I read that part once, now i am not clear, i forget. I am looking for
that book, but i don't know where i put it. During the Siam invaded
Longvake. After that the married of King chey chetha II.
Chey Chetta II (r. 1618 - 1627), Khmer king.
http://www.angkortech.com/product/0,prod,0,0,0,496,0.htm
http://www.cambodia.org/blogs/editorials/2005/02/open-letter-to-pro-viet-scholars.html
1400
Le Quy Ly deposes the last Tran Emperor of the Dai Viet and becomes
Emperor with the name Ho Quy.
1405
Samtac Chao Phaya Phing-ya Nippean-bat (1405 - 1409), Khmer king.
1409
Lampang Paramaraja (1409 - 1416), Khmer king.
1416
Sorijovong or Lambang (1416 - 1425), Khmer king.
1417
Pongsa Voda records the Siamese's siege of Angkor, which capitulated
after seven months during which Khmer ministers had gone over to the
enemy, taking a great number of followers. [22]
1425
Barom Racha, or Gamkhat Ramadhapati (1425 - 1429), Khmer king.
1429
Thommo-Soccorach, or Dharmasoka (1429 - 1431), Khmer king.
1431
Paramaraja II of Ayuthaya sacks Angkor. Khmer capital is relocated to
Srei Santhor region.
1432
Ponhea Yat, or Gam Yat (1432-?) comes to the Khmer throne. The King
begins his reign at Angkor.
1433
King Ponhea Yat abandons Angkor and moves his court to Basan. [14]
1434
The Khmer royal court (capital) move from Basan to Phnom Penh.
According to Pongsa Voda (Chronicle) Khmer, "...in 1434, Tuesday, the
ninth day of the waning moon, in the month of Pisakh in the year of the
Tiger, 6th in the decade, the King left Basan, where he had resided for
only one year, and went by boat to Phnom Daun Penh, accompanied by his
mandarins and all his household."
1444
Siamese capture Angkor.
1471
Emperor Le Thanh-tong of Dai Viet annexes the northern provinces of
Champa (today Vietnam).
1473
Siamese invade and sack the capital.
1505
Khmer Royal court moves to Udong. [22] [Map | Image]
1516
Barom Reachea II or Chau Ponhea Chan (r. 1516 - 1566) Khmer king.
1528
Khmer Royal court moves to Longvaek. [22]
1556
A Portuguese missionary, Gaspar de Cruze, cames to Longvaek in an
attempt to convert Camboidains to Christianity. He leaves a year later
disappointedly unable to convert any Cambodians, whom he blames for
believing in superstitions and loyalty to Buddhism. [29]
1567
Barom Reachea III (r. 1567 - 1575), Khmer king.
1575
Barom Reachea IV or Satha (1575 - c. 1594), Khmer king.
1580
Portugal and Spain send reinforcements of Spanish soldiers of fortune
and Dominicans from Manila, the Philippines, to protect Portuguese in
Cambodia. Many Portuguese traders and missionaries are in the Khmer
court of Longvaek. [14]
1583
Pongsa Voda accounts a Siamese invasion with 100,000 men, 800
elephants, and 15,000 horses; it also details the abduction of the
King's chief wife, and the flight of the King's elderly aunt. The
Siamese account of the same incidence describes the victorious Siamese
king bathing his feet in the blood of the fallen Khmer king before
departing with 50,000 prisoners. [22]
1585
Diego Belloso, a Portuguese adventurer, comes to Longvaek. He later
married a relative of the King. [30]
1587
Siamese unsuccessfully besieges Khmer's capital, Longvaek.
1593
A Spaniard adventurer Blaz Ruiz de Hernan Gonzales arrives in Longvaek.
He is one of a band of Portuguese and Spaniard traders and adventurers
come to Cambodia. [14]
1594
Reama 1st (1594 - 1596), Khmer king; Thai sacks Longvaek.
1595
Diego Belloso manages to convince Dasmarinas, the Governor of the
Philippines, to send military expedition to protect the King Satha's
throne and at the same time establish de facto Spanish rule over the
Khmer court. Three ships with 130 soldiers are sent. [14] [30]
1596
Ream 2nd or Chau Ponhea Nou (1596 - 1597), Khmer king.
The Hispano-Portuguese expedition sent from the Philippines arrives in
Phnom Penh, but the King had already fled the court at Srei Santhor and
Reama Chung Prei is installed. Belloso and Ruiz, who comes with the
expedition, along with 38 men go to Srei Santhor and attack the palace
at night. They kill King Reama and fight their way back to their ships
at Phnom Penh. [14]S
April 12, 1596
Portuguese Belloso and Spaniard Ruiz's men attack and ruthlessly kill
Chinese traders in Phnom Penh. They also burn houses in the Chinese
quarter of Phnom Penh. [14]
May 1596
Veloso, Ruiz and some 40 of their men make a surprise attack on the
Khmer court at Srei Santhor, killing the King, burning his palace and
blowing up a powder magazine. They then return to their ships in Phnom
Penh and fled. [14]
1597
Barom Reachea V (r. 1597 - 1599), Khmer king second reign.?
May 1597
Veloso and Ruiz, who fled Cambodia after killing a Khmer King the
previous year, reappears with the son of King Satha Chau Ponhea Ton
(Barom Reachea II), who takes the throne at Srei Santhor. [14]
1599
Barom Reachea VI (1599 - 1600), Khmer king.
Spaniard and Malays in Phnom Penh clashed, in which Veloso and Ruiz are
killed. The Portuguese and Spaniard adventurers are at Srei Santhor
for discussion with the King as violent incident occurred in Phnom Penh
between Spaniards and Malays. Against the King's advice for them to
hide and wait for the violence to calm down, the two adventurers rush
to Phnom Penh to help their compatriots and are both killed. [14]
1600
Kev Fa 1st or Chau Ponhea Nhom (1600 - 1602), Khmer king.
