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Post-Angkor period

The post-Angkor period of Cambodia (Khmer: ប្រទេសកម្ពុជាក្រោយសម័យអង្គរ), also called the Middle Period,[1] refers to the historical era from the early 15th century to 1863, the beginning of the French protectorate of Cambodia. As reliable sources (for the 15th and 16th centuries, in particular) are very rare, a defensible and conclusive explanation that relates to concrete events that manifest the decline of the Khmer Empire, recognised unanimously by the scientific community, has so far not been produced.[2][3] However, most modern historians have approached a consensus in which several distinct and gradual changes of religious, dynastic, administrative and military nature, environmental problems and ecological imbalance[4] coincided with shifts of power in Indochina and must all be taken into account to make an interpretation.[5][6][7] In recent years scholars' focus has shifted increasingly towards human–environment interactions and the ecological consequences, including natural disasters, such as flooding and droughts.[8][9][10][11]

Kingdom of Cambodia
ក្រុងកម្ពុជាធិបតី
1431–1863
Cambodia and mainland Southeast Asia in 1540 CE
Capital
Common languagesMiddle Khmer (until 1777)
Khmer
Religion
Buddhism
Demonym(s)Cambodian
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
Monarch 
• 1431–1463
Ponhea Yat (first)
• 1860–1863
Norodom (last)
Historical eraEarly modern period
1431
1594
11 August 1863
Population
• 1500
1,200,000
• 1700
1,650,000
CurrencyTical
Today part ofCambodia
Thailand
Vietnam

Stone epigraphy in temples, which had been the primary source for Khmer history, is already a rarity throughout the 13th century, ends in the third decade of the fourteenth, and does not resume until the mid-16th century. Recording of the Royal Chronology discontinues with King Jayavarman IX Parameshwara (or Jayavarma-Paramesvara), who reigned from 1327 to 1336. There exists not a single contemporary record of even a king’s name for over 200 years. Construction and maintenance of monumental temple architecture had come to a standstill after Jayavarman VII's reign. According to author Michael Vickery there only exist external sources for Cambodia’s 15th century, the Chinese Ming Shilu (engl. veritable records) annals and the earliest Royal Chronicle of Ayutthaya,[12] which must be interpreted with greatest caution.[13]

The single incident which undoubtedly reflects reality, the central reference point for the entire 15th century, is a Siamese intervention of some undisclosed nature at the capital Yasodharapura (Angkor Thom) around the year 1431. Historians relate the event to the shift of Cambodia's political centre southward to the river port region of Phnom Penh and later Longvek.[14][15]

Sources for the 16th century are more numerous, although still coming from outside of Cambodia. The kingdom is centred at the Mekong, prospering as an integral part of the Asian maritime trade network,[16][17] via which the first contact with European explorers and adventurers does occur.[18] Wars with the Siamese resulted in loss of territory in the West and eventually the conquest of the capital Longvek in 1594. The Vietnamese on their "Southward March" reached Prei Nokor/Saigon at the Mekong Delta in the 17th century. This event initiates the slow process of Cambodia losing access to the seas and independent marine trade.[19]

Siamese and Vietnamese dominance intensified during the 17th and 18th century, provoking frequent displacements of the seat of power as the Khmer monarch's authority decreased to the state of a vassal. Both powers alternately demanded subservience and tribute from the Cambodian court.[20] In the early 19th century with dynasties in Vietnam and Siam firmly established, Cambodia was placed under joint suzerainty, having lost its national sovereignty. British agent John Crawfurd states: "...the King of that ancient Kingdom is ready to throw himself under the protection of any European nation..." To save Cambodia from being incorporated into Vietnam and Siam, King Ang Duong agreed to colonial France's offers of protection, which took effect with King Norodom Prohmbarirak signing and officially recognising the French protectorate on 11 August 1863.[21]

Historical background and causes

The Khmer Empire had steadily gained hegemonic power over most of mainland Southeast Asia since its early days in the 8th and 9th centuries. Rivalries and wars with its western neighbour, the Pagan Kingdom of the Mon people of modern-day Burma were less numerous and decisive than those with Champa to the east. The Khmer and Cham Hindu kingdoms remained for centuries preoccupied with each other's containment and it has been argued that one of the Khmer's military objectives was "...in the reigns of the Angkor kings Suryavarman II and Jayavarman VII." the conquest of the Cham ports, "...important in the international trade of the time".[22] Even though the Khmer suffered a number of serious defeats, such as the Cham invasion of Angkor in 1177, the empire quickly recovered, capable to strike back, as it was the case in 1181 with the invasion of the Cham city-state of Vijaya.[23][24]

Mongol incursions into southern China and political and cultural pressure caused the southward migration of the Tai people and Thai people and their settling on the upper Chao Phraya River in the 12th century.[25] The Sukhothai Kingdom and later the Ayutthaya kingdom were established and "...conquered the Khmers of the upper and central Menam valley and greatly extended their territory..."[26]

Military setbacks

Although a number of sources, such as the Cambodian Royal Chronicles and the Royal chronicles of Ayutthaya[27] contain recordings of military expeditions and raids with associated dates and the names of sovereigns and warlords, several influential scholars, such as David Chandler and Michael Vickery doubt the accuracy and reliability of these texts.[28][29][30] Other authors criticise this rigid "overall assessment", though.[31]

David Chandler states in A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing, Volume 2: "Michael Vickery has argued that Cambodian chronicles, including this one, that treat events earlier than 1550 cannot be verified, and were often copied from Thai chronicles about Thailand..."[28][32] Linguist Jean-Michel Filippi concludes: "The chronology of Cambodian history itself is more a chrono-ideology with a pivotal role offered to Angkor."[33] Similarities apply to Thai chronological records, with the notable example of the Ramkhamhaeng controversy.[34][35]

According to the Siamese Royal chronicles of Paramanuchitchinorot, clashes occurred in 1350, around 1380, 1418 and 1431.[36][37]

"In 1350/51; probably April 1350 King Ramadhipati had his son Ramesvara attack the capital of the King of the Kambujas (Angkor) and had Paramaraja (Pha-ngua) of Suphanburi advance to support him. The Kambuja capital was taken and many families were removed to the capital Ayudhya.

At that time, [around 1380] the ruler of Kambuja came to attack Chonburi, to carry away families from the provinces eastwards to Chanthaburi, amounting to about six or seven thousand persons who returned [with the Cambodian armies] to Kambuja. So the King attacked Kambuja and, having captured it, returned to the capitol.[sic]

Then [1418] he went to attack Angkor, the capital of Kambuja, and captured it."

Land or People?

Siamese sources record the habit of capturing sizeable numbers of inhabitants from the capital cities and centres of civilisation of the defeated parties in Chiang Mai and Angkor which can be assumed to have accelerated the cultural decline.[37][38]

 
Cambodian people in 18th century in chinese painting Portraits of Periodical Offering by Xie Sui.

Author Michael Vickery debates the degree of importance of this subject in his publication "Two Historical Records of the Kingdom of Vientiane - Land or People?": "It is not at all certain that Angkor desired manpower in central Thailand, rather than simply control over the rich agricultural resources." and "...whether the political economy of early Southeast Asia resulted in rulers being more concerned with control of land or control of people..." and "...both sides of this discussion have offered ad hoc, case-by-case pronunciamentos, which are then repeated like mantra... Critical discussion of the question is long overdue..."

Contrary views

Author Akin Rabibhadana, who quotes Ram Khamhaeng: "One particular characteristic of the historical Southeast Asian mainland states was the lack of manpower. The need for manpower is well illustrated by events following each war between Thailand and her neighbours. The victorious side always carried off a large number of people from the conquered territory. Whole villages were often moved into the territory of the conqueror, where they were assimilated and became the population of the conqueror."

David K. Wyatt: "As much as anything else, the Tai müang was an instrument for the efficient use of manpower in a region where land was plentiful in relation to labor and agricultural technology."

And Aung-Thwin wrote: "Much of the warfare of early Southeast Asia witnessed the victor carrying off half the population of the vanquished foe and later resettling them on his own soil. Pagan was located in the dry belt of Burma, and depended mainly upon irrigated agriculture for its economic base. Land was plentiful but labor was extremely difficult to obtain."[39]

Dynastic and religious factors

 
The flag of the kingdom of Cambodia until 1863.

