9 33 2 91 8 34 6 94 3 35 3 95 5 34 8 94 6 33 8 92 8 32 9 91 2 32 7 90 9 32 2 90 0 31 4 88 5 31 1 88 0 30 8 87 4 32 9 91 2 Daily mean C F 26 6 79 9 28 0 82 4 29 4 84 9 30 2 86 4 30 0 86 0 29 2 84 6 28 7 83 7 28 5 83 3 28 2 82 8 27 2 81 0 27 1 80 8 26 3 79 3 28 3 82 9 Average low C F 21 8 71 2 22 8 73 0 24 3 75 7 25 5 77 9 25 6 78 1 24 9 76 8 24 8 76 6 24 6 76 3 24 4 75 9 24 2 75 6 23 2 73 8 21 9 71 4 24 0 75 2 Record low C F 12 8 55 0 15 2 59 4 19 0 66 2 17 8 64 0 20 6 69 1 21 2 70 2 20 1 68 2 20 0 68 0 21 1 70 0 17 2 63 0 16 7 62 1 14 4 57 9 12 8 55 0 Average precipitation mm inches 12 1 0 48 6 6 0 26 34 8 1 37 78 8 3 10 118 2 4 65 145 0 5 71 162 1 6 38 182 7 7 19 270 9 10 67 248 1 9 77 120 5 4 74 32 1 1 26 1 411 9 55 58 Average rainy days 0 1 mm 1 2 1 1 3 4 6 8 15 9 17 0 18 1 18 3 21 5 19 3 10 2 4 5 137 3Average relative humidity 73 71 71 73 77 78 80 81 84 84 78 73 77Mean monthly sunshine hours 260 226 267 240 202 192 143 174 129 202 213 242 2 490Source 1 Deutscher Wetterdienst 27 Source 2 Danish Meteorological Institute sun 1931 1960 28 Administration Edit Phnom Penh Capital Hall Sections khans of Phnom Penh Phnom Penh is an autonomous municipality of area 678 46 square kilometres 261 95 sq mi with a government status equal to that of the provinces The autonomous municipality is subdivided into 14 administrative divisions called khans sections The district s are subdivided into 105 sangkats quarters and further subdivided into 953 phums villages 29 All khans are under the governance of Phnom Penh Dangkao Meanchey Porsenchey Sen Sok and Russey Keo are considered the outskirts of the city Phnom Penh is governed by the governor who acts as the top executive of the city as well as overseeing the Municipal Military Police Municipal Police and Bureau of Urban Affairs Below the governor is the first vice governor and five vice governors The chief of cabinet who holds the same status as the vice governors heads the cabinet consisting of eight deputy chiefs of cabinet who in turn are in charge of the 27 administrative departments Every khans also has a chief 30 Phnom Penh administrative sectionsISO code Name Khmer Quarters Villages Population1201 Chamkar Mon ខណ ឌច ក រមន 5 40 70 7721202 Doun Penh ខណ ឌដ នព ញ 11 134 155 0691203 Prampir Makara ខណ ឌប រ ព រមករ 8 66 71 0921204 Tuol Kouk ខណ ឌទ លគ ក 10 143 145 5701205 Dangkao ខណ ឌដង ក 12 81 159 7721206 Mean Chey ខណ ឌម នជ យ 7 59 248 4641207 Russey Keo ខណ ឌឫស ស ក វ 7 30 274 8611208 Sen Sok ខណ ឌស នស ខ 6 47 182 9031209 Pou Senchey ខណ ឌព ធ ស នជ យ 7 75 226 9711210 Chroy Changvar ខណ ឌជ រ យចង វ រ 5 22 159 2331211 Prek Pnov ខណ ឌព រ កព ន 5 59 188 1901212 Chbar Ampov ខណ ឌច ប រអ ព 8 49 164 3791213 Boeng Keng Kang ខណ ឌប ងក ងកង 7 55 66 6581214 Kamboul ខណ ឌក ប ល 7 93 75 526Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop p a 1950334 000 1960398 000 1 77 1970457 000 1 39 1975370 000 4 14 197832 000 55 78 1980189 000 143 03 1985351 000 13 18 1990634 000 12 55 1995925 000 7 85 20001 284 000 6 78 20051 677 000 5 49 20102 101 725 4 62 20192 129 371 4 0 15 As of 2019 update Phnom Penh had a population of 2 129 371 people with a total population density of 3 136 inhabitants per square kilometre in a 679 square kilometres 262 sq mi city area 4 The population growth rate of the city is 3 92 The city area has grown fourfold since 1979 and the metro area will continue to expand in order to support the city s growing population and economy A survey by the National Institute of Statistics in 2017 showed that 95 3 of the population in Phnom Penh are Khmer 4 Chams and 0 7 others predominantly Chinese Vietnamese and other small ethnic groups who are Thai Budong Mnong Preh Kuy and Chong 31 The official language is Khmer but English and French are widely used in the city The number of slum inhabitants at the end of 2012 was 105 771 compared with 85 807 at the start of 2012 32 Note As stated in the History paragraph The 1998 Census put Phnom Penh s population at 862 000 24 and the 2008 census was 1 3 million 25 the information collides with the information provided in the Historical population table Needs editing Religion Edit Religion in Phnom Penh 2019 census 33 Buddhism 97 8 Islam 1 6 Christianity 0 5 Animism