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Kampong Thom province

Coordinates: 12°42′N 104°53′E / 12.700°N 104.883°E / 12.700; 104.883
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Kampong Thom
ខេត្តកំពង់ធំ
Phnom Santuk
Phnom Santuk
Map of Cambodia highlighting Kampong Thom
Map of Cambodia highlighting Kampong Thom
Coordinates: 12°42′N 104°53′E / 12.700°N 104.883°E / 12.700; 104.883
Country Cambodia
Provincial status1907
CapitalStueng Saen
Government
 • GovernorUth Sam An (CPP)
Area
 • Total13,814 km2 (5,334 sq mi)
 • RankRanked 2nd
Population
 (2009)[1]
 • Total708,398
 • RankRanked 11th
 • Density51/km2 (130/sq mi)
  • RankRanked 17th
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)
Dialing code+855
ISO 3166 codeKH-6
Districts8

Template:Contains Khmer text Kampong Thom (Khmer: កំពង់ធំ, IPA: [kɑmpɔːŋ tʰom], "Great Port") is a province (khaet) of Cambodia. It borders the provinces of Siem Reap to the northwest, Preah Vihear to the north, Stung Treng to the northeast, Kratie to the east, Kampong Cham, Kampong Chhnang to the south, and the Tonle Sap to the west.

The provincial capital is Stung Saen, a town of approximately 30,000 people on the banks of the Stung Sen River.

Kampong Thom is Cambodia's second largest province by area. There are a number of significant Angkorian sites in the area, including Prasat Sambor Prei Kuk and Prasat Andet temples. As one of the nine provinces bordering Tonle Sap Lake, Kampong Thom is part of the Tonlé Sap Biosphere Reