Phnom Penh (official Romanization: Phnum Pénh; pronounced [pʰnum peːɲ]) is the largest, most populous and capital city of Cambodia. It is also the capital of the Phnom Penh municipality.
Once known as the "Pearl of Asia" in the 1920s, Phnom Penh, along with Siem Reap, is a significant global and domestic tourist destination for Cambodia. Phnom Penh is known for its traditional Khmer and French influenced architecture. Phnom Penh is the wealthiest and most populous city in Cambodia. It is also the commercial, political and cultural hub of Cambodia and is home to more than one million of Cambodia's population of over 13 million.
Etymology
King Norodom I made Phnom Penh the permanent seat of government for the kingdom in 1866.The city takes its name from the Wat Phnom Daun Penh (known now as just the Wat Phnom or Hill Temple), built in 1373 to house five statues of Buddha on a man made hill 27 metres (89 ft) high. It was named after Daun Penh (Grandma Penh), a wealthy widow.
Phnom Penh was also previously known as Krong Chaktomuk meaning "City of Four Faces". This name refers to the junction where the Mekong, Bassac, and Tonle Sap rivers cross to form an "X" where the capital is situated. Krong Chaktomuk is an abbreviation of its ceremonial name given by King Ponhea Yat which was "Krong Chaktomuk Mongkol Sakal Kampuchea Thipadei Sereythor Inthabot Borei Roth Reach Seima Maha Nokor".
History
Phnom Penh first became the capital of Cambodia after Ponhea Yat, king of the Khmer Empire, moved the capital from Angkor Thom after it was captured by Siam a few years earlier. There are stupa behind Wat Phnom that house the remains of Ponhea Yat and the royal family as well as the remaining Buddhist statues from the Angkorean era. There is a legend that tells how Phnom Penh was created.
It was not until 1866, under the reign of King Norodom I, that Phnom Penh became the permanent seat of government, and the Royal Palace was built. This marked the beginning of the transformation of what was essentially a village into a great city with the French Colonialists expanding the canal system to control the wetlands, constructing roads and building a port.
By the 1920s, Phnom Penh was known as the Pearl of Asia, and over the next four decades continued to experience growth with the building of a railway to Sihanoukville and the Pochentong International Airport.
During the Vietnam War, Cambodia was
used as a base by the North Vietnamese
Army and the Viet Cong, and thousands of
refugees from across the country flooded
the city to escape the fighting between
their own government troops, the
NVA/NLF, the South Vietnamese and its
allies and the Khmer Rouge. By 1975, the
population was 2,000,000, the bulk of
them refugees from the fighting. The
city fell to the Khmer Rouge on April
17. Many of its residents, those who
were wealthy and educated, were forced
to do labor on rural farms as "new
people". Tuol Svay Prey High School was
taken over by Pol Pot's forces and was
turned into the S-21 prison camp, where
Cambodians were detained and tortured.
Pol Pot sought a return to an agrarian
economy and therefore killed many people
percieved as educated, "lazy" or
political enemies. Many others starved
to death as a result of failure of the
agrarian society and the sale of
Cambodia's rice to China in exchange for
bullets and weaponry. Tuol Svay Prey
High School is now the Tuol Sleng Museum
in which Khmer Rouge torture devices and
photos of their victims are displayed.
Choeung Ek (The Killing Fields), 15
kilometres (9 mi) away, where the Khmer
Rouge marched prisoners from Tuol Sleng
to be murdered and buried in shallow
pits, is also now a memorial to those
who were killed by the regime.
The Khmer Rouge were driven out of Phnom
Penh by the Vietnamese in 1979 and
people began to return to the city.
Vietnam is historically a state with
which Cambodia has had many conflicts,
therefore this liberation was and is
viewed with mixed emotions by the
Cambodians. A period of reconstruction
began, spurred by continuing stability
of government, attracting new foreign
investment and aid by countries
including France, Australia, and Japan.
Loans were made from the Asian
Development Bank and the World Bank to
reinstate a clean water supply, roads
and other infrastructure. The 1998
Census put Phnom Penh's population at
862,000; by 2001 it was estimated at
slightly over 1 million.
Geography
Phnom Penh is located in the
south-central region of Cambodia, at the
confluence of the Tonlé Sap, Mekong, and
Bassac rivers. These rivers provide
potential freshwater and other
resources. The city, located at 11.55° N
104.91667° E (11°33' North, 104°55'
East, Covers an area of 375 square
kilometres (145 sq mi) which some 11,401
hectares (28,172 acres) in the
municipality and 26,106 hectares (64,509
acres) of roads. The agricultural land
in the municipality amounts to 34.685
square kilometres (13 sq mi) with some
1.476 square kilometres (365 acres)
under irrigation.