The complete transition from the early Khmer kingdom to the firm establishment of the Mahidharapura dynasty (first king Jayavarman VI, 1080 to 1107), which originated west of the Dângrêk Mountains at Phimai in the Mun river valley[40] lasted several decades. Some historians argue, that these kings failed to acquire absolute central administrative control and had limited access to local resources. The dynasty discontinued "ritual policy" and genealogical traditions. Further momentum ensued as Mahayana Buddhism was eventually tolerated and several Buddhist kings emerged, including Suryavarman I, Rajendravarman II and Jayavarman VII.[41]

These rulers were not considered, and did not consider themselves, as divine, which lead to a shift in perception of royal authority, central power and a loss of dynastic prestige with respect to foreign rulers. Effectively the royal subjects were given permission to re-direct attention and support from the Hindu state of military dominance with its consecrated leader, the "Varman"—protector king, towards the inner-worldly alternative with the contradictory teachings of the Buddhist temple.Indravarman III (c. 1295-1308) adopted Theravada Buddhism as the state religion,[42] which implied an even more passive, introverted focus towards individual and personal responsibility to accumulate merit to achieve nirvana.[43]

Miriam T. Stark argues that competition and rivalries in royal succession, usurpers and "second grade" rulers characterised the kingdom since the 9th century. Periods of "...consolidation alternated with political fragmentation [as] only few rulers were able to wrest control from the provincial level".[44]

Debate remains on the progress of the imperial society as the kingdom grew and occupied foreign lands. Authors present numerous theories about the relationship between Southeast Asian kings and the populace's loyalties, nature and degree of identity, the Mandala concept and the effects of changing state-religion. Scholar Ben Kiernan highlights a tendency to identify with a universal religion rather than to adhere to the concept of a people or nation, as he refers to author Victor Lieberman in: Blood and Soil: Modern Genocide 1500-2000 "[local courts make]...no formal demand, that rulers be of the same ethnicity as their subjects"[45][46]

Environmental problems and infrastructural breakdown

Historians increasingly maintain the idea that decline was caused by progressing ecological imbalance of the delicate irrigation network and canal system of "...a profoundly ritualized, elaborate system of hydraulic engineering..."[47] at Angkor's Yasodharapura. Recent studies indicate that the irrigation system was overworked and gradually started to silt up, amplified by large scale deforestation.[48] Permanent monument construction projects and maintenance of temples instead of canals and dykes put an enormous strain on the royal resources and drained thousands of slaves and common people from the public workforce and caused tax deficits.[49]

Author Heng L. Thung addressed common sense in "Geohydrology and the decline of Angkor" as he sums things up: "...the preoccupation of the Khmers with the need to store water for the long dry season. Each household needed a pond to provide drinking and household water for both man and beast. The barays [reservoirs] of Angkor were simply the manifestation of the need of an urban population. Water was the fountain of life for Angkor; a disruption in its supply would be fatal."[50]

Recent Lidar (Light detection and ranging) Geo-Scans of Angkor have produced new data, that have caused several "Eureka moments" and "have profoundly transformed our understanding of urbanism in the region of Angkor".[51] Results of dendrochronological studies imply prolonged periods of drought between the 14th and 15th centuries.[52] As a result, recent re-interpretations of the epoch put greater emphasis on human–environment interactions and the ecological consequences.[8]

Chaktomuk era

Following the abandonment of the capital Yasodharapura[53] and the Angkorian sites, the few remaining Khmer survivors, with Siamese help, established a new capital around two-hundred kilometres to the south-east on the site which is modern day Phnom Penh, at the confluence of the Mekong and the Tonle Sap river. Thus, it controlled the river commerce of the Khmer heartland, upper Siam and the Laotian kingdoms with access, by way of the Mekong Delta, to the international trade routes that linked the Chinese coast, the South China Sea, and the Indian Ocean. Unlike its inland predecessor, this society was more open to the outside world and relied mainly on commerce as the source of wealth. The adoption of maritime trade with China during the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) provided lucrative opportunities for members of the Cambodian elite who controlled royal trading monopolies.[54]

Historians consent that as the capital ceased to exist, the temples at Angkor remained as central for the nation as they always had been. David P. Chandler: "The 1747 inscription is the last extensive one at Angkor Wat and reveals the importance of the temple in Cambodian religious life barely a century before it was "discovered" by the French."[55]

Longvek era

 
Depiction of Cambodia on a Portuguese map (17th century)

King Ang Chan I (1516–1566) moved the capital from Phnom Penh north to Longvek at the banks of the Tonle Sap river. Trade was an essential feature and "...even though they appeared to have a secondary role in the Asian commercial sphere in the 16th century, the Cambodian ports did indeed thrive." Products traded there included precious stones, metals, silk, cotton, incense, ivory, lacquer, livestock (including elephants), and rhinoceros horn.

First Contact with the West

Messengers of Portuguese admiral Alfonso de Albuquerque, conqueror of Malacca arrived in Indochina in 1511, the earliest documented official contact with European sailors. By the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Longvek maintained flourishing communities of Chinese, Indonesians, Malays, Japanese, Arabs, Spaniards, English, Dutch and Portuguese traders.[56][57]

Christian missionary activities began in 1555 with Portuguese clergyman friar Gaspar da Cruz,[58] the first to set foot in the Kingdom of Cambodia, who "...wasn’t able to spread the word of God and he was seriously ill[sic]." Subsequent attempts did not yield any results that could substantiate a congregation.[59][60][61]

Siamese encroachment

 
A drawing by Dutch mapmaker Johannes Vingboons, "Eauweck, hooftstadt van Cambodia - Longvek, capital of Cambodia"

Cambodia was attacked by Thai prince and warlord Naresuan in 1583.[62] and Longvek was captured in 1594 which marked the beginning of the establishment of a Siamese military governor in the city. For the first time a degree of foreign political control was established over the kingdom as the seat of the sovereign was demoted to that of a vassal.[63][64][65][66] Following the Siam capture of the capital at Longvek, Cambodian royals were taken hostage and relocated at the court of Ayutthaya, kept under permanent Thai influence and left to compromise and out-compete each other under the overlord's scrutiny.[67]

The initially lucky circumstance of some royal family members, managing to seek refuge at the Lao court of Vientiane, ended as one of many sinister chapters for the health and integrity of Khmer royalty. The refugees never returned to demand their claims. Their sons, born and raised in Lao, were alienated, as can be expected, and while "moderately" manipulated, engaged in rivalries with their relatives in Siam, and had the ruling king Ram I., who was of lower birth, killed with the help of Spanish and Portuguese sailors.[68]

Shortly after they were killed and defeated in the Cambodian–Spanish War, with foreign hands—Malays and Chams—involved. This pattern of royal indignity is noticeable in its continuity during the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, the Vietnamese court in Hue joining in as yet another stage of royal drama.[69] Promoted and orchestrated by their protectors, who successfully interfered in marriage policies, royal contender's quarrels often prevented any chance of restoring an effective King of competitive authority for decades.[70][71]

Srey Santhor era

Kings Preah Ram I and Preah Ram II moved the capital several times and established their royal capitals at Tuol Basan (Srey Santhor) around 40 kilometres north-east of Phnom Penh, later Pursat, Lavear Em and finally Oudong.[72] In 1596 Spanish and Portuguese conquistadores from Manila raided and razed Srei Santhor.[73]

In 1597 Malay Muslim merchants massacred the Spanish conquistadors who attempted to conquer Cambodia.

Oudong Era

 
Phnom Oudong, the former capital of Cambodia.

By the 17th century Siam and Vietnam increasingly fought over control of the fertile Mekong basin, enhancing pressure on weakened Cambodia.[74][75] The 17th century was also the beginning of direct relations between post-Angkor Cambodia and Vietnam, that is the war between Nguyễn lords who ruled central and southern Vietnam and Trịnh lords in the north.[76]

Henri Mouhot: "Travels in the Central Parts of Indo-China" 1864

"Udong, the present capital of Cambodia, is situated north-east of Komput, and is four miles and a half from that arm of the Mekon which forms the great lake...Every moment I met mandarins, either borne in litters or on foot, followed by a crowd of slaves carrying various articles; some, yellow or scarlet parasols, more or less large according to the rank of the person; others, boxes with betel. I also encountered horsemen, mounted on pretty, spirited little animals, richly caparisoned and covered with bells, ambling along, while a troop of attendants, covered with dust and sweltering with heat, ran after them. Light carts, drawn by a couple of small oxen, trotting along rapidly and noisily, were here and there to be seen. Occasionally a large elephant passed majestically by. On this side were numerous processions to the pagoda, marching to the sound of music; there, again, was a band of ecclesiastics in single file, seeking alms, draped in their yellow cloaks, and with the holy vessels on their backs....The entire population numbers about 12,000 souls."[77]

Loss of the Mekong Delta

 
1683 Map showing Cambodia
 
The Kingdom of Cambodia in 1686

By the late 15th century, the Vietnamese—descendants of the Sinic civilisation sphere—had conquered some of the territories of the principalities of Champa.[78] Some of the surviving Chams began their diaspora in 1471, many re-settling in Khmer territory.[79][80] However, the Cambodian Chronicle does not mention the Cham arrival in Cambodia until the 17th century.[81] The last remaining principality of Champa, Panduranga, survived until 1832. [82]

Traditional course

 
1719 Map showing Cambodia

In 1620 the Vietnamese on their southwards expansion (Nam tiến) had reached the Mekong Delta, a hitherto Khmer domain. Also in 1620 the Khmer king Chey Chettha II (1618–28) married a daughter of lord Nguyễn Phúc Nguyên, one of the Nguyễn lords, who held sway over southern Vietnam for most of the Lê dynasty era from 1428 to 1788. Three years later, king Chey Chettha allowed Vietnam to establish a custom-post at Prey Nokor, modern day Ho Chi Minh City. Vietnam after gaining independence from the Chinese now instituted its own version of the frontier policies of the Chinese empire and by the end of the 17th century, the region was under full Vietnamese administrative control. Cambodia's access to international sea trade was now hampered by Vietnamese taxes and permissions.[83]

Contrary views

The story of a Cambodian king falling in love with a Vietnamese princess, who requested and obtained Kampuchea Krom, the Mekong Delta for Vietnam is folklore, dismissed by scholars and not even mentioned in the Royal Chronicles.[84][85]

In the process of re-interpretation of the royal records and their rather doubtful contents, Michael Vickery again postulates that future publications take these contradicting facts into account: "First, the very concept of a steady Vietnamese "Push to the South" (nam tiến) requires rethinking. It was not steady, and its stages show that there was no continuing policy of southward expansion. Each move was ad hoc, in response to particular challenges..."[86]

In 1642 Cambodian prince Ponhea Chan became king after overthrowing and assassinating king Outey. Malay Muslim merchants in Cambodia helped him in his takeover, and he subsequently converted to Islam from Buddhism, changed his name to Ibrahim, married a Malay woman and reigned as Ramathipadi I. His reign marked the historical apogee of Muslim rule in mainland Southeast Asia.

