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         Cambodian History:     more books (98)
  1. The Tragedy of Cambodian History: Politics, War, and Revolution since 1945 by David P. Chandler, 1993-09-10
  2. Cambodian Buddhism: History And Practice by Ian Charles Harris, 2005-01-31
  3. Cambodian Linguistics, Literature and History: Collected Articles by Judith J Jacobs, 1993-12-31
  4. Road to the Killing Fields: The Cambodian War of 1970-1975 (Military History Ser. 53) by Wilfred P. Deac, 1997-12
  5. The Tragedy of Cambodian History: Politics, War, and Revolution since 1945 by David P. Chandler, 1993
  6. A' History of Cambodian Non-communist Resistance 1975-1983 (Working paper / Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, Monash University) by Justin J. Corfield, 2005-06-21
  7. The Tragedy of Cambodian History : Politics, War, and Revolution Since 1945 by David P. Chandler, 1992
  8. The Tragedy of Cambodian History: Politics, War and Revolution Since 1945.: An article from: Pacific Affairs by Pamela Sodhy, 1994-12-22
  9. THE TRAGEDY OF CAMBODIAN HISTORY, POLITICS, WAR AND REVOLUTION SINCE 1945 by David P Chandler, 1991
  10. From Freedom to Hell: A History of Foreign Intervention in Cambodian Politics and Wars by Punnee Soonthornpoct, 2006-01-30
  11. Not Just Victims: Conversations with Cambodian Community Leaders in the United States (Asian American Experience) by Audrey U. Kim, 2003-03
  12. History by other means.(Letter from Cambodia): An article from: New Criterion by Anthony Daniels, 2003-10-01
  13. Cambodian Linguistics, Literature and History: Collected Articles. (book reviews): An article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society by Karen L. Adams, 1997-07-01
  14. To Destroy You Is No Loss: The Odyssey of a Cambodian Family by JoAn D. Criddle, 1998-01-01

1. Cambodia In Modern History Beauty And Darkness
Maps and basic statistical information. General Articles. Links to several articles about various aspects of Cambodian culture and history.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. Untangling Cambodian History: The Banyan Tree
The Banyan Tree Untangling cambodian history. by Bruce Sharp. The banyan tree grows throughout Cambodia. It may reach a height of over 100 feet,
http://www.mekong.net/cambodia/banyan1.htm
The Banyan Tree: Untangling Cambodian History
by Bruce Sharp The banyan tree grows throughout Cambodia. It may reach a height of over 100 feet, and as it grows, new roots descend from its branches, pushing into the ground and forming new trunks. The roots grow relentlessly; many of the ancient temples of Angkor have toppled as these roots have become embedded in the cracks and crevices between their massive stones. A single tree might have dozens of trunks, and it is often impossible to tell which is the original. This is Cambodia today: a thousand intertwined branches, a thousand stories woven together, a thousand currents of history swirling in different directions. To understand Cambodia in the present, it is necessary to look at Cambodia in the past. Part One: The Seeds In the early 1960s, to much of the outside world, Cambodia seemed to be an insignificant country. For Americans, it was known only as the site of the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat: a small, quiet nation sharing a border with Vietnam. Vietnam, by contrast, was well known to Americans. The cold war was raging, and in the eyes of the American public the front line of that war was clearly marked by the boundary between the communists in the north, and the noncommunists in the South. South Vietnam was perceived as the first domino; Cambodia was merely the next. The subtleties of history, the blurred lines of political fact and fiction were lost in the analogy.

3. Cambodian History And Culture
cambodian history and Culture Cambodian Culrural event and site on the Net Last update 11/30/97 By SSim. Go back to Front Page
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4. Index
Timeline from the preAngkor period to the present day.
http://www.geocities.com/khmerchronology/
Map of Cambodia 1826 Angkor Pre-Angkor Cambodian Chronology in French (Not with this Website) About This Page About Me / Acknowledgement Contact since August 2001 You are C.O.C.H visitor National Assembly Senate Cambodian People' Party (CPP) FUNCINPEC ... Cambodia: Governance and Corruption Diagnostic.