and Other religions 0 1 The state religion is Theravada Buddhism More than 97 8 of the people in Phnom Penh are Buddhists Chams have been practicing Islam for hundreds of years A small percentage follow Christianity Politics Edit The National Assembly building of Cambodia Supreme Court Building See also Phnom Penh National Assembly constituency Phnom Penh is allocated 12 seats in the National Assembly making it the largest constituency Members of Parliament Edit Name Political party1 Pa Socheatvong Cambodian People s Party2 Ith Sam Heng Cambodian People s Party3 Mam Bunheng Cambodian People s Party4 Ing Kuntha Phavi Cambodian People s Party5 Kep Chuktema Cambodian People s Party6 Hou Sry Cambodian People s Party7 Krouch Sam An Cambodian People s Party8 Lauk Kheng Cambodian People s Party9 Ousman Hasan Cambodian People s Party10 Cheap Sivon Cambodian People s Party11 Pich Kimsreang Cambodian People s Party12 Ly Chheng Cambodian People s PartyEconomy Edit Phnom Penh Skyline The Central Post Office Building The Hong Kong Center headquarters of oil producer TotalEnergies in Cambodia Phnom Penh is Cambodia s economic centre as it accounts for a large portion of the Cambodian economy Double digit economic growth rates in recent years have triggered an economic boom in Phnom Penh with new hotels restaurants schools bars high rises and residential buildings springing up in the city The economy is based on commercial interests such as garments trading and small and medium enterprises In the past few years the property business has been booming with rapidly increasing real estate prices Tourism is also a major contributor in the capital as more shopping and commercial centres open making Phnom Penh one of the major tourist destinations in South East Asia along with Siem Reap and Sihanoukville According to the World Travel and Tourism Council tourism made up 19 2 percent US 2 053 million of Cambodia s GDP in 2009 and accounts for 13 7 percent of total employment 34 One of the most popular areas in Phnom Penh for tourists is Sisowath Quay alongside the Tonle Sap River Sisowath Quay is a five kilometre strip of road that includes restaurants bars and hotels 35 The US 2 6 billion new urban development Camko City is meant to bolster the city landscape The Bureau of Urban Affairs of Phnom Penh Municipality has plans to expand and construct new infrastructure to accommodate the growing population and economy High rise buildings will be constructed at the entrance of the city and near the lakes and riverbanks Furthermore new roads canals and a railway system will be used to connect Camko City and Phnom Penh 36 Other projects include Grand Phnom Penh International City under construction De Castle Royal Condominium 37 Completed Gold Tower 42 On hold 32 floors construction begins again in the mid of 2018 OCIC Tower Completed Kokling super second floor house Vattanac Capital Tower completed The Bridge Completed The Peak Completed With booming economic growth seen since the 1990s new shopping venues have opened such as Sorya Center Point Aeon Mall Phnom Penh Aeon Mall Sen Sok City Aeon Mall Mean Chey and Olympia Mall Many international brands have opened such as Mango Salvatore Ferragamo Hugo Boss Padini Concept Store Lily Timberland Jimmy Choo CC Double O MO Brands Outlet Nike Converse Pony Armani Exchange and Super Dry The tallest skyscraper in Phnom Penh is Vattanac Capital Tower at a height of 188 metres 617 ft dominating Phnom Penh s skyline with its neighbour skyscraper Canadia Tower OCIC Tower 38 The tower was completed in December 2014 Modern high rises have been constructed all around the city not concentrated in any one particular area The Central Market Phsar Thmei is a tourist attraction The four wings of the yellow colored market are teeming with numerous stalls selling gold and silver jewelry antique coins clothing clocks flowers food fabrics and shoes Phsar Thmei is undergoing under a major renovation along with the creation of newer stalls Education EditUniversities and colleges Edit Buddhist Institute Royal University of Phnom Penh Campus II Institute of Foreign Languages Institut de Technologie du Cambodge Name KhmerAmerican