 
A 1770s map of Cambodia

Ramathipadi defeated the Dutch East India Company in naval engagements of the Cambodian–Dutch War during 1643 and 1644.[87] Pierre de Rogemortes, the ambassador of the Company was killed alongside a third of his 432 men and it was not until two centuries later that Europeans played any important and influential role in Cambodian affairs.[88] In the 1670s the Dutch left all the trading posts they had maintained in Cambodia after the massacre in 1643.[89] The first Vietnamese military intervention took place in 1658-59, in which rebel Cambodian princes, Ibrahim Ramathipadi's own brothers, had requested military support to depose the Muslim ruler and restore Buddhism.

Siam, which might otherwise have been courted as an ally against Vietnamese incursions in the 18th century, was itself involved in prolonged conflicts with Burma and in 1767 the Siamese capital of Ayutthaya was completely destroyed. However, Siam recovered and soon reasserted its dominion over Cambodia. The youthful Khmer king Ang Eng (1779–96) was installed as monarch at Oudong while Siam annexed Cambodia's Battambang and Siem Reap provinces. The local rulers became vassals under direct Siamese rule.[90][91]

A renewed struggle between Siam and Vietnam for control of Cambodia and the Mekong basin in the early 19th century resulted in Vietnamese dominance over a Cambodian vassal king. Justin Corfield writes in "French Indochina": "[1807] the Vietnamese expanded their lands by establishing a protectorate over Cambodia. However king […] Ang Duong was keen on Cambodia becoming independent of [...] Thailand [...] and Vietnam [...] and sought help from the British in Singapore. When that failed, he enlisted the help of the French."[92]

Attempts to force Cambodians to adopt Vietnamese customs caused several rebellions against Vietnamese rule. The most notable took place from 1840 to 1841, spreading through much of the country.

Siam and Vietnam had fundamentally different attitudes concerning their relationship with Cambodia. The Siamese shared a common religion, mythology, literature, and culture with the Khmer, having adopted many religious and cultural practices.[93] The Thai Chakri kings followed the Chakravatin system of an ideal universal ruler, ethically and benevolently ruling over all his subjects. The Vietnamese enacted a civilising mission, as they viewed the Khmer people as culturally inferior and regarded the Khmer lands as legitimate site for colonisation by settlers from Vietnam.[94]

The territory of the Mekong Delta became a territorial dispute between Cambodians and Vietnamese. Cambodia gradually lost control of the Mekong Delta. By the 1860s French colonist had taken over the Mekong Delta and establish the colony of French Cochinchina.

Vietnamese Invasions of Cambodia in Oudong Era

As the Vietnamese empire consolidated itself over the eastern mainland under Gia Long and Minh Mang, Cambodia fell to the Vietnamese invasion in 1811. The invasion was initially initiated by the ruling king, King Ang Chan II's (r. 1806–35) request to Gia Long to suppress his own brothers, Ang Snguon and Ang Em, who were in rebellion against him. The two brothers fled to Thailand, while Ang Chan became a Vietnamese vassal.[95][96]

In 1820 Gia Long died and his fourth son Minh Mang inherited the throne. Both Minh Mang and his father were strong adherents of Confucianism, but Minh Mang was a sadistic isolationist and strong ruler. He removed the Viceroy of Cambodia and Saigon in 1832, triggered the pro-Catholic Lê Văn Khôi revolt against him in 1833. The Thai army, intended to support the rebellion, launched an offensive campaign against the Vietnamese on occupying Cambodia. This led Ang Chan to flee to Saigon, as Rama III promised to restore the Kingdom of Cambodia and punish the insolence of the Kingdom of Vietnam. In 1834, the rebellion in Southern Vietnam was suppressed, and Minh Mang ordered troops to launch the second invasion of Cambodia. This drove most of the Thai forces to the west and reinstalled Ang Chan as the puppet king in Phnom Penh, later succeeded by his daughter, Queen Ang Mey (r. 1835–41).[97] Later that year, the Tây Thành Province was established, the Vietnamese occupied Cambodia result in direct Vietnamese control. For the next six years, the Vietnamese emperor had tried to force the Cambodians to adopt Vietnamese culture by cultural assimilation, a progress that historian David P. Chandler called The Vietnamization of Cambodia.[98]

The death of Minh Mang in early 1841 halted the Vietnamization of Cambodia.[99] With 35,000 Thai troops, they took advantage the of dire situation in Vietnam, rushed into the Tây Thành Province, and were able to fend off Vietnamese counteroffensives in late 1845. The new Vietnamese emperor, Thieu Tri, readied to make peace with Siam, and in June 1847 a peace treaty was signed. The Kingdom of Cambodia under Ang Duong regained its independence after 36 years of brutal Vietnamese occupations and Siamese interventions.[100]

Consequences and conclusions

European colonialism and Anglo-French rivalries

Admiral Léonard Charner proclaimed the formal annexation of three provinces of Cochinchina into the French Empire on 31 July 1861,[101] the beginning of the colonial era of France in South-East Asia. France's interference in Indochina was thus a fact and the colonial community pressing to establish a commercial network in the region based on the Mekong river, ideally linking up with the gigantic market of southern China.[102][103]

Dutch author H.Th. Bussemaker has argued that these French colonial undertakings and acquisitions in the region were mere reactions to or counter-measures against British geo-strategy and economic hegemony. "For the British, it was obvious that the French were trying to undercut British expansionism in India and China by interposing themselves in Indochina. The reason for this frantic expansionism was the hope that the Mekong river would prove to be navigable to the Chinese frontier, which then would open the immense Chinese market for French industrial goods."[104] To save the kingdom's national identity and integrity, King Ang Duong initiated secret negotiations in a letter to Napoleon III seeking to obtain some agreement of protection with France.

In June 1884, the French governor of Cochinchina, Charles Thomson went to Phnom Penh, Norodom's capital, and demanded approval of a treaty with Paris that promised far-reaching changes such as the abolition of slavery, the institution of private land ownership, and the establishment of French résidents in provincial cities. The king reluctantly signed the agreement. The Philaster Treaty of 1874 confirmed French sovereignty over the whole of Cochin China and on 16 November 1887 the Indo-Chinese Union was established.[105]

Outlook

 
Coronation of Norodom, 3 June 1864.

Archaeology of Cambodia is considered to be still in its infancy. The introduction of new methods of geochronology such as LIDAR-Scanning and Luminescence dating has revealed new sets and kinds of data and studies on climate—and environmental imbalances have become more numerous in recent years. Reflection of results obviously requires time, as in an article of the US National Academy of Sciences of the year 2010, the author complains: "Historians and archaeologists have, with a few notable exceptions only rarely considered the role played by environment and climate in the history of Angkor".[106]

Widely debated remain historiography, culturalism and other aspects of the historical sources as wide contradictions suggest.[107] Probably the greatest challenge is to synchronise all research with the conclusions of the neighbouring countries. Delicate issues exist that are rooted in this historical period (border disputes, cultural heritage), which are politically relevant and far from solved. Definitive conclusions with all contributing factors in a reasonable context are clearly future events.[108]

Miriam T. Stark in: "From Funan to Angkor Collapse and Regeneration in Ancient Cambodia"[109]

"...explaining why particular continuities and discontinuities characterize ancient Cambodia remains impossible without a more finely textured understanding of the archaeological record... Future work, that combines systematic archaeological research and critical documentary analysis can and should illuminate aspects of resilience and change..."

See also

References

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Bibliography

  • Chakrabartty, H. R. (1988). Vietnam, Kampuchea, Laos, Bound in Comradeship: A Panoramic Study of Indochina from Ancient to Modern Times, Volume 2. Patriot Publishers. ISBN 8170500486. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  • Cormack, Don (2001). Killing Fields, Living Fields: An Unfinished Portrait of the Cambodian Church - The Church That Would Not Die. Contributor Peter Lewis (reprint ed.). Kregel Publications. ISBN 0825460026. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  • Fielding, Leslie (2008). Before the Killing Fields: Witness to Cambodia and the Vietnam War (illustrated ed.). I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1845114930. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  • Kiernan, Ben (2008). Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and Extermination from Sparta to Darfur. Melbourne Univ. Publishing. ISBN 978-0522854770. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  • Kiernan, Ben (2002). The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power, and Genocide in Cambodia Under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-79 (illustrated ed.). Yale University Press. ISBN 0300096496. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  • Osborne, Milton (2008). Phnom Penh : A Cultural History: A Cultural History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199711734. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  • Reid, Anthony (1999). Charting the shape of early modern Southeast Asia. Silkworm Books. ISBN 9747551063. Retrieved 16 February 2014.