5. Cambodian History And Document
cambodian history and Document
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6. Chronology Of Cambodian History, 1400-1699
Chronology of cambodian history, 14001699. YEAR. 1400 Le Quy Ly deposes the last Tran Emperor of the Dai Viet and becomes Emperor with the name Ho Quy.
http://www.geocities.com/khmerchronology/1400.htm
Chronology of Cambodian History, 1400-1699
YEAR
Le Quy Ly deposes the last Tran Emperor of the Dai Viet and becomes Emperor with the name Ho Quy.
Samtac Chao Phaya Phing-ya Nippean-bat (1405 - 1409), Khmer king.
Lampang Paramaraja (1409 - 1416), Khmer king.
Sorijovong or Lambang (1416 - 1425), Khmer king. Pongsa Voda records the Siamese’s siege of Angkor, which capitulated after seven months during which Khmer ministers had gone over to the enemy, taking a great number of followers.
Barom Racha, or Gamkhat Ramadhapati (1425 - 1429), Khmer king.
Thommo-Soccorach, or Dharmasoka (1429 - 1431), Khmer king.
Paramaraja II of Ayuthaya sacks Angkor. Khmer capital is relocated to Srei Santhor region.
Ponhea Yat, or Gam Yat (1432-?) comes to the Khmer throne. The King begins his reign at Angkor. King Ponhea Yat abandons Angkor and moves his court to Basan
The Khmer royal court (capital) move from Basan to Phnom Penh. According to Pongsa Voda (Chronicle) Khmer, “…in 1434, Tuesday, the ninth day of the waning moon, in the month of Pisakh in the year of the Tiger, 6 th in the decade, the King left Basan, where he had resided for only one year, and went by boat to Phnom Daun Penh, accompanied by his mandarins and all his household.”

7. Cambodian History Contents Page
cambodian history Source http//memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/khtoc.html. ..
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8. Cambodian History
cambodian history. Migrations into the mainland regions of Southeast Asia from the north continued well into historic times. The ancestors of the Cambodians
http://research.umbc.edu/eol/cambodia/histcamb.htm
Cambodian history
Migrations into the mainland regions of Southeast Asia from the north continued well into historic times. The ancestors of the Cambodians came with earlier waves that followed in the wake of the proto-Malays. The Cambodians are closely related to the Mon who settled further to the west but of whom only small pockets survive in Thailand and Burma. According to conventional history based largely on Chinese sources, when the Cambodians arrived in presentday Cambodia, two powerful states had already been established there by people of the Malay stock Champa , controlling part of central and southern Vietnam, and Founan (Funan), sited in the southernmost part of Vietnam and most of presentday Cambodia. Founan was at the height of its power at the end of the fifth century A.D. Some scholars, such as Nasuruddin, believe that the court of Founan had Indian dance and music which spread to the other parts of the Kingdom (1992:2), but Chandler (1992:13ff) casts doubt on the reliability of the Chinese sources. It is believed that one of Founan's vassals was the Cambodian state of Chenla , situated in presentday northern Cambodia and southern Laos. By about the middle of the sixth century A.D., Chenla overcame Founan and reversed the pattern of overlord and vassal. About A.D. 627, Chenla completely absorbed Founan, during the reign of Isanvarman I who married a princess of the neighboring kingdom of Champa, and extended his domains westward until it bordered the Mon kingdom of Dvaravati (Cambodia 1969:104). Before the end of Jayavarman I's reign, Chenla was showing signs of breaking up. Civil war followed his death, and the country split into two parts: Land Chenla (northern part) and Water Chenla (southern part), and Cambodian power suffered an eclipse for more than a century.

9. Cambodian History
cambodian history. Migrations into the mainland regions of Southeast Asia from the north continued well into historic times.
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10. Cambodian History
Cambodian music history. A distinction must be made between music in Cambodia Little is known of this period, the most obscure in cambodian history.
http://research.umbc.edu/eol/cambodia/histcmus.htm
Cambodian music history
A distinction must be made between "music in Cambodia" and "Cambodian music," for the former embraces all ethnic groups within the national boundaries while the latter is limited to the majority, Cambodians. The northern provinces of Rattanakiri and Mundulkiri include hilly plateaus which are home to the Pnorng (Pnorng), an upland Mon-Khmer speaking group, while in the southwest along the Koulen and Cardamom ranges are found the Kuoy (Kui), Por, Samre, and other upland Mon-Khmer speakers. Their musical expression emphasizes gong ensembles, drum ensembles, and free-reed mouth organs with gourd windchests. In the west, around the great lake (Tonle Sap) live Cham, Chinese, Vietnamese, and other lowland minorities, but the extent to which these groups maintain their traditional musics is not largely known. Cambodian music flourished in both court and village settings, some associated with specific functions, others with entertainment. In villages weddings are celebrated with kar music, communication with spirits is accompanied by arakk music, and entertainments include

11. USATODAY.com - Cambodians Hope Justice Will Close Dark Chapter
"We want to close a dark chapter in cambodian history.
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12. A Short Cambodian History
A Short cambodian history. Although Cambodia had a rich and powerful past under the Hindu state of Search Google for another short cambodian history
http://www.abacci.com/atlas/history3.asp?countryID=162