University of Phnom Penh ស កលវ ទ យ ល យអ ម រ ក ងភ ន ព ញBELTEI International University ស កលវ ទ យ ល យប លធ អន តរជ ត University of Cambodia UC ស កលវ ទ យ ល យកម ព ជ International University IU ស កលវ ទ យ ល យអន តរជ ត Ecole Royale d Administration ERA ស ល ភ ម ន ទរដ ឋប លRoyal University of Phnom Penh RUPP ស កលវ ទ យ ល យភ ម ន ទភ ន ព ញRoyal University of Law and Economics RULE ស កលវ ទ យ ល យភ ម ន ទន ត ស ស រ ត ន ងវ ទ យ ស ស រ តស ដ ឋក ច ចRoyal University of Fine Arts RUFA ស កលវ ទ យ ល យភ ម ន ទវ ច ត រស ល ប Royal University of Agriculture RUA ស កលវ ទ យ ល យភ ម ន ទកស កម មNational University of Management NUM ស កលវ ទ យ ល យជ ត គ រប គ រងInstitute of Technology of Cambodia ITC វ ទ យ ស ថ នបច ច កវ ទ យ កម ព ជ Buddhist Institute វ ទ យ ស ថ នព ទ ធស សនបណ ឌ ត យRoyal Academy of Cambodia រ ជបណ ឌ ត យសភ កម ព ជ Cambodian Agricultural Research and Development Institute វ ទ យ ស ថ នស រ វជ រ វ ន ងអភ វឌ ឍកស កម មកម ព ជ National Institute of Business វ ទ យ ស ថ នជ ត ព ណ ជ ជស ស រ តNational Institute of Education វ ទ យ ស ថ នជ ត អប រ National Polytechnic Institute of Cambodia វ ទ យ ស ថ នជ ត ពហ បច ច កទ សកម ព ជ National Technical Training Institute វ ទ យ ស ថ នជ ត បណ ត បណ ត លបច ច កទ សPannasastra University of Cambodia ស កលវ ទ យ ល យបញ ញ ស ស ត រកម ព ជ Preah Sihanouk Raja Buddhist University ព ទ ធ កស កលវ ទ យ ល យព រ ស ហន រ ជPrek Leap National College of Agriculture ស ល ជ ត កស កម មព រ កល បUniversity of Health Sciences ស កលវ ទ យ ល យវ ទ យ ស ស រ តស ខ ភ ប លUniversity of Puthisastra ស កលវ ទ យ ល យព ទ ធ ស ស ត រPreah Kosomak Polytechnic Institute វ ទ យ ស ថ នពហ បច ច កទ សព រ ក ស ម Industrial Technical Institute វ ទ យ ស ថ នបច ច កទ សឧស ស ហកម មParagon International University ស កលវ ទ យ ល យអន តរជ ត ផ រ ហ គនInstitute For Development of Economy IDE វ ទ យ ស ថ នអភ វឌ ឍន ស ដ ឋក ច ចWestern University 39 ស កលវ ទ យ ល យវ ស ទ នStudent Development Institute SDI វ ទ យ ស ថ នអភ វឌ ឍន ន ស ស តAsia Euro University ស កលវ ទ យ ល យអ ស អ រ បPrimary and secondary schools Edit Name Name in KhmerBak Touk High School វ ទ យ ល យប ក ទ កChaktomuk Secondary School អន វ ទ យ ល យចត ម ខChbar Ampov High School វ ទ យ ល យច ប រអ ព Chea Sim Boeng Kang Kang High School វ ទ យ ល យជ ស មប ងក ងកងChea Sim Chroy Changvar High School វ ទ យ ល យជ ស មជ រ យចង វ រChea Sim Samaky High School វ ទ យ ល យជ ស មស មគ គ Chea Sim Santhormok High School វ ទ យ ល យជ ស មសន ធរម កHun Sen Bun Rany Phsar Daeum Thkov High School វ ទ យ ល យហ នស នប នរ ន ផ ស រដ មថ ក វIndradevi High School វ ទ យ ល យឥន ទ រទ វ Lycee Sisowath វ ទ យ ល យព រ ស ស វត ថ Tuol Svay Prey High School វ ទ យ ល យទ លស វ យព រ Wat Koh High School វ ទ យ ល យវត តក International schools Edit Name Name in KhmerAbundant Life International School ALIS ស ល អន តរជ ត អ ប នឌ នឡ American Intercon School American Intercon School AIS ស ល រ នអន តរទ វ បអ ម រ ក ង Salariĕn Antărătvib AmerĭkăngAustralian International School Phnom Penh AISPP Beijing International School ស ល អន តរជ ត ប ក ង Sala Antărăcheatĕ PekăngBELTEI International School ស ល ប លធ អន តរជ ត Sala Belthi AntărăcheatĕBritish International School of Phnom PenhCIA First International School ស ល អន តរជ ត ស អ យអ ហ វ សត Sala Antărăcheatĕ Si ay e FœstEast West International School ស ល អន តរជ ត អ សវ ស Sala Antărăcheatĕ Ĭs VesFootprint International SchoolHarrods International AcademyHome of English International SchooliCAN British International SchoolInternational School of Phnom Penh ISPP ស ល រ នអន តរជ ត ភ ន ព ញInternational School of SingaporeInvictus International School Phnom PenhJapanese School of Phnom Penh 金边日本学校Lycee francais Rene Descartes de Phnom PenhNew Gateway International SchoolNorthbridge International SchoolParagon International School ស ល រ នអន តរជ ត ផ រ ហ គន Salariĕn Antărăcheatĕ PharaganSingapore Cambodia International AcademySouthbridge International SchoolAdvanced International School ស ល រ នអន តរជ ត អ តវ ន 顶尖国际学校 Supplementary and extra schools Edit English Original NameJapanese Supplementary School of Phnom Penh プノンペン補習授業校 Punonpen Hoshu Jugyō Kō Rodwell Learning Center ស ល បង រ នគ ររ ដវ ល Sala Bangriĕn Kuŏr RadvelThe Japanese Supplementary School of Phnom Penh formerly known in English as the Phnom Penh Japanese School 40 41 is a part time Japanese School operated by the Japanese Association of Cambodia JACAM カンボジア日本人会 Kambojia Nihonjin