CAMBODIA
CAMBODIA
CAMBODIA
Prepared by:
Jessica D. Barredo
Learning Objective:
Discuss the Geographical, Socio-
economic, Cultural and Tourism of
Cambodia.
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Cambodia
Alternate names: State of
Cambodia, People’s, Republic
of Kampuchea, Khmer
Republic
Capital: Phnom Penh
Population: 16,493,000
Member Since: 1999
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HISTORY OF CAMBODIA
Funan Empire - 1st century AD
• Flourished in southern Cambodia
Chenla – 6th century
• North western Cambodia
Khmer Empire (790)
• Jaya Varman II built a Kmer or Cambodian empire.
French Colonial Period
• 1863 French Protectorate
• Restoration of Angkor Wat
• Lost freedom and being controlled
• November 9, 1953
Khmer Rouge Genocide
• 1940s Communist movement to oppose the French Rule
• Khmer Rouge - Red Cambodians- led by Pol Pot
• 1975 Khmer Rough took over Cambodia, killed middle or upper class- a country
without class.
• During 1975-1979, 1.7 millions people died.
Vietnamese-backed Government
• 1979-1991 Vietnam controlled Cambodia Rebuilt roads, hospitals and
schools.
Civil War
• By people loyal to king, with business interest, and the Khmer Rouge
led by Pol Pot Khmer Rouge fought the government until Pol Pot died
the day before taken prisoner by the US.
Democratic Elections
• Vietnam left Cambodia in 1991
• UN helped prepare for democratic election
• First election in 1993 (Hun Sen and Prince Ranariddh)
Hun Sen won election in 1998, 2003 as Prime Minister
until present.
Cambodia Today
• 95 % Buddhism
• Among the 10 poorest country
Cambodia’s Challenges
• Still recovering from Genocide
• 50% women, 25% men cannot read or write
• 30% has access to clean water
• 50% children are malnourished
• 4-6 MILLION land mines
• Poverty and Government Corruption
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION
Cambodia is located in the
southwestern part of the Indochina
peninsula. Roughly square in
shape, the country is bounded on
the north by Thailand and by Laos,
on the east and southeast by
Vietnam, and on the west by the
Gulf of Thailand and by Thailand.
LAND
Relief (Highest and lowest
elevations of land area)
Drainage
Soils
Climate of Cambodia
Cambodia’s landscape is
characterized by a low-lying central
alluvial plain that is surrounded by
uplands and low mountains and
includes the Tonle Sap (Great
Lake) and the upper reaches of the
Mekong River delta.
Dangrek (Khmer: Dângrêk)
Mountain – forested range of hills
averaging 1,500–2,000 feet (450–
600 m) and dividing Thailand from
Cambodia.
Krâvanh (Cardamom)
922696 Mountains
–The Krâvanh Mountains extend
(some discontinuously) for about
100 miles (160 km) southeast and
east to the Dâmrei Mountains,
reaching their highest point (5,949
feet [1,813 m]) near Poŭthĭsăt in
Dâmrei (Elephant) Mountains
– north-south-trending range of
high hills, Extending 70 miles
(110 km) north from the Gulf of
Thailand, they reach a high point
in the Bok Koŭ ridge at Mount
Bokor (3,547 feet [1,081 m]).
Mount Aôral – Cambodia’s
highest peak, rises to an
elevation of 5,949 feet (1,813
metres).
Drainage
The two dominant hydrological features of
Cambodia are the Mekong River and the
Tonle Sap. The Mekong river enters
Cambodia from Laos at the Khone Falls
and flows generally southward to the
border with Vietnam, a distance within
Cambodia of approximately 315 miles (510
km). The Mekong is connected to the Tonle
Sap by the Sab River.
Soils
Most of Cambodia’s soils are sandy and poor in nutrients.
The so-called red-soil areas in the eastern part of the
country, however, are suitable for commercial crops such
as rubber and cotton. The annual flooding of the Mekong
during the rainy season deposits a rich alluvial sediment
that accounts for the fertility of the central plain and
provides natural irrigation for rice cultivation.
Climate of Cambodia
Monsoon winds (two major seasons)
1. From mid-May to early October, the strong prevailing winds of
the southwest monsoon bring heavy rains and high humidity.
2. From early November to mid-March, the lighter and drier
winds of the northeast monsoon bring variable cloudiness,
infrequent precipitation, and lower humidity.
Maximum temperatures are high throughout the year, ranging
from about 82 to 83 °F (28 °C) in January, the coolest month, to
about 95 °F (35 °C) in April.
Plant and animal life
Central lowland region is
covered with rice paddies,
fields of dry crops such as
corn (maize) and tobacco,
tracts of tall grass and reeds,
and thinly wooded areas.
Eastern highlands the
high plateaus are covered
with grasses and deciduous
forests.
Broad-leaved evergreen forests grow in
the mountainous areas to the north, with
trees 100 feet (30 metres) high emerging
from thick undergrowth's of vines,
rattans, palms, bamboos, and assorted
woody and herbaceous ground plants.
Southwestern highlands, open forests
of pines are found at the higher
elevations, while the rain-drenched
seaward slopes are blanketed with virgin
rainforests growing to heights of 150
feet (45 metres) or more.
Northeastern forests of Cambodia
Elephants, wild oxen, rhinoceroses, and several species of
deer.
Small populations of most of these species may still be
found, along with some tigers, leopards, bears, and many
small mammals. Among the more common birds are herons,
cranes, grouse, pheasant, peafowl, pelicans, cormorants,
egrets, and wild ducks.
Four varieties of snakes are especially dangerous: the Indian
cobra, the king cobra, the banded krait, and Russell’s viper.
Wild oxen King cobra
Rhinoceroses
Herons Russell’s viper
Cormorant
People
Ethnic groups
Languages
Religion of Cambodia
Settlement patterns
Ethnic groups
The Khmer (Cambodians) account for
the vast majority of the population,
producing a homogeneity unique in
Southeast Asia that has encouraged a
strong sense of national identity. Ethnic
minorities include Chinese, Vietnamese,
Muslim Cham-Malays, Laotians, and
various indigenous peoples of the rural
highlands.
Languages
The Khmer language is one of the major tongues of the
Mon-Khmer subfamily of the Austroasiatic language
family and is spoken by nearly all people in Cambodia,
including the Cham-Malay.
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