The kingdom of Cambodia is heir to the mighty empire of Angkor, once holding sway over Cambodia, Siam, Laos, Vietnam and parts of Burma. The present dynasty dates from the close of the thirteenth century. Around 1296, Neay Trasac Paem, the Chief of the Royal Gardens, killed his father-in-law King Sihanuraja and ascended the throne. Siam established its independence under a new dynasty in 1351, become a source of woe to Cambodia, ever after. The first of many Siamese invasions began in 1352; Angkor being captured and the King killed. Three Siamese princes ascended the Cambodian throne. Although the dynasty was restored in 1357, a pattern of history had been established for the following five centuries. Each successive restoration of the Cambodian dynasty purchased with the ceding of province after province to the Siamese. The acceptance of Siamese protection in 1758 improved nothing.
By the middle of the eighteenth century, a new power was to emerge in the East. Thereafter, Cambodia was prey to two competing powers, Siam and Annam, losing the rich province of Cochin China to the latter. Kings were made and unmade by whichever power was in the ascendant. Eventually the arrival of the French during the middle of the nineteenth century established some degree of permanence. Siam was forced to gave up its protective embrace and recognise a French protectorate in 1863, bought by the cession of yet another province. A relatively long period of peace and development ensued until the collapse of France in 1940. The Japanese followed in the wake, returning some of the ceded provinces and establishing a brief fictional "independence". British-Indian troops liberated the country in 1945 but re-established the French as the dominant power. Cambodia, together with Laos and the State of Vietnam, joined the French Union in 1949. The kingdom achieved independence in November 1953 and the Union with France dissolved two years later.
King Sihanouk abdicated in favour of his father in 1955, thereafter concentrating on steering his country between the competing supers who were active in the region. Unpopular with the US, who wished to prosecute their war in Vietnam through Cambodian territory, Sihanouk was overthrown in a US-sponsored coup d'etat in March 1970. The new military regime lasted no longer than the American presence in Vietnam. By April 1975, the Khmers Rouges, a murderous communist guerrilla movement, had taken control of the country. They were to impose a new "Dark Age" over the country that saw the death and disappearance of millions of people. Every level of society lost loved ones, the Royal family high amongst them, as these pages testify. Vietnam soon tired of its malevolent neighbour, invaded in 1978 and established a friendly government of its choosing.
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