kai 42 It is in Sangkat Toek Thla in Sen Sok 43 It was established in 2002 It had 60 students in June 2011 44 Culture Edit Dried version of Phnom Penh noodles with soup broth on the side Phnom Penh also has its own dialect of Khmer Speakers of the Phnom Penh dialect often elide syllables which has earned it a reputation for being lazy speech Phnom Penh is also known for its influence on New Khmer Architecture Phnom Penh is notable for Ka tieu Phnom Penh its variation on rice noodle soup a dish available in sit down cafes as well as street cafes The city hosts a number of music events throughout the city Indie bands have grown in number due also in part to the emergence of private music schools such as SoundsKool Music also operating in the city of Siem Reap and Music Arts School registered as a non governmental organization The Cambodian fishing dance originated in Phnom Penh at the Royal University of Fine Arts in the 1960s 45 The Cambodian fishing dance originated from Phnom Penh The two most visited museums in the city are the National Museum which is the country s leading historical and archaeological museum and Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum a former Khmer Rouge prison The National Museum hosts celebrations of Cambodian dance and music including a popular classic Apsara dance show of traditional folk dances as well as original creations Cambodian New Year Edit Main article Choul Chnam Thmey At this time Phnom Penh celebrates Cambodian New Year an occasion increasingly popular with tourists During this typically hottest part of the year water gets thrown around adding to the party atmosphere along with dancing and music The precise date changes year by year but this holiday lasts at least three days This festival marks the turn of the year based on the ancient Khmer calendar and also marks the end of the prior year harvest Water Festival Edit Main article Bon Om Touk Colorful boats during Bon Om Touk The largest annual festival in Phnom Penh this lively gathering celebrates the reversing of the flow of the Tonle Sap River The holiday lasts three days as people flood into the city to enjoy the fireworks boat races live concerts eating and partying The boat racing dates back to ancient times marking the strengths of the Khmer marine forces during the Khmer Empire On November 22 2010 at least 348 people were crushed to death in a bridge stampede at the festival 46 Ancestors Day Edit Main article Pchum Ben Ancestors Day also called Pchum Ben is a very important aspect of Cambodian culture It may be translated as gathering together to make offerings and is a time of reunion commemoration express love and appreciation for one s ancestors By offering food and good karma to those possibly trapped in the spirit world living relatives help assuage their misery and guide them back into the cycle of reincarnation Visak Bochea Edit Main article Vesakha Vesakha is an annual holiday observed traditionally by Buddhists in Cambodia Sometimes informally called Buddha s Birthday it actually encompasses the birth enlightenment nirvaṇa and passing away Parinirvana of Gautama Buddha Cityscape and architecture EditThe oldest structure is Wat Phnom from the founding days of the city constructed in 1373 The main tourist attractions are the Royal Palace with the Silver Pagoda and the National Museum constructed during the French colonial era in the late 19th century in the classical Khmer style and hosting a vast collection of Khmer antiquities The Independence Monument Khmer Vimean Akareach although from the 1950s is also constructed in the ancient Khmer style The French who were the colonial masters from the 19th century to the 1940s also left their mark with various colonial villas French churches boulevards and the Art Deco market Phsar Thom Thmei A notable landmark of the colonial era is the Hotel Le Royal Starting with independence from the French in the 1950s and lasting until the era of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s Phnom Penh underwent tremendous growth as the capital city of a newly independent country King Sihanouk was eager to present a new style of architecture and thus invigorate