Wikijunior:Ancient Civilizations/Khmer
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The people of Cambodia are the descendants of the Khmer.
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[edit] What Country did they live in?
The Khmer people lived in the country today known as Cambodia. Cambodians to this day introduce themselves as Khmer. At its largest the Khmer kingdom extended into what is now Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam.
[edit] How did the civilization rise and fall?
Little is known about the origin of the Khmer people before their arrival in south east Asia. But legend says that a race called Mon-Khmer used to live in eastern India, which is now present day Bangladesh. Traces of Mon-Khmer culture and vocabulary still exist in the Bengali vocabulary. The oldest Khmer settlement in Cambodia was established around 1000 BC. From the 1st to 6th century AD, Cambodia was the part of the south Asian kingdom, Funan. The first kingdom of the Khmer people was built by King Jayavarman II and later he was succeeded by his son Jayavarman III. During the reign of these two monarchs, the Great Angkor kingdom of Cambodia was built. Later in 1431 Angkor was captured and destroyed by the Siamese (current day Thailand). After this, the French claimed Cambodia as a colony. Independence from France was granted in 1953. This was followed by the establishment of a totalitarian government intermixed with episodes of anarchy and feudalism.
[edit] What did their buildings look like?
Khmer people lived in houses made of bamboo and wood. These houses were built so that they were raised off of the ground on poles. Much of area around the Mekong river where the Khmer lived flooded during summer monsoons. This type of house was very practical and kept the inhabitants dry.
During the Angkorian kingdom the Khmer also built many fine stone temples. The Khmer were accomplished stone workers. One of the most famous of these temples is Angkor Wat. Angkor Wat, first constructed in the twelfth century, is the largest religious structure in the world. It has five large domes which are shaped like flower buds surrounded by terraces. Most of the temple is built from sandstone blocks. Carved reliefs in the walls show various religious scenes. The temple is surrounded by a moat.
[edit] What did they eat?
Archaeological findings prove that Khmer people's diet consisted of fish and rice in 1000 BC. For many hundreds of years the Khmer have used irrigation to bring water to their rice paddys. There are also stone carvings dating back hundreds of years showing large fisheries. It wasn't just fish and rice though, the Khmer also ate other water creatures including crabs, frogs, shrimp and snails. They also grew a variety of vegetables and fruits. The coconut is and has been an important addition to the Khmer diet.
According to accounts by a visitor from China during ancient times, the Khmer ate soup from bowls made from woven leaves. Still today, a Cambodian meal almost always includes a soup, which is eaten with the other courses. Fish is the nation's mainstay, and dried fish are used in many dishes. Soups are sometimes made with coconut milk. 'Salad' dishes are flavored with coriander, mint and lemon grass - three flavors which find their way into many Cambodian dishes.
[edit] What did they wear?
Men wore Sarongs and women wore Sampots. Both garments are a kind of loose fitting skirt gathered at the waist. Both men and women were generally bare from the waist up. Bas relief sculptures show both men and women wearing elaborate beaded necklaces, ear-rings, bracelets, anklets and elaborate head-dresses.
[edit] What did their writing look like?
[edit] What did they believe?
[edit] Are some of them famous even today?
Prince Norodom Sihanouk won Cambodia's independence from France. Pol Pot was an infamous dictator, more than one million people were killed by execution, starvation and in forced labor camps during his rule of Cambodia. Photographer Dith Pran had a book and movie made about his life called The Killing Fields. He helped chronicle the atrocities of the Pol Pot regime.
[edit] What is left of them today?
There are a few descendants, but they are mostly gone.