External links

  • The Ram Khamhaeng Inscription - The fake that did not come true
  • What the collapse of ancient capitals can teach us about the cities of today
  • Center for Southeast Asian Studies Japan
  • Center for Khmer Studies
  • The Philippine islands, 1493-1803 at the Internet Archive
  • Strange Parallels - Southeast Asia in a Global Context by Victor Lieberman
  • Maritime boundary delimitation in the gulf of Thailand - information on multiple unsolved regional border disputes,dating back to the dark ages

post, angkor, period, post, angkor, period, cambodia, khmer, រទ, សកម, យសម, យអង, គរ, also, called, middle, period, refers, historical, from, early, 15th, century, 1863, beginning, french, protectorate, cambodia, reliable, sources, 15th, 16th, centuries, particu. The post Angkor period of Cambodia Khmer ប រទ សកម ព ជ ក រ យសម យអង គរ also called the Middle Period 1 refers to the historical era from the early 15th century to 1863 the beginning of the French protectorate of Cambodia As reliable sources for the 15th and 16th centuries in particular are very rare a defensible and conclusive explanation that relates to concrete events that manifest the decline of the Khmer Empire recognised unanimously by the scientific community has so far not been produced 2 3 However most modern historians have approached a consensus in which several distinct and gradual changes of religious dynastic administrative and military nature environmental problems and ecological imbalance 4 coincided with shifts of power in Indochina and must all be taken into account to make an interpretation 5 6 7 In recent years scholars focus has shifted increasingly towards human environment interactions and the ecological consequences including natural disasters such as flooding and droughts 8 9 10 11 Kingdom of Cambodiaក រ ងកម ព ជ ធ បត 1431 1863FlagCambodia and mainland Southeast Asia in 1540 CECapitalSrey Sorchhor 1431 1434 Chaktomuk 1434 1525 Longvek 1525 1603 Lvea Aem 1603 1620 Oudong 1620 1863 Common languagesMiddle Khmer until 1777 KhmerReligionBuddhismDemonym s CambodianGovernmentAbsolute monarchyMonarch 1431 1463Ponhea Yat first 1860 1863Norodom last Historical eraEarly modern period Siege of Angkor1431 Siamese invasion1594 French protectorate11 August 1863Population 15001 200 000 17001 650 000CurrencyTicalPreceded by Succeeded byKhmer Empire French protectorate of CambodiaToday part ofCambodiaThailandVietnamStone epigraphy in temples which had been the primary source for Khmer history is already a rarity throughout the 13th century ends in the third decade of the fourteenth and does not resume until the mid 16th century Recording of the Royal Chronology discontinues with King Jayavarman IX Parameshwara or Jayavarma Paramesvara who reigned from 1327 to 1336 There exists not a single contemporary record of even a king s name for over 200 years Construction and maintenance of monumental temple architecture had come to a standstill after Jayavarman VII s reign According to author Michael Vickery there only exist external sources for Cambodia s 15th century the Chinese Ming Shilu engl veritable records annals and the earliest Royal Chronicle of Ayutthaya 12 which must be interpreted with greatest caution 13 The single incident which undoubtedly reflects reality the central reference point for the entire 15th century is a Siamese intervention of some undisclosed nature at the capital Yasodharapura Angkor Thom around the year 1431 Historians relate the event to the shift of Cambodia s political centre southward to the river port region of Phnom Penh and later Longvek 14 15 Sources for the 16th century are more numerous although still coming from outside of Cambodia The kingdom is centred at the Mekong prospering as an integral part of the Asian maritime trade network 16 17 via which the first contact with European explorers and adventurers does occur 18 Wars with the Siamese resulted in loss of territory in the West and eventually the conquest of the capital Longvek in 1594 The Vietnamese on their Southward March reached Prei Nokor Saigon at the Mekong Delta in the 17th century This event initiates the slow process of Cambodia losing access to the seas and independent marine trade 19 Siamese and Vietnamese dominance intensified during the 17th and 18th century provoking frequent displacements of the seat of power as the Khmer monarch s authority decreased to the state of a vassal Both powers alternately demanded subservience and tribute from the Cambodian court 20 In the early 19th century with dynasties in Vietnam and Siam firmly established Cambodia was placed under joint suzerainty having lost its national sovereignty British agent John Crawfurd states the King of that ancient Kingdom is ready to throw himself under the protection of any European nation To save Cambodia from being incorporated into Vietnam and Siam King Ang Duong agreed to colonial France s offers of protection which took effect with King Norodom Prohmbarirak signing and officially recognising the French protectorate on 11 August 1863 21 Contents 1 Historical background and causes 1 1 Military setbacks 1 2 Land or People 1 3 Dynastic and religious factors 1 4 Environmental problems and infrastructural breakdown 2 Chaktomuk era 3 Longvek era 3 1 First Contact with the West 3 2 Siamese encroachment 4 Srey Santhor era 5 Oudong Era 5 1 Loss of the Mekong Delta 5 1 1 Traditional course 5 1 2 Contrary views 5 2 Vietnamese Invasions of Cambodia in Oudong Era 6 Consequences and conclusions 6 1 European colonialism and Anglo French rivalries 6 2 Outlook 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistorical background and causes EditThe Khmer Empire had steadily gained hegemonic power over most of mainland Southeast Asia since its early days in the 8th and 9th centuries Rivalries and wars with its western neighbour the Pagan Kingdom of the Mon people of modern day Burma were less numerous and decisive than those with Champa to the east The Khmer and Cham Hindu kingdoms remained for centuries preoccupied with each other s containment and it has been argued that one of the Khmer s military objectives was in the reigns of the Angkor kings Suryavarman II and Jayavarman VII the conquest of the Cham ports important in the international trade of the time 22 Even though the Khmer suffered a number of serious defeats such as the Cham invasion of Angkor in 1177 the empire quickly recovered capable to strike back as it was the case in 1181 with the invasion of the Cham city state of Vijaya 23 24 Mongol incursions into southern China and political and cultural pressure caused the southward migration of the Tai people and Thai people and their settling on the upper Chao Phraya River in the 12th century 25 The Sukhothai Kingdom and later the Ayutthaya kingdom were established and conquered the Khmers of the upper and central Menam valley and greatly extended their territory 26 Military setbacks Edit Although a number of sources such as the Cambodian Royal Chronicles and the Royal chronicles of Ayutthaya 27 contain recordings of military expeditions and raids with associated dates and the names of sovereigns and warlords several influential scholars such as David Chandler and Michael Vickery doubt the accuracy and reliability of these texts 28 29 30 Other authors criticise this rigid overall assessment though 31 David Chandler states in A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing Volume 2 Michael Vickery has argued that Cambodian chronicles including this one that treat events earlier than 1550 cannot be verified and were often copied from Thai chronicles about Thailand 28 32 Linguist Jean Michel Filippi concludes The chronology of Cambodian history itself is more a chrono ideology with a pivotal role offered to Angkor 33 Similarities apply to Thai chronological records with the notable example of the Ramkhamhaeng controversy 34 35 According to the Siamese Royal chronicles of Paramanuchitchinorot clashes occurred in 1350 around 1380 1418 and 1431 36 37 In 1350 51 probably April 1350 King Ramadhipati had his son Ramesvara attack the capital of the King of the Kambujas Angkor and had Paramaraja Pha ngua of Suphanburi advance to support him The Kambuja capital was taken and many families were removed to the capital Ayudhya At that time around 1380 the ruler of Kambuja came to attack Chonburi to carry away families from the provinces eastwards to Chanthaburi amounting to about six or seven thousand persons who returned with the Cambodian armies to Kambuja So the King attacked Kambuja and having captured it returned to the capitol sic Then 1418 he went to attack Angkor the capital of Kambuja and captured it Land or People Edit Siamese sources record the habit of capturing sizeable numbers of inhabitants from the capital cities and centres of civilisation of the defeated parties in Chiang Mai and Angkor which can be assumed to have accelerated the cultural decline 37 38 Cambodian people in 18th century in chinese painting Portraits of Periodical Offering by Xie Sui Author Michael Vickery debates the degree of importance of this subject in his publication Two Historical Records of the Kingdom of Vientiane Land or People It is not at all certain that Angkor desired manpower in central Thailand rather than simply control over the rich agricultural resources and whether the political economy of early Southeast Asia resulted in rulers being more concerned with control of land or control of people and both sides of this discussion have offered ad hoc case by case pronunciamentos which are then repeated like mantra Critical discussion of the question is long overdue Contrary viewsAuthor Akin Rabibhadana who quotes Ram Khamhaeng One particular characteristic of the historical Southeast Asian mainland states was the lack of manpower The need for manpower is well illustrated by events following each war between Thailand and her neighbours The victorious side always carried off a large number of people from the conquered territory Whole villages were often moved into the territory of the conqueror where they were assimilated and became the population of the conqueror David K Wyatt As much as anything else the Tai muang was an instrument for the efficient use of manpower in a region where land was plentiful in relation to labor and agricultural technology And Aung Thwin wrote Much of the warfare of early Southeast Asia witnessed the victor carrying off half the population of the vanquished foe and later resettling them on his own soil Pagan was located in the dry belt of Burma and depended mainly upon irrigated