the process of nation building A new golden era of architecture took off with various projects and young Khmer architects often educated in France given opportunities to design and construct This new movement was called New Khmer Architecture and was often characterised by a fusion of Bauhaus European post modern architecture and traditional elements from Angkor The most prominent architect was Vann Molyvann who was nominated chief national architect by the king himself in 1956 Molyvann created landmark buildings such as the Preah Suramarit National Theatre or the Vann Molyvann House Other architects helped construct the newly founded Royal Khmer University the Institute of Foreign Languages and the National Sports Centre With the growth of the upper and entrepreneurial middle Statue of Lady Penh the city s founder classes new suburbs were built in the 1950s and 1960s Although these buildings survived the Khmer Rouge era and the civil war today they are under threat due to economic development and financial speculation 47 Villas and gardens from that era are being destroyed and redeveloped to make place for bigger structures The landmark National Theatre by Molyvann was razed in 2008 48 A movement is rising in Cambodia to preserve this modernist heritage Old villas are sometimes being converted into boutique hotels such as the Knai Bang Chatt Monuments and memorials to the genocide of the Khmer Rouge era in the 1970s are the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum a former high school used as a concentration camp and on the outskirts of the city the Choeung Ek Genocide Center The Cambodia Vietnam Friendship Monument was commissioned by the Vietnamese communists as symbol of Khmer Vietnamese friendship during the late 1970s following the liberation of Cambodia from the Khmer Rouge The population foreign investment and urban development in Phnom Penh grew dramatically during the 1990s and early 2000s The rapid growth resulted in the city s infrastructure distinctly lacking the drainage system is particularly notorious and Phnom Penh frequently floods during the wet season and a need for both residential and commercial spaces The simultaneous demand for residential and commercial housing and the increase of international investment has led to the planning if not construction of several satellite cities The largest of these cities are Grand Phnom Penh International City CamKo City Diamond Island City Boeung Kak Town and Chruy Cangva City On the outskirts of the city farmland has been developed into garment factories and housing for lower economic classes and those displaced by the new development in the city center Panoramic view of Phnom Penh from City Center National Museum designed in the early 1920s by George Groslier Royal Throne Hall constructed in the 1860s under King Norodom I Facade Hotel Le Royal built in 1929 in the reign of King Sisowath Monivong Colonial villa in Phnom Penh Ministry of Land Management Urban Planning and Construction Phnom Penh city at night revealing skylines and the royal palace viewed from the east bank of Tonle Sap river in September 2019 2035 master plan Edit Originally intended to be completed by 2020 the 2035 master plan 49 is a French funded project for the development of Phnom Penh Although the plan was approved by the Ministry of Land Management Urban Planning and Construction in 2005 it has yet to be ratified by the Cabinet of Cambodia The original plan details five edge city projects connected to the historical city centre by waterways and tree lined corridors 50 Media EditDailies Edit Khmer Edit Sralagn Khmer Love Khmer Chakraval Daily Universe Kampuchea Thmei Daily New Cambodia Kampuchea Tgnai Nis Cambodia Today Kanychok Sangkhum Social Reflection Koh Santepheap Island of Peace Moneaksekar Khmer Khmer Conscience Published by the Sam Rainsy Party Rasmei Kampuchea Light of Kampuchea Cambodia s largest daily it circulates about 18 000 copies Samleng Yuvachun Voice of Khmer Youth Udomkate Khmer Khmer Ideal Wat Phnom Daily Mount Temple English Edit Phnom Penh Post a daily English language newspaper published in Phnom Penh The Cambodia Daily an English language daily newspaper