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A BRIEF CHRONOLOGY
9TH CENTURY TO 14TH CENTURY
 
The Angkor era in Cambodia.
 
14TH CENTURY TO 19TH CENTURY
 
Decline of the Angkor Empire.
 
1863—1864
 
King Norodom signs treaties beginning the era of the French protectorate over Cambodia, which lasts until 1953.
 
1930
 
French scholar Suzanne Karpelès establishes the Buddhist Institute, which will nurture the first expressions of a Cambodian independence movement and provide a base for Son Ngoc Thanh.
 
Ho Chi Minh founds the Indochinese Communist Party with responsibility over Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos.
 
1941
 
The Japanese march into Phnom Penh.
 
Sihanouk is crowned king by the Vichy French.
 
1942
 
Son Ngoc Thanh organizes the first anti-French demonstrations in Phnom Penh in support of the Buddhist nationalists.
 
In Bangkok Cambodians have established Issarak (Freedom) committees against the French.
 
1945
 
The Japanese remove the Vichy French in Cambodia in a
coup de force
and grant Cambodia its “independence” under Sihanouk.
 
World War II ends and Sihanouk asks the French to return to Cambodia.
 
In Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh declares Vietnam independent from the French.
 
1946
 
The First Indochina War begins between Ho Chi Minh's Vietminh army and the French.
 
1949
 
Saloth Sar (the future Pol Pot) travels to Paris for studies and stays until 1953 when he returns to Cambodia a communist.
 
1951
 
The Khmer People's Revolutionary Party is created out of the Indochinese Communist Party.
 
1953
 
Sihanouk wins limited independence from France.
 
1954
 
Ho Chi Minh's army defeats the French at Dien Bien Phu.
 
The Geneva Conference convenes to settle the Korean and Indochinese conflicts.
 
Sihanouk wins complete control over an independent Cambodia.
 
Cambodian communist leader Son Ngoc Minh and roughly half of the Cambodian communist movement go into exile in North Vietnam.
 
1955
 
Cambodia holds elections. Sihanouk abdicates in favor of his father, forms his own party, and sweeps the election.
 
1955—1960
 
Cambodian communists concentrate on organizing in Phnom Penh as well as in the countryside.
 
1959
 
The editor of one of the communists' newspapers is assassinated.
 
The communists' in-country leader Sieu Heng publicly defects to Sihanouk.
 
1960
 
At a congress in Phnom Penh the communists found a Cambodian Marxist-Leninist party, the Workers Party of Kampuchea (which will be renamed the Communist Party of Kampuchea in 1971).
 
1963
 
At a second party congress, Saloth Sar becomes head of the party.
 
Most of the party's leaders flee Phnom Penh to build their movement in the maquis.
BOOK: When the War Was Over
8.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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