agriculture for its economic base Land was plentiful but labor was extremely difficult to obtain 39 Dynastic and religious factors Edit The flag of the kingdom of Cambodia until 1863 The complete transition from the early Khmer kingdom to the firm establishment of the Mahidharapura dynasty first king Jayavarman VI 1080 to 1107 which originated west of the Dangrek Mountains at Phimai in the Mun river valley 40 lasted several decades Some historians argue that these kings failed to acquire absolute central administrative control and had limited access to local resources The dynasty discontinued ritual policy and genealogical traditions Further momentum ensued as Mahayana Buddhism was eventually tolerated and several Buddhist kings emerged including Suryavarman I Rajendravarman II and Jayavarman VII 41 These rulers were not considered and did not consider themselves as divine which lead to a shift in perception of royal authority central power and a loss of dynastic prestige with respect to foreign rulers Effectively the royal subjects were given permission to re direct attention and support from the Hindu state of military dominance with its consecrated leader the Varman protector king towards the inner worldly alternative with the contradictory teachings of the Buddhist temple Indravarman III c 1295 1308 adopted Theravada Buddhism as the state religion 42 which implied an even more passive introverted focus towards individual and personal responsibility to accumulate merit to achieve nirvana 43 Miriam T Stark argues that competition and rivalries in royal succession usurpers and second grade rulers characterised the kingdom since the 9th century Periods of consolidation alternated with political fragmentation as only few rulers were able to wrest control from the provincial level 44 Debate remains on the progress of the imperial society as the kingdom grew and occupied foreign lands Authors present numerous theories about the relationship between Southeast Asian kings and the populace s loyalties nature and degree of identity the Mandala concept and the effects of changing state religion Scholar Ben Kiernan highlights a tendency to identify with a universal religion rather than to adhere to the concept of a people or nation as he refers to author Victor Lieberman in Blood and Soil Modern Genocide 1500 2000 local courts make no formal demand that rulers be of the same ethnicity as their subjects 45 46 Environmental problems and infrastructural breakdown Edit Historians increasingly maintain the idea that decline was caused by progressing ecological imbalance of the delicate irrigation network and canal system of a profoundly ritualized elaborate system of hydraulic engineering 47 at Angkor s Yasodharapura Recent studies indicate that the irrigation system was overworked and gradually started to silt up amplified by large scale deforestation 48 Permanent monument construction projects and maintenance of temples instead of canals and dykes put an enormous strain on the royal resources and drained thousands of slaves and common people from the public workforce and caused tax deficits 49 Author Heng L Thung addressed common sense in Geohydrology and the decline of Angkor as he sums things up the preoccupation of the Khmers with the need to store water for the long dry season Each household needed a pond to provide drinking and household water for both man and beast The barays reservoirs of Angkor were simply the manifestation of the need of an urban population Water was the fountain of life for Angkor a disruption in its supply would be fatal 50 Recent Lidar Light detection and ranging Geo Scans of Angkor have produced new data that have caused several Eureka moments and have profoundly transformed our understanding of urbanism in the region of Angkor 51 Results of dendrochronological studies imply prolonged periods of drought between the 14th and 15th centuries 52 As a result recent re interpretations of the epoch put greater emphasis on human environment interactions and the ecological consequences 8 Chaktomuk era EditFollowing the abandonment of the capital Yasodharapura 53 and the Angkorian sites the few remaining Khmer survivors with Siamese help established a new capital around two hundred kilometres to the south east on the site which is modern day Phnom Penh at the confluence of the Mekong and the Tonle Sap river Thus it controlled the river commerce of the Khmer heartland upper Siam and the Laotian kingdoms with access by way of the Mekong Delta to the international trade routes that linked the Chinese coast the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean Unlike its inland predecessor this society was more open to the outside world and relied mainly on commerce as the source of wealth The adoption of maritime trade with China during the Ming dynasty 1368 1644 provided lucrative opportunities for members of the Cambodian elite who controlled royal trading monopolies 54 Historians consent that as the capital ceased to exist the temples at Angkor remained as central for the nation as they always had been David P Chandler The 1747 inscription is the last extensive one at Angkor Wat and reveals the importance of the temple in Cambodian religious life barely a century before it was discovered by the French 55 Longvek era Edit Depiction of Cambodia on a Portuguese map 17th century King Ang Chan I 1516 1566 moved the capital from Phnom Penh north to Longvek at the banks of the Tonle Sap river Trade was an essential feature and even though they appeared to have a secondary role in the Asian commercial sphere in the 16th century the Cambodian ports did indeed thrive Products traded there included precious stones metals silk cotton incense ivory lacquer livestock including elephants and rhinoceros horn First Contact with the West Edit Messengers of Portuguese admiral Alfonso de Albuquerque conqueror of Malacca arrived in Indochina in 1511 the earliest documented official contact with European sailors By the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries Longvek maintained flourishing communities of Chinese Indonesians Malays Japanese Arabs Spaniards English Dutch and Portuguese traders 56 57 Christian missionary activities began in 1555 with Portuguese clergyman friar Gaspar da Cruz 58 the first to set foot in the Kingdom of Cambodia who wasn t able to spread the word of God and he was seriously ill sic Subsequent attempts did not yield any results that could substantiate a congregation 59 60 61 Siamese encroachment Edit A drawing by Dutch mapmaker Johannes Vingboons Eauweck hooftstadt van Cambodia Longvek capital of Cambodia Main articles Siamese Cambodian War 1591 1594 and Cambodian Spanish WarCambodia was attacked by Thai prince and warlord Naresuan in 1583 62 and Longvek was captured in 1594 which marked the beginning of the establishment of a Siamese military governor in the city For the first time a degree of foreign political control was established over the kingdom as the seat of the sovereign was demoted to that of a vassal 63 64 65 66 Following the Siam capture of the capital at Longvek Cambodian royals were taken hostage and relocated at the court of Ayutthaya kept under permanent Thai influence and left to compromise and out compete each other under the overlord s scrutiny 67 The initially lucky circumstance of some royal family members managing to seek refuge at the Lao court of Vientiane ended as one of many sinister chapters for the health and integrity of Khmer royalty The refugees never returned to demand their claims Their sons born and raised in Lao were alienated as can be expected and while moderately manipulated engaged in rivalries with their relatives in Siam and had the ruling king Ram I who was of lower birth killed with the help of Spanish and Portuguese sailors 68 Shortly after they were killed and defeated in the Cambodian Spanish War with foreign hands Malays and Chams involved This pattern of royal indignity is noticeable in its continuity during the 17th 18th and 19th centuries the Vietnamese court in Hue joining in as yet another stage of royal drama 69 Promoted and orchestrated by their protectors who successfully interfered in marriage policies royal contender s quarrels often prevented any chance of restoring an effective King of competitive authority for decades 70 71 Srey Santhor era EditKings Preah Ram I and Preah Ram II moved the capital several times and established their royal capitals at Tuol Basan Srey Santhor around 40 kilometres north east of Phnom Penh later Pursat Lavear Em and finally Oudong 72 In 1596 Spanish and Portuguese conquistadores from Manila raided and razed Srei Santhor 73 In 1597 Malay Muslim merchants massacred the Spanish conquistadors who attempted to conquer Cambodia Oudong Era Edit Phnom Oudong the former capital of Cambodia By the 17th century Siam and Vietnam increasingly fought over control of the fertile Mekong basin enhancing pressure on weakened Cambodia 74 75 The 17th century was also the beginning of direct relations between post Angkor Cambodia and Vietnam that is the war between Nguyễn lords who ruled central and southern Vietnam and Trịnh lords in the north 76 Henri Mouhot Travels in the Central Parts of Indo China 1864 Udong the present capital of Cambodia is situated north east of Komput and is four miles and a half from that arm of the Mekon which forms the great lake Every moment I met mandarins either borne in litters or on foot followed by a crowd of slaves carrying various articles some yellow or scarlet parasols more or less large according to the rank of the person others boxes with betel I also encountered horsemen mounted on pretty spirited little animals richly caparisoned and covered with bells ambling along while a troop of attendants covered with dust and sweltering with heat ran after them Light carts drawn by a couple of small oxen trotting along rapidly and noisily were here and there to be seen Occasionally a large elephant passed majestically by On this side were numerous processions to the pagoda marching to the sound of music there again was a band of ecclesiastics in single file seeking alms draped in their yellow cloaks and with the holy vessels on their backs The entire population numbers about 12 000 souls 77 Loss of the Mekong Delta Edit 1683 Map showing Cambodia The Kingdom of Cambodia in 1686By the late 15th century the Vietnamese descendants of the Sinic civilisation sphere had conquered some of the territories of the principalities of Champa 78 Some of the surviving Chams began their diaspora in 1471 many re settling in