closed in 2017 The Khmer Times an English language daily newspaper Chinese Edit 柬華日報 Jianhua Daily a daily Chinese language newspaper published in Phnom Penh 星洲日報 Sin Chew Daily a Chinese language daily newspaper the Cambodian edition of the Malaysian Chinese daily of the same name 華商日報 Huashang Daily a Chinese language daily newspaper 高棉日报 Khmer Daily a Chinese language daily newspaper 新柬埔寨 New Cambodia a Chinese language daily newspaper Magazines Edit AsiaLIFE Guide Phnom Penh a monthly English language lifestyle magazine published in Phnom Penh Ceased in 2018 F Magazine the first fashion forward magazine in Cambodia Bi lingual written in English and Khmer SOVRIN Magazine is the fashion glossy magazine in Cambodia which written in khmer language Online news Edit Thmey Thmey Phnom Penh 51 Sabay News Phnom Penh Fresh News Phnom Penh 52 Sport EditSee also Sport in Cambodia and Morodok Techo National Sports Complex The martial arts of Bokator Pradal Serey Khmer kick boxing and Khmer traditional wrestling have venues in Phnom Penh watched by dedicated spectators Cambodia has increasingly become involved in modern sports over the last 30 years As with the rest of the country football and the martial arts are particularly popular Ultimate fighting and freestyle boxing have also become more common in recent years citation needed The most prominent sporting venue in the city is the Phnom Penh National Olympic Stadium with a capacity of 50 000 53 although the country never hosted the Olympic Games due to disruption by the civil war and the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s Built in 1964 53 it is home to the Cambodian national football team 54 On completion the stadium was one of the largest in Asia Volleyball basketball and Tai Kwon Do games are often hosted at the stadium The stadium closed in 2000 53 but was redeveloped and reopened In footballing ventures Phnom Penh is formally represented by Phnom Penh Crown FC despite being home to numerous football teams who plays in the Cambodian League Including Visakha Nagaworld Boeungket and the aforementioned Phnom Penh Crown amongst many others The National Sports Centre of Cambodia hosts swimming boxing and volleyball competitions Noted local football clubs include Phnom Penh Empire Khemara Keila FC and Military Police The city will host the 2023 Southeast Asian Games and the 2023 ASEAN Para Games this will mark the first time that Cambodia has hosted a multi sport event Transport EditSee also Transport in Cambodia and Transport in Phnom Penh Phnom Penh International Airport Phnom Penh International Airport is the largest and busiest airport in Cambodia It is seven kilometres west of central Phnom Penh The airport is connected to the city center by taxi train and shuttle bus Cambodia s national flag carrier Cambodia Angkor Air launched in 2009 is headquartered in Phnom Penh and has its main hub there with an additional hub at the Angkor International Airport 55 Air France used to serve Phnom Penh from Paris Charles de Gaulle but this service has since stopped Qatar Airways now flies to and from Phnom Penh via Saigon Taxis pick ups and minibuses leave the city for destinations all over the country but are fast losing ground to cheaper and more comfortable buses Phnom Penh also has a rail service There are numerous bus companies including Phnom Penh Public Transport and GST Express running services to most provincial capitals including Sihanoukville Kampong Chhnang Oudong and Takeo Phnom Penh Sorya Transport Co offers bus service to several provincial destinations along the National Routes and to Saigon Giant Ibis is another bus company based in Phnom Penh which travels to Sihanoukville Kampot Siem Reap and Saigon and has free Wi Fi air conditioning and modest pricing The city is Cambodia s main freshwater port a major port on the Mekong River It is linked to the South China Sea 290 kilometres distant via a channel of the Mekong in Vietnam Public transport Edit Phnom Penh BRT bus approaching Monivong Sihanouk station See also Phnom Penh City Bus Phnom Penh is served by air conditioned public buses Initial attempts by the Japanese government to develop a Phnom