Angkor Borei District

Coordinates: 10°59′42″N 104°58′29″E / 10.99500°N 104.97472°E / 10.99500; 104.97472
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Angkor Borei
អង្គរបូរី
Angkor Borei District
ស្រុកអង្គរបូរី
Angkor Borei is located in Cambodia
Angkor Borei
Angkor Borei
Location in Cambodia
Coordinates: 10°59′42″N 104°58′29″E / 10.99500°N 104.97472°E / 10.99500; 104.97472
Country Cambodia
ProvinceTakéo
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)
ISO 3166 codeKH-2101

Angkor Borei (Khmer: អង្គរបូរី) is a district located in Takéo Province, in southern Cambodia. According to the 1998 census of Cambodia, it had a population of 44,980.[2]

Administration[edit]

The district has 6 communes, 34 villages (as of 2019).[3]

No. Code Commune Khmer Number of Villages
1 210101 Angkor Borei Commune ឃុំអង្គរបូរី 6
2 210102 Ba Srae Commune ឃុំបាស្រែ 8
3 210103 Kouk Thlok Commune ឃុំគោកធ្លក 4
4 210104 Ponley Commune ឃុំពន្លៃ 6
5 210105 Prek Phtoul Commune (Preaek Phtoul) ឃុំព្រែកផ្ទោល 4
6 210106 Prey Phkoam Commune ឃុំព្រៃផ្គាំ 6
Total 34

History[edit]

The ancient canal linking Angkor Borei to Óc Eo

This ancient city was an important settlement of the Kingdom of Funan and may have been its capital. It may have been the Thinae, or Sinae Metropolis located by Claudius Ptolemy as the farthest known city to the east in his Geography.[4] The site was first excavated in 1996 and was again excavated in 1999 as part of the Lower Mekong Archaeological Project.[5] During the 1996 excavation, the University of Hawaii and the Royal University of Fine Arts initiated the excavation and focused on the sociopolitical complexity from 500 BC to 500 AD. This first excavation, however, was just preliminary research. The first objectives were:[6]

1) Documentation of the site's layout and the range of its archaeological features

2) Evaluation of the integrity of subsurface materials and description of the site's stratigraphy

3) Collection of samples for dating portions of the archaeological site

4) Reconstructing the hydrology and natural environment of the early historic period in this region

In this site various archaeological methods were used such as surface survey and mapping, test excavations, auger sampling and coring, and trenching with a backhoe.[7]

Unfortunately, the archeological project was disturbed by looting and illicit trafficking of Khmer antiquities, which continues as a serious problem into the 21st century.[8]

It is the birthplace of Norodom, King of Cambodia from 1860 to 1904.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ General Population Census of Cambodia, 1998: Village Gazetteer. National Institute of Statistics. February 2000. pp. 239–240.
  2. ^ "General Population Census of Cambodia 1998: Final Census Results" (PDF) (2nd ed.). National Institute of Statistics, Ministry of Planning, Cambodia. August 2002. pp. 260, 267. Retrieved 2010-11-25.
  3. ^ "Cambodia Gazetteer Database Online". Cambodia NCDD Databases. National Committee for Sub-National Democratic Development (NCDD). 2019. Retrieved 2019-08-24.
  4. ^ John Caverhill, “Some Attempts to ascertain the utmost Extent of the Knowledge of the Ancients in the East Indies”, Philosophical Transactions, vol.57, 1767, pp. 155-174. Rinith Taing, ‘The mysterious ‘foreigners’ carved into the temples of Sambor Prei Kuk’, Phnom Penh Post, 9 June 2017.
  5. ^ Miriam T. Stark, et al., “Results of the 1995–1996 Archaeological Field Investigations at Angkor Borei, Cambodia” Archived 2015-09-23 at the Wayback Machine, Asian Perspectives, vol.38, no.1, 1999, at University of Hawai’i, pp.7-36.
  6. ^ Stark, Miriam; Bong Sovath (2001). "Recent Research on emergent complexity in Cambodia's Mekong". Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association: 85–98.[1] Archived 2012-03-13 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Stark, Miriam; Bong Sovath (2001). "Recent Research on emergent complexity in Cambodia's Mekong". Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association: 85–98.
  8. ^ Miriam T. Stark and P. Brion Griffin, “Archaeological Research and Cultural Heritage Management in Cambodia's Mekong Delta: The Search for the ‘Cradle of Khmer Civilization,’” in Marketing Heritage: Archaeology and the Consumption of the Past, ed. by Yorke Rowan and Uzi Baram, Walnut Creek, California: Altamira Press, 2004, 117–141.