Khmer territory 79 80 However the Cambodian Chronicle does not mention the Cham arrival in Cambodia until the 17th century 81 The last remaining principality of Champa Panduranga survived until 1832 82 Traditional course Edit 1719 Map showing Cambodia In 1620 the Vietnamese on their southwards expansion Nam tiến had reached the Mekong Delta a hitherto Khmer domain Also in 1620 the Khmer king Chey Chettha II 1618 28 married a daughter of lord Nguyễn Phuc Nguyen one of the Nguyễn lords who held sway over southern Vietnam for most of the Le dynasty era from 1428 to 1788 Three years later king Chey Chettha allowed Vietnam to establish a custom post at Prey Nokor modern day Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam after gaining independence from the Chinese now instituted its own version of the frontier policies of the Chinese empire and by the end of the 17th century the region was under full Vietnamese administrative control Cambodia s access to international sea trade was now hampered by Vietnamese taxes and permissions 83 Contrary views Edit The story of a Cambodian king falling in love with a Vietnamese princess who requested and obtained Kampuchea Krom the Mekong Delta for Vietnam is folklore dismissed by scholars and not even mentioned in the Royal Chronicles 84 85 In the process of re interpretation of the royal records and their rather doubtful contents Michael Vickery again postulates that future publications take these contradicting facts into account First the very concept of a steady Vietnamese Push to the South nam tiến requires rethinking It was not steady and its stages show that there was no continuing policy of southward expansion Each move was ad hoc in response to particular challenges 86 In 1642 Cambodian prince Ponhea Chan became king after overthrowing and assassinating king Outey Malay Muslim merchants in Cambodia helped him in his takeover and he subsequently converted to Islam from Buddhism changed his name to Ibrahim married a Malay woman and reigned as Ramathipadi I His reign marked the historical apogee of Muslim rule in mainland Southeast Asia A 1770s map of Cambodia Ramathipadi defeated the Dutch East India Company in naval engagements of the Cambodian Dutch War during 1643 and 1644 87 Pierre de Rogemortes the ambassador of the Company was killed alongside a third of his 432 men and it was not until two centuries later that Europeans played any important and influential role in Cambodian affairs 88 In the 1670s the Dutch left all the trading posts they had maintained in Cambodia after the massacre in 1643 89 The first Vietnamese military intervention took place in 1658 59 in which rebel Cambodian princes Ibrahim Ramathipadi s own brothers had requested military support to depose the Muslim ruler and restore Buddhism Siam which might otherwise have been courted as an ally against Vietnamese incursions in the 18th century was itself involved in prolonged conflicts with Burma and in 1767 the Siamese capital of Ayutthaya was completely destroyed However Siam recovered and soon reasserted its dominion over Cambodia The youthful Khmer king Ang Eng 1779 96 was installed as monarch at Oudong while Siam annexed Cambodia s Battambang and Siem Reap provinces The local rulers became vassals under direct Siamese rule 90 91 A renewed struggle between Siam and Vietnam for control of Cambodia and the Mekong basin in the early 19th century resulted in Vietnamese dominance over a Cambodian vassal king Justin Corfield writes in French Indochina 1807 the Vietnamese expanded their lands by establishing a protectorate over Cambodia However king Ang Duong was keen on Cambodia becoming independent of Thailand and Vietnam and sought help from the British in Singapore When that failed he enlisted the help of the French 92 Attempts to force Cambodians to adopt Vietnamese customs caused several rebellions against Vietnamese rule The most notable took place from 1840 to 1841 spreading through much of the country Siam and Vietnam had fundamentally different attitudes concerning their relationship with Cambodia The Siamese shared a common religion mythology literature and culture with the Khmer having adopted many religious and cultural practices 93 The Thai Chakri kings followed the Chakravatin system of an ideal universal ruler ethically and benevolently ruling over all his subjects The Vietnamese enacted a civilising mission as they viewed the Khmer people as culturally inferior and regarded the Khmer lands as legitimate site for colonisation by settlers from Vietnam 94 The territory of the Mekong Delta became a territorial dispute between Cambodians and Vietnamese Cambodia gradually lost control of the Mekong Delta By the 1860s French colonist had taken over the Mekong Delta and establish the colony of French Cochinchina Vietnamese Invasions of Cambodia in Oudong Era Edit Main article Vietnamese invasions of Cambodia As the Vietnamese empire consolidated itself over the eastern mainland under Gia Long and Minh Mang Cambodia fell to the Vietnamese invasion in 1811 The invasion was initially initiated by the ruling king King Ang Chan II s r 1806 35 request to Gia Long to suppress his own brothers Ang Snguon and Ang Em who were in rebellion against him The two brothers fled to Thailand while Ang Chan became a Vietnamese vassal 95 96 In 1820 Gia Long died and his fourth son Minh Mang inherited the throne Both Minh Mang and his father were strong adherents of Confucianism but Minh Mang was a sadistic isolationist and strong ruler He removed the Viceroy of Cambodia and Saigon in 1832 triggered the pro Catholic Le Văn Khoi revolt against him in 1833 The Thai army intended to support the rebellion launched an offensive campaign against the Vietnamese on occupying Cambodia This led Ang Chan to flee to Saigon as Rama III promised to restore the Kingdom of Cambodia and punish the insolence of the Kingdom of Vietnam In 1834 the rebellion in Southern Vietnam was suppressed and Minh Mang ordered troops to launch the second invasion of Cambodia This drove most of the Thai forces to the west and reinstalled Ang Chan as the puppet king in Phnom Penh later succeeded by his daughter Queen Ang Mey r 1835 41 97 Later that year the Tay Thanh Province was established the Vietnamese occupied Cambodia result in direct Vietnamese control For the next six years the Vietnamese emperor had tried to force the Cambodians to adopt Vietnamese culture by cultural assimilation a progress that historian David P Chandler called The Vietnamization of Cambodia 98 The death of Minh Mang in early 1841 halted the Vietnamization of Cambodia 99 With 35 000 Thai troops they took advantage the of dire situation in Vietnam rushed into the Tay Thanh Province and were able to fend off Vietnamese counteroffensives in late 1845 The new Vietnamese emperor Thieu Tri readied to make peace with Siam and in June 1847 a peace treaty was signed The Kingdom of Cambodia under Ang Duong regained its independence after 36 years of brutal Vietnamese occupations and Siamese interventions 100 Consequences and conclusions EditMain article Colonial Cambodia Main article French Protectorate of Cambodia King Norodom of Cambodia European colonialism and Anglo French rivalries Edit Admiral Leonard Charner proclaimed the formal annexation of three provinces of Cochinchina into the French Empire on 31 July 1861 101 the beginning of the colonial era of France in South East Asia France s interference in Indochina was thus a fact and the colonial community pressing to establish a commercial network in the region based on the Mekong river ideally linking up with the gigantic market of southern China 102 103 Dutch author H Th Bussemaker has argued that these French colonial undertakings and acquisitions in the region were mere reactions to or counter measures against British geo strategy and economic hegemony For the British it was obvious that the French were trying to undercut British expansionism in India and China by interposing themselves in Indochina The reason for this frantic expansionism was the hope that the Mekong river would prove to be navigable to the Chinese frontier which then would open the immense Chinese market for French industrial goods 104 To save the kingdom s national identity and integrity King Ang Duong initiated secret negotiations in a letter to Napoleon III seeking to obtain some agreement of protection with France In June 1884 the French governor of Cochinchina Charles Thomson went to Phnom Penh Norodom s capital and demanded approval of a treaty with Paris that promised far reaching changes such as the abolition of slavery the institution of private land ownership and the establishment of French residents in provincial cities The king reluctantly signed the agreement The Philaster Treaty of 1874 confirmed French sovereignty over the whole of Cochin China and on 16 November 1887 the Indo Chinese Union was established 105 Outlook Edit Coronation of Norodom 3 June 1864 Archaeology of Cambodia is considered to be still in its infancy The introduction of new methods of geochronology such as LIDAR Scanning and Luminescence dating has revealed new sets and kinds of data and studies on climate and environmental imbalances have become more numerous in recent years Reflection of results obviously requires time as in an article of the US National Academy of Sciences of the year 2010 the author complains Historians and archaeologists have with a few notable exceptions only rarely considered the role played by environment and climate in the history of Angkor 106 Widely debated remain historiography culturalism and other aspects of the historical sources as wide contradictions suggest 107 Probably the greatest challenge is to synchronise all research with the conclusions of the neighbouring countries Delicate issues exist that are rooted in this historical period border disputes cultural heritage which are politically relevant and far from solved Definitive conclusions with all contributing factors in a reasonable context are clearly future events 108 Miriam T Stark in From Funan to Angkor Collapse and Regeneration in Ancient Cambodia 109 explaining why particular continuities and discontinuities characterize ancient Cambodia remains impossible without a more finely textured understanding of the archaeological record Future work that combines systematic archaeological research and critical documentary analysis can and should illuminate aspects of resilience and change See also Edit Cambodia portalBuddhism in Cambodia Cambodian Royal Chronicles History of Cambodia Khmer Empire French