Penh bus service began in 2001 An update of the JICA urban transport master plan for Phnom Penh was completed and implemented in 2014 56 The city is now served by 17 bus lines operated by the Phnom Penh municipal government Private transportation within the city include the cycle rickshaw known in Khmer as cyclo the motorcycle taxi known in Khmer as moto the auto rickshaw known locally as tuk tuk the trailer attached to a motorcycle taxi known in Khmer as remorque and the standard automobile taxicab known in Khmer as taxi 57 Private forms of transportation used by locals include bicycles motorbikes and cars Highways Edit Motorcycle traffic in Phnom Penh As the capital of Cambodia a number of national highways connect the city with various parts of the country National Highway Code Length Origin TerminalNational Highway 1 10001 167 10 km 103 83 mi Phnom Penh Vietnamese BorderNational Highway 2 10002 120 60 km 74 94 mi Phnom Penh Vietnamese BorderNational Highway 3 10003 202 00 km 125 52 mi Phnom Penh Veal RenhNational Highway 4 10004 226 00 km 140 43 mi Phnom Penh SihanoukvilleNational Highway 5 10005 407 45 km 253 18 mi Phnom Penh Thai BorderNational Highway 6 10006 416 00 km 258 49 mi Phnom Penh Banteay MeancheyNational Highway 7 10007 509 17 km 316 38 mi Skun Cheung Prey District Lao BorderWater supply EditMain article Water supply in Phnom Penh Water supply in Phnom Penh has improved dramatically in terms of access service quality efficiency cost recovery and governance between 1993 and 2006 The number of customers has increased ninefold service quality has improved from intermittent to continuous supply water losses have been cut dramatically and the city s water utility went from being bankrupt to making a modest profit 58 These achievements were recognized through international awards such as the 2006 Ramon Magsaysay Award and the 2010 Stockholm Industry Water Award 59 The city s water utility is the Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority PPWSA Its main water sources are the Mekong River the Tonle Sap river and the Tonle Bassac river Twin towns sister cities EditPhnom Penh is twinned with Bangkok Thailand 60 Beijing China 61 Busan South Korea 62 Chongqing China 63 Hanoi Vietnam 64 Hefei China 65 Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam 66 Incheon South Korea 67 Kitakyushu Japan 68 Kunming China 69 Long Beach United States 70 Lowell United States 71 Shanghai China 72 Shenzhen China 73 Notable people EditGeorge Groslier French polymath historian archaeologist Norodom Sihamoni King of Cambodia Patricia Hy Boulais professional tennis player Preap Sovath Cambodian singer Theavy Mok born 1963 first plastic surgeon in CambodiaSee also EditList of markets in Phnom Penh Special Economic Zones of CambodiaReferences Edit ISO 3166 Codes for the representation of names of countries and their subdivisions Cambodia KH ISO Retrieved October 28 2018 a b Bennett Murray February 14 2015 Ancient kiln site poised to disappear forever Retrieved March 14 2021 Soth Koemseoun January 31 2019 Government establishes new districts town for better management The Phnom Penh Post Retrieved July 9 2019 Two new districts Boeung Keng Kang and Kamboul have been added to Phnom Penh the sub decree states a b c d e General Population Census of the Kingdom of Cambodia 2019 Final Results PDF National Institute of Statistics Ministry of Planning January 26 2021 Retrieved January 26 2021 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved January 23 2023 Wells John April 3 2008 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Sports Science and Technology Retrieved on February 13 2015 プノンペン Phnom Penh Japanese School No 3EO St 390 PhnomPenh Cambodia Home Archived December 20 2014 at the Wayback Machine Japanese Association of Cambodia JACAM カンボジア日本人会 Retrieved on March 31 2015 概略 所在地 Phnom Penh Japanese School Retrieved May 14 2020 プノンペン補習授業校 Japanese Supplementary School of Phnom Penh 住所 No 205B St Lum Phumi Toek Thla Sangkat Toek Thla Khan Sen Sok Phnom Penh CAMBODIA Project Completion Report Appendix 4 Manual PDF Japan International Cooperation Agency p 60 Retrieved May 14 2020 Khmer Traditional Dance and Shadow