13. The Cambodian Killing Fields
The Cambodian Killing Fields
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14. Cambodian History Contents Page
cambodian history. Source http//memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/khtoc.html Cambodia A Country Study. RR Ross (ed.) Federal Research Division, 1987
http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/genocide/cambhist.htm
//Dynamic-FX slide in menu v6.5 (By maXimus, maximus@nsimail.com) //Site: http://www.absolutegb.com/maximus //For full source, and 100's more DHTML scripts, visit http://www.dynamicdrive.com Cambodian History Source: http://memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/khtoc.html
Cambodia: A Country Study. R R Ross (ed.) Federal Research Division, 1987
Accessed 30 July 2001 [Only those parts of the report are reproduced here that most directly linked with the period of Khmer Rouge rule, 1975-78]

15. Yale Cambodian Genocide Project The CGP, 1994-2004
The Cambodian genocide of 19751979, in which approximately 1.7 million people lost their lives (21% of the country's population), was one of the
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16. Cambodian History Part IV
Probably the most definitive account of cambodian history in English is An earlier work, Martin Herz s A Short History of Cambodia from the Days of
http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/genocide/cambhist4.htm
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Cambodia: A Country Study. R R Ross (ed.) Federal Research Division, 1987
Accessed 30 July 2001 [Cambodian History Part IV] Part I Part II Part III Part IV ... The Fall of Democratic Kampuchea DEMOCRATIC KAMPUCHEA, 1975-78
Mid-April is the beginning of the Cambodian new year, the year's most festive celebration. For many Cambodians, the fall of Phnom Penh promised both a new year and a new era of peace. The people of Phnom Penh and of other cities waited in anticipation for the appearance of their new rulers. The troops who entered the capital on April 17 were mostly grim-faced youths clad in black with the checkered scarves that had become the uniform of the movement. Their unsmiling demeanor quickly dispelled popular enthusiasm. People began to realize that, in the eyes of the victors, the war was not over; it was just beginning, and the people were the new enemy. According to Father Ponchaud, as the sense of consternation and dread grew, it seemed that "a slab of lead had fallen on the city." Evacuation of Phnom Penh began immediately.The black-clad troops told the residents that they would move only about "two or three kilometers" outside the city and would return in "two or three days." Other witnesses report being told that the evacuation was because of the threat of an American bombing and that they did not have to lock their houses since the Khmer Rouge would "take care of everything" until they returned. The roads out of the city were clogged with evacuees. Phnom Penhthe population of which, numbering 2.5 million people, included as many as 1.5 million wartime refugees living with relatives or in shantytowns around the urban centerwas soon emptied. Similar evacuations occurred at Batdambang, Kampong Cham, Siemreab, Kampong Thum, and the country's other towns and cities.

17. History Of Cambodia
The Cambodian delegation agreed to the neutrality of the three Search Net History. Free Clip Art w/ Flags! home guides history stats
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18. CAMBODIA: Return To Year Zero - Simply... Cambodian History
All roads in cambodian history lead to Angkor Wat – and Pol Pot was particularly conscious of trying to emulate the independent greatness that the temple
http://www.newint.org/issue242/simply.htm
new internationalist
issue 242 - April 1993 Simply... Cambodian history 1 Magnificent beginnings
All roads in Cambodian
history lead to Angkor Wat – and Pol Pot was particularly conscious of trying to emulate the independent greatness that the temple city symbolized. 'If our people were capable of building Angkor,' he said, 'we can do anything.' Completed around 1150 and devoted to the Hindu god Vishnu, it remains the largest religious building the world has ever known. Legend has it that it was built not by human hands but by Indra, the Lord of Heaven, who sailed down to earth for the purpose. Actually its creation was ordered by King Suryavarman II, one of a series of Khmer monarchs, culminating in the most powerful of all, Jayavarman VII, whose preoccupation was with building monuments at home and pursuing the conquest of surrounding countries. The magnificent buildings we now see are legacies of the insatiable demands for forced labour and military service that these kings laid upon their people – and which had their twentieth-century echo in the Khmer Rouge. 2 Under French ‘protection’
The abandonment of Angkor 3 Faith and fire
Early Cambodia was
largely Hindu in religion, though this was always mingled with a large measure of animism. There was a Mahayana Buddhist tradition too but when Buddhism eventually became established it was the Theravada strain (imported from Sri Lanka via Burma) which took hold.

19. Cambodian Recent History And Contemporary Society An Introductory
Cambodian Recent History and Contemporary Society An Introductory Course
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20. Cambodian History
Chronology of cambodian history Khmer Royal Family Tree CambodiaHistory Notes from Phnom Penhby Rich Garella during his stay at Phnom Penh in 1995.
http://www.khmernet.com/books/directory/link/history.html
Cambodian History
Chronology of Cambodian History
Khmer Royal Family Tree
Genealogy of King Norodom Sihanouk
Poetry in motion Apsara in motion.
Cambodia-History
Notes from Phnom Penh by Rich Garella during his stay at Phnom Penh in 1995. Buy Books at Khmernet
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