1602
Barom Reachea VII or Srei Soriyopor (r. 1602 - 1619), Khmer king.
1612
July 1612
Peter Floris arrives in Phnom Penh through the Mekong; he appeares to
be the first British to reach Phnom Penh. [14]
1619
Chey Chetta II (r. 1618 - 1627), Khmer king.
1620
A new palace is built at Udong. [22]
Dec. 1620
A Dutch under-merchant ship arrives in Phnom Penh.
1627
Barom Reachea (Outei)? [Opphayoreach], Khmer king.
Srei Thoamareachea 1st or Chau Ponhea To (1627 - 1632), Khmer king.
1632
Ang Tong Reachea or Chau Ponhea Nou (1632 - 1640), Khmer king.
1637
The Dutch East Indies Company establishes its first factory in
Cambodia. [14]
1640
Botum Reachea 1st or Ang Non (1640 - 1642), Khmer king.
1642
Reameathipadei 1st or Chau Ponhea Chan (1642 - 1658) ascended the
Khmer throne.
King Ponhea Chan, in response to the disorder of traders, issues a
decree that all Khmer or foreign ships arriving from other countries
would not be permitted to moor at Phnom Penh unless their masts and
helms are removed. [14]
1643
Sept. 1643
Manager of the Dutch factory Pierre de Regemortes, following
disturbances, presents himself at the Oudong Court to protest against
the violence and damage suffered by his company. Irritated by his
insolence, the Royal Guard kills him and his followers. At the same
time, the trading post is pillaged, 36 of the company's men are
killed and some 50 others are thrown into prison. [14]
1644
March 23, 1644
To re-establish the Company's prestige in Cambodia, the Council of
the Indies decides to mount a reprisal expedition by dispatching a
squadron of ships comprising the Kievit, the Dolphin, the Wakende Boei
and the Noorster, carrying 432 well-armed men, under the command of
Admiral Hendrik Harouze and Vice-Admiral Simon Jacobsz Domkins.
June 3, 1644
Three of the four ships sent by the Indies Company arrives off Phnom
Penh;
July 22, 1644
Dutch ship 'the Noordster' is attacked by the Khmer Royal ships,
which include the ships Rijswijk and Oranjeboom captured from the Dutch
the previous year. [14]
1646
The King agrees to hand back the Dutch prisoners who were captured
three years earlier, as well as the seized merchandise. [14]
1651
A British merchant comes to Phnom Penh and Longvaek in August to set up
a factory. In his diary, he described the rivers at Phnom Penh:
"Three big rivers traverse the country, but all three converge at the
site of the principal town. This town is called Pantaprick by the
people of the country and Camboja by the Malays and Christians. The
three rivers are the Bussack, the Kerringheze and the Sending. The
Bussack lies to the west, the Kerringheze to the east, and the Sending
between the two. The distance from the mouth of the river to the town
of Camboja is about 190 miles. If a ship wishes to mount the river in
Jan. Feb. March or April and is aided by a favorable wind and the tide,
it can reach Camboja in five days. During the months of May and June
the voyage would take 10 to 12 days. In Aug. and Sept. the current is
so swift and the winds so unfavorable that the journey can take more
than 52 days." [14]
1653
Bastian de Bouillon, according to the English documents, appeares to be
the first Frenchman to arrive in Cambodia. He arrives from Batavia
with two junks laden with cloth worth 30,000 reals. [14]
1655
The King and East Indies Company reach an agreement under which Khmer
would pay restitution for the damage to the Company's trading post;
however, the Dutch have to forego the trade monopoly in Cambodia. [14]
1656
The British hands over their trading post to the Dutch. Soon after the
British set up a trading post in Cambodia, the Dutch make relentless
war on the British trading competitors, who later withdraw completely
from Cambodia. [14]
1659
Barom Reachea VIII or Ang So (1659 - 1672), Khmer king.
Dutch trading post in Phnom Penh is sacked by Annameses.
1662
The Society of Foreign Missionary of Paris (Societe des Missions
Etrangeres de Paris) is set up in the Siamese capital. A few years
later it tries to extend its religious activities to Cambodia but
encounters the opposition of the Spanish Dominicans, who are determined
to defend their fief. [14]
1664
Reameathipadei ? (Outei Sorivong Ang Tan) [Opphayoreach] (1664 -
1674), Khmer king.
1665
French Father Louis Chevreul establishes himself in the Svay Rieng
area. He later moves to Phnom Penh and finally to Oudong. However,
discouraged by Khmer indifference and the hostility of the
Hispano-Portugese, the priest abandoned his evangelist effort and leave
Cambodia. [14]
1667
July 9, 1667
The yacht Schelvisch arrives at the trading post in Phnom Penh to
evacuate Dutch traders, but that night the Chinese forestall the Dutch
and invade their establishment, murdering the factor, Pierre Ketting,
along with some of his men and seize the money and goods before
withdrawing. [14]
July 12, 1667
The Schelvisch left Phnom Penh, marking the end of the East Indies
Company in Cambodia. [14]
1672
Botum Reachea II or Srei Chei Chet (1672 - 1673), Khmer king.
1673
Kev Fa II or Ang Chi (1673 - 1677), Khmer king.
1674
Botum Reachea ? (Ang Non) [Opphayoreach] (1674 - 1691), Khmer king.
1677
Chei Chettha III or Ang So (1677 - 1695), Khmer king first reign.
1695
Reameathipadei II or Ang Yang (1695 - 1696), Khmer king.
1696
Chei Chettha III or Ang So (1696 - 1700), Khmer king second reign.