Theater n d Canby Publications Retrieved August 19 2020 from https www canbypublications com siemreap srothersr htm Se Suy November 23 2010 Cambodia festival stampede leaves almost 350 dead The Age Melbourne NAM SYLVIA 2011 Phnom Penh From the Politics of Ruin to the Possibilities of Return Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review 23 1 55 68 ISSN 1050 2092 JSTOR 41758883 Khmer Architecture Tours Ka tours org May 30 2010 Retrieved June 27 2010 Phnom Penh master plan extended to 2035 CBDA www cbda org kh Retrieved December 12 2016 Paling Willem 2012 Planning a Future for Phnom Penh Mega Projects Aid Dependence and Disjointed Governance Urban Studies 49 13 2889 2912 doi 10 1177 0042098012452457 S2CID 154354673 Thmey Thmey thmeythmey com com FRESH NEWS en freshnewsasia com a b c ppp webadmin April 27 2001 Stadium dream becomes public nightmare phnompenhpost com Cambodian Fans Deflated After World Cup Loss The Cambodia Daily cambodiadaily com June 12 2015 Welcome Cambodia Angkor Air 2009 Archived from the original on December 17 2009 Retrieved December 28 2009 Phnom Penh Post Gridlock going nowhere fast February 28 2012 retrieved on March 27 2012 Gnarfgnarf Cyclos motos remorques tuk tuks and other taxis in Phnom Penh March 12 2012 retrieved on March 27 2012 Asian Development Bank Country Water Action Cambodia Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority An Exemplary Water Utility in Asia Archived April 1 2011 at the Wayback Machine August 2007 retrieved on April 10 2011 Stockholm International Water Institute Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority Wins Stockholm Industry Water Award 2010 retrieved on April 9 2011 Relationship with Sister Cities Bangkok Metropolitan Administration Retrieved January 8 2021 Sister Cities beijing gov cn Beijing Retrieved January 8 2021 List of Sister Cities english busan go kr Busan Metropolitan City Retrieved January 8 2021 34年来重庆的朋友圈里有37个友好城市 cq sina cn in Chinese Sina November 11 2016 Retrieved January 8 2021 Khanh thanh Đại lộ mang ten hai thủ đo kết nghĩa Phnom Penh Ha Nội baodongnai com vn in Vietnamese Đồng Nai March 6 2017 Retrieved January 8 2021 A List of Sister Cities of Anhui ah gov cn Anhui Province Retrieved January 8 2021 Danh sach địa phương nước ngoai kết nghĩa với TpHCM mofahcm gov vn in Vietnamese Ho Chi Minh City Retrieved January 8 2021 Sister Cities amp Affiliated Cities incheon go kr Incheon Metropolitan City Retrieved January 8 2021 姉妹 友好都市の紹介 city kitakyushu lg jp in Japanese Kitakyushu Retrieved January 8 2021 Sister Cities kunming cn Kunming Retrieved January 8 2021 Home sistercitiesoflongbeach org Sister Cities of Long Beach California Retrieved January 8 2021 Phnom Penh Lowell Enter Sister City Relationship cambodiadaily com The Cambodia Daily January 15 2015 Retrieved January 8 2021 市级友好城市 sh gov cn in Chinese Shanghai Retrieved January 8 2021 Sister Cities sz gov cn Shenzhen Retrieved January 8 2021 Bibliography EditGroslier B P 2006 Angkor And Cambodia In the Sixteenth Century Bangkok Orchid Press Igout Michel Dubuisson Serge 1993 Phnom Penh Then and Now Bangkok White Lotus ISBN 978 974 8495 84 2 OCLC 29795478 LeBoutillier Kris Ariff Shahida 2004 Journey Through Phnom Penh A Pictorial Guide to the Jewel of Cambodia Singapore Times Editions ISBN 978 981 232 596 9 OCLC 55501046 Leroy Joakim Hoskin John 2005 AZU s Dreams of Cambodia Phnom Penh Hong Kong AZU Editions Ltd ISBN 978 988 98140 2 1 OCLC 62328690 Kolnberger Thomas 2020 Continuity and change Transformations in the urban history of Phnom Penh Cambodia in Southeast Asian Transformations Urban and Rural Developments in the 21st Century pp 219 239 ed by S Kurfurst and S Wehner Transcript Bielefeld hdl 10993 43963 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to ក រ ងភ ន ព ញ category Official city website Time in Phnom Penh Phnom Penh travel guide from Wikivoyage 560229438 Phnom Penh on OpenStreetMap Geographic data related to Phnom Penh at OpenStreetMapPortal Cambodia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phnom Penh amp oldid 1152459062, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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