Protectorate of Cambodia List of monarchs of Cambodia Monarchs family tree Devaraja Mainland Southeast AsiaReferences Edit Murder and Mayhem in Seventeenth Century Cambodia The so called middle period of Cambodian history stretching from Reviews in History School of Advanced Study at the University of London 28 February 2009 Archived from the original on 15 June 2015 Retrieved 14 June 2015 What the collapse of ancient capitals can teach us about the cities of today by Srinath Perur The Guardian 14 January 2015 Retrieved 27 June 2015 Cambodia and Its Neighbors in the 15th Century Michael Vickery Michael Vickery s Publications 1 June 2004 Retrieved 8 June 2015 Scientists dig and fly over Angkor in search of answers to golden city s fall by Miranda Leitsinger The San Diego Union Tribune 13 June 2004 Archived from the original on 24 December 2013 Retrieved 19 June 2015 What Caused the End of the Khmer Empire By K Kris Hirst About com Retrieved 11 June 2015 THE DECLINE OF ANGKOR Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 11 June 2015 The emergence and ultimate decline of the Khmer Empire was paralleled with development and subsequent change in religious ideology together with infrastructure that supported agriculture PDF Studies Of Asia Retrieved 11 June 2015 a b Laser scans flesh out the saga of Cambodias 1200 year old lost city KHMER GEO Archived from the original on 14 June 2015 Retrieved 11 June 2015 Possible new explanation found for sudden demise of Khmer Empire Phys org 3 January 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2015 The emergence and ultimate decline of the Khmer Empire the Empire experienced two lengthy droughts during c 1340 1370 and also c 1400 1425 PDF Studies of Asia Retrieved 19 June 2015 Buckley Brendan M Anchukaitis Kevin J Penny Daniel Fletcher Roland Cook Edward R Sano Masaki Nam Le Canh Wichienkeeo Aroonrut Minh Ton That Hong Truong Mai 13 April 2010 Climate as a contributing factor in the demise of Angkor Cambodia Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences National Academy of Sciences 107 15 6748 6752 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 6748B doi 10 1073 pnas 0910827107 PMC 2872380 PMID 20351244 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle PDF Michael Vickery Retrieved 11 June 2015 The Ming Shi lu as a Source for the Study of Southeast Asian History Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi lu Archived from the original on 22 June 2015 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Kingdom of Cambodia 1431 1863 GlobalSecurity Retrieved 12 June 2015 Marlay Ross Neher Clark D 1999 Patriots and Tyrants Ten Asian Leaders By Ross Marlay Clark D Nehe ISBN 9780847684427 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Giovanni Filippo de MARINI Delle Missioni CHAPTER VII MISSION OF THE KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA by Cesare Polenghi It is considered one of the most renowned for trading opportunities there is abundance PDF The Siam Society Retrieved 1 July 2015 Reid Anthony August 2000 Charting the Shape of Early Modern Southeast Asia By Anthony Reid ISBN 9781630414818 Retrieved 14 June 2015 Maritime Trade in Southeast Asia during the Early Colonial Period PDF University of Oxford Retrieved 12 June 2015 Church Peter 3 February 2012 MA Short History of South East Asia edited by Peter Church ISBN 9781118350447 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Ooi Keat Gin 2004 Southeast Asia A Historical Encyclopedia from Angkor Wat to East Volume 1 ISBN 9781576077702 Retrieved 7 June 2015 London Company s Envoys Plot Siam PDF Siamese Heritage Retrieved 7 May 2015 Two Historical Records of the Kingdom of Vientiane That was probably also the reason for the Cambodian conquests in Champa in the reigns of the Angkor kings Suryavarman II and Jayavarman VII PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 30 June 2015 Angkor Wat equated with the quintessence of Cambodian culture for more than a century The Cham fleet sailed up the Mekong River The reaction was very quick The Phnom Penh Post 14 June 2013 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Bayon New Perspectives Reconsidered Michael Vickery PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 26 June 2015 A Short History of South East Asia Chapter 3 The Repercussions of the Mongol Conquest of China The result was a mass movement of Thai peoples southwards PDF Stanford University Retrieved 26 June 2015 Briggs Lawrence Palmer 1948 Siamese Attacks On Angkor Before 1430 The Far Eastern Quarterly Association for Asian Studies 8 1 3 33 doi 10 2307 2049480 JSTOR 2049480 S2CID 165680758 Siam Society Books The Royal Chronicles of Ayutthaya A Synoptic Translation by Richard D Cushman Siam Society Retrieved 20 June 2015 a b Woolf D R 3 June 2014 A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing Volume 2 Tiounn Chronicle ISBN 9781134819980 Retrieved 19 May 2015 Cambodia s cultural heritage considerations in Area Studies by Aratoi Hisao googleusercontent com Retrieved 12 March 2015 Essay on Cambodian History from the middle of the 14 th to the beginning of the 16 th Centuries According to the Cambodian Royal Chronicles by NHIM Sotheavin So far the reconstruction of history from the middle of the 14 th to the beginning of the 16 th centuries is locked in a sort of unsolved state since local sources prove inadequate and references from foreign sources are of little use PDF Sophia Asia Center Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 1 July 2015 Bourdonneau Eric September 2004 Culturalism and historiography of ancient Cambodia about prioritizing sources of Khmer history Ranking Historical Sources and the Culturalist Approach in the Historiography of Ancient Cambodia by Eric Bourdonneau 29 Also this material is sparse Moussons Recherche en Sciences Humaines Sur l Asie du Sud Est Presses Universitaires de Provence 7 39 70 doi 10 4000 moussons 2469 Retrieved 3 July 2015 The historical Records of Ayudhya Blamed on the invasion of Pagan in 1767 all Ayudhya s past records were assumed perished during its fall to the Burmese attack Khmer heritage 31 May 2015 Retrieved 20 June 2015 Angkor Wat equated with the quintessence of Cambodian culture for more than a century Behind the mythical towers Cambodian history Phnom Penh Post 14 June 2013 Retrieved 20 June 2015 A king and a stone Nineteenth century or twelfth When the Thai script was first inscribed has much to do with how history is used politically by Rahul Goswami Khaleej Times 29 November 2014 Retrieved 20 June 2015 Recreations epigraphic 2 2 Epigraphic western the case of Ramkhamhaeng by Jean Michel Filippi Kampotmuseum 28 June 2012 Retrieved 20 June 2015 THE ABRIDGED ROYAL CHRONICLE OF AYUDHYA In 712 of the Era Year of the Tiger PDF The Siam Society Retrieved 12 June 2015 a b History of Ayutthaya Dynasties King Ramesuan History of Ayutthaya Retrieved 20 June 2015 THE ABRIDGED ROYAL CHRONICLE OF AYUDHYA Then he went to attack Chiangmai A great many Lao families were brought away to the capitol PDF The Siam Society Retrieved 12 June 2015 Two Historical Records of the Kingdom of Vientiane pp 2 5 PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 29 June 2015 Higham Charles 14 May 2014 Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations By Charles Higham Mahidharapura dynasty ISBN 9781438109961 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Marr David G Milner Anthony Crothers 1986 Southeast Asia in the 9th to 14th Centuries edited by David G Marr Anthony Crothers Milner ISBN 9789971988395 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Comparative timeline of Khmer Empire and Europe Theravada Buddhism became the state religion PDF Australian Government Department of Education Retrieved 20 June 2015 The emergence and ultimate decline of the Khmer Empire Many scholars attribute the halt of the development of Angkor to the rise of Theravada PDF Studies Of Asia Retrieved 11 June 2015 From Funan to Angkor Collapse and Regeneration in Ancient Cambodia by Miriam T Stark p 162 PDF University of Hawaii Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2015 Kiernan Ben 2008 Blood and Soil Modern Genocide 1500 2000 ISBN 9780522854770 Retrieved 11 June 2015 Strange Parallels Volume 1 Integration on the Mainland Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 by Victor Lieberman PDF University of Michigan Retrieved 11 June 2015 The water management network of Angkor Cambodia Roland Fletcher Dan Penny Damian Evans Christophe Pottier Mike Barbetti Matti Kummu Terry Lustig amp Authority for the Protection and Management of Angkor and the Region of Siem Reap APSARA Department of Monuments and Archaeology Team PDF University of Washington Retrieved 26 June 2015 The architects of Cambodia s famed Angkor the world s most extensive medieval hydraulic city unwittingly engineered its environmental collapse ScienceDaily 12 September 2007 Retrieved 19 June 2015 Damme Thomas Van January 2011 The Collapse of the Khmer Empire by Thomas Van Damme Academia Edu Retrieved 20 June 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help GEOHYDROLOGY AND THE DECLINE OF ANGKOR by HENG L THUNG PDF Khamkoo Archived from the original PDF on 29 June 2016 Retrieved 29 June 2015 Evans DH Fletcher RJ Pottier C Chevance JB Soutif D Tan BS Im S Ea D Tin T Kim S Cromarty C De Greef S Hanus K Baty P Kuszinger R Shimoda I Boornazian G 11 July 2013 Uncovering archaeological landscapes at Angkor using lidar Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 110 31 12595 600 Bibcode 2013PNAS 11012595E doi 10 1073 pnas 1306539110 PMC 3732978 PMID 23847206 The Collapse of Angkor Evidence for a Long Term Drought an extended drought between the 14th and 15th centuries at Angkor About Education Retrieved 3 July 2015 Yasodharapura revived in literature Yasodharapura the first capital of the Khmer empire was razed by the Siamese THE JAPAN TIMES LTD 23 September 2007 Retrieved 27 June 2015 A Brief History of Phnom Penh Chaktomuk Canby Publications Co Retrieved 26 June 2015 AN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY INSCRIPTION FROM ANGKOR WAT by David P Chandler PDF The Siam Society Retrieved 29 June 2015 Murder and Mayhem in Seventeenth Century Cambodia Institute of Historical Research IHR Retrieved 26 June 2015 Maritime Trade in Southeast Asia during the Early Colonial Period transferring the lucrative China trade to Cambodia PDF Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology University of Oxford Retrieved 26 June 2015 Justin Corfield 13 October 2009 The History of Cambodia ABC CLIO pp 12 ISBN 978 0 