Cambodia's language, part of the Mon-Khmer family, which contains elements of Sanskrit, its ancient religion of Hinduism and Buddhism. Historians have noted, for examples, that
Cambodians
can be distinguished from their neighbors
by their clothing - checkered scarves
known as kramas are worn instead
of straw hats. Funan gave way to the
Angkor Empire with the rise to power
of King Jayavarman II in 802. The
following 600 years saw powerful Khmer
kings dominate much of present day Southeast
Asia, from the borders of Myanmar east
to the South China Sea and north to
Laos. It was during this period that
Khmer king built the most extensive
concentration of religious temple complex.
The most successful of Angkor's king,
Jayavarman II, Indravarman I, Suryavarman
II and Jayavarman VII, also devised
a masterpiece of ancient engineering:
a sophisticated irrigation system that
includes barays (gigantic man-made lakes)
and canals that ensured as many as three
rice crops a year. Part of this system
is still in use today. As the Angkor period
ended, Cambodia's capital moved south
to Longvek, then to Udong, and finally
to the present-day capital of Phnom
Penh. Among the main features of the
capital, was a widespread conversion
to Theravada Buddhism, illustrated on
temple carvings, where Buddhist features
gradually replaced Hindu features.The
15th to 17th centuries
represented a time of feign influence,
when expansionists Siam and Vietnam
fought over Cambodia by the mid- 1800,
Cambodia, like most other countries
in Asia, came under increasing pressure
from European colonial powers. In 1863,
the country agreed to protection from
France. King Norodom signed a Protectate
Treaty between King Norodom and the
French. |