313 35723 7 THE JESUITS IN CAMBODIA A LOOK UPON CAMBODIAN RELIGIOUSNESS 2nd half of the 16th century to the 1st quarter of the 18th century he wasn t able to spread the word of God and he was seriously ill he quickly left the region without doing much and not baptizing more than a heathen PDF Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico Retrieved 1 July 2015 Boxer Charles Ralph Pereira Galeote Cruz Gaspar da Rada Martin de 1953 South China in the sixteenth century being the narratives of Galeote Pereira Fr Gaspar da Cruz O P and Fr Martin de Rada O E S A 1550 1575 Issue 106 of Works issued by the Hakluyt Society Printed for the Hakluyt Society pp lix 59 63 The Philippine islands 1493 1803 the expedition of 1596 to Cambodia Archive Org Retrieved 26 June 2015 Daniel George Edward Hall 1981 History of South East Asia Macmillan Press p 148 ISBN 978 0 333 24163 9 Cambodia Lovek the principal city of Cambodia after the sacking of Angkor by the Siamese king Boromoraja II in 1431 Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 26 June 2015 1551 WAR WITH LOVEK During the Burmese siege of Ayutthaya in 1549 the King of Cambodia Ang Chan History of Ayutthaya Retrieved 26 June 2015 Tarling Nicholas 1999 The Cambridge History of Southeast edited by Nicholas Tarling ISBN 9780521663700 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Thailand and Cambodia A Love Hate Relationship Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia 16 March 2003 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle At the time of the invasion one group of the royal family the reigning king and two or more princes escaped and eventually found refuge in Laos while another group the king s brother and his sons were taken as hostages to Ayutthaya PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 1 July 2015 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle It was in fact at the end of the reign of Suriyobarm that the first step was taken in the form of a marriage between the crown prince Jayajettha and a Vietnamese princess at a date between 1616 and 1618 PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 1 July 2015 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle It was in fact at the end of the reign of Suriyobarm that the first step was taken in the form of a marriage between the crown prince Jayajettha and a Vietnamese princess at a date between 1616 and 1618 PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 1 July 2015 1620 A Cautionary Tale Cambodia had quickly recovered from an Ayutthayan invasion of Lovek in 1593 94 PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 26 June 2015 Preah Khan Reach The Genealogy of Khmer Kings THE RISE OF KING ANG CHAN THE DEFEAT OF SDACH KAN PDF CAMBOSASTRA Retrieved 26 June 2015 HISTORY PEROD 1372 1432 60 YEARS ABANDONMENT OF CHAKTOMUK CITY Locomo org Retrieved 26 June 2015 Ben Kiernan Recovering History and Justice in Cambodia Within two years Spanish and Portuguese conquistadores Yale University Retrieved 26 June 2015 The Buddha of Chinese deception Oudong Mountain by Bou Saroeun Phnom Penh Post 22 June 2001 Retrieved 26 June 2015 THistory of the Phnom Bakheng Monument PDF Khmer Studies Archived from the original PDF on 26 June 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Norman G Owen 2005 The Emergence Of Modern Southeast Asia A New History University of Hawaii Press pp 117 ISBN 978 0 8248 2890 5 The Project Gutenberg EBook of Travels in the Central Parts of Indo China Siam Cambodia and Laos Vol 1 of 2 by Henri Mouhot The Project Gutenberg Retrieved 3 July 2015 Kiernan Ben 2008 Blood and Soil Modern Genocide 1500 2000 By Ben Kiernan p 102 The Vietnamese destruction of Champa 1390 1509 ISBN 9780522854770 Retrieved 27 June 2015 The Cham Descendants of Ancient Rulers of South China Sea Watch Maritime Dispute From Sidelines Written by Adam Bray IOC Champa Archived from the original on 26 June 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Mote Frederick W 1998 The Cambridge History of China Volume 8 The Ming Part 2 Parts 1368 1644 By Denis C Twitchett Frederick W Mote ISBN 9780521243339 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Vachon M amp Naren K 2006 April 29 A history of Champa The Cambodia Daily Retrieved September 10 2020 from https english cambodiadaily com news a history of champa 87292 Weber N 2012 The destruction and assimilation of Campa 1832 35 as seen from Cam sources Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 43 1 158 180 Retrieved June 3 2020 from www jstor org stable 41490300 Reconceptualizing Southern Vietnamese History from the 15th to 18th Centuries Competition along the Coasts from Guangdong to Cambodia by Brian A Zottoli University of Michigan Retrieved 26 June 2015 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle According to Cambodian oral tradition the marriage was because a weak Cambodian king fell in love PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 30 June 2015 Michael Arthur Aung Thwin Kenneth R Hall 13 May 2011 New Perspectives on the History and Historiography of Southeast Asia Continuing Explorations Routledge pp 158 ISBN 978 1 136 81964 3 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle In Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient Tome 83 1996 pp 405 415 PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 30 June 2015 p 157 Kiernan 2002 p 253 Cormack 2001 p 447 Reid 1999 p 36 Chakrabartty 1988 p 497 Fielding 2008 p 27 Kiernan 2008 p 158 Kiernan 2002 p 254 Osborne 2008 p 45 War and trade Siamese interventions in Cambodia 1767 1851 by Puangthong Rungswasdisab University of Wollongong Retrieved 27 June 2015 Nolan Cathal J 2002 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of International Relations S Z by Cathal J Nolan ISBN 9780313323836 Retrieved 21 November 2015 Volume IV Age of Revolution and Empire 1750 to 1900 French Indochina by Justin Corfield PDF Grodno State Medical University Retrieved 30 June 2015 Full text of Siamese State Ceremonies CHAPTER XV THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE 197 as compared with the early Khmer Oath Internet Archive Retrieved 27 June 2015 March to the South Nam Tiến Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation Archived from the original on 26 June 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Chandler David 2018 1986 A History of Cambodia Taylor amp Francis pp 140 144 ISBN 978 0 429 97514 1 Corfield Justin J 2009 The History of Cambodia ABC CLIO p 18 ISBN 978 0 31335 723 7 Chandler David 2018 1986 A History of Cambodia Taylor amp Francis pp 146 149 ISBN 978 0 429 97514 1 Chandler David 2018 1986 A History of Cambodia Taylor amp Francis pp 150 156 ISBN 978 0 429 97514 1 Chandler David 2018 1986 A History of Cambodia Taylor amp Francis pp 157 160 ISBN 978 0 429 97514 1 Corfield Justin J 2009 The History of Cambodia ABC CLIO p 19 ISBN 978 0 31335 723 7 Chapuis Oscar 1 January 2000 The Last Emperors of Vietnam From Tu Duc to Bao Dai Greenwood Publishing Group p 48 ISBN 9780313311703 Retrieved 3 April 2015 Dunmore John April 1993 The French Voyages and the Philosophical Background Tuatara Victoria University of Wellington Library 32 Retrieved 3 April 2015 Keay John November 2005 The Mekong Exploration Commission 1866 68 Anglo French Rivalry in South East Asia PDF Asian Affairs Routledge XXXVI III Retrieved 3 April 2015 Bussemaker H Th 2001 Paradise in Peril Western colonial power and Japanese expansion in South East Asia 1905 1941 University of Amsterdam Retrieved 3 April 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sovannarith Keo 14 December 2014 The Raison d etre of French Protectorate of Cambodia Retrieved 2 July 2020 Climate as a contributing factor in the demise of Angkor Cambodia Historians and archaeologists have with a few notable exceptions 1 2 only National Academy of Sciences Retrieved 3 July 2015 Culturalism and historiography of ancient Cambodia about prioritizing sources of Khmer history Ranking Historical Sources and the Culturalist Approach in the Historiography of Ancient Cambodia by Eric Bourdonneau Presses Universitaires de Provence Retrieved 3 July 2015 Archaeology in Cambodia An appraisal for future research by William A Southworth Archaeological consultant for the Center for Khmer Studies Rather than being finalized and complete the study of the archaeology of Cambodia Center for Khmer Studies Retrieved 1 July 2015 From Funan to Angkor Collapse and Regeneration in Ancient Cambodia by Miriam T Stark p 166 PDF University of Hawaii Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2015 Bibliography EditChakrabartty H R 1988 Vietnam Kampuchea Laos Bound in Comradeship A Panoramic Study of Indochina from Ancient to Modern Times Volume 2 Patriot Publishers ISBN 8170500486 Retrieved 16 February 2014 Cormack Don 2001 Killing Fields Living Fields An Unfinished Portrait of the Cambodian Church The Church That Would Not Die Contributor Peter Lewis reprint ed Kregel Publications ISBN 0825460026 Retrieved 16 February 2014 Fielding Leslie 2008 Before the Killing Fields Witness to Cambodia and the Vietnam War illustrated ed I B Tauris ISBN 978 1845114930 Retrieved 16 February 2014 Kiernan Ben 2008 Blood and Soil A World History of Genocide and Extermination from Sparta to Darfur Melbourne Univ Publishing ISBN 978 0522854770 Retrieved 16 February 2014 Kiernan Ben 2002 The Pol Pot Regime Race Power and Genocide in Cambodia Under the Khmer Rouge 1975 79 illustrated ed Yale University Press ISBN 0300096496 Retrieved 16 February 2014 Osborne Milton 2008 Phnom Penh A Cultural History A Cultural History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199711734 Retrieved 16 February 2014 Reid Anthony 1999 Charting the shape of early modern Southeast Asia Silkworm Books ISBN 9747551063 Retrieved 16 February 2014 External links EditPost Angkor period at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity The Ram Khamhaeng Inscription The fake that did not come true What the collapse of ancient capitals can teach us about the cities of today Center for Southeast Asian Studies Japan Center for Khmer Studies The Philippine islands 1493 1803 at the Internet Archive Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in a Global Context by Victor Lieberman Maritime boundary delimitation in the gulf of Thailand information on multiple unsolved regional border disputes dating back to the dark ages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Post Angkor period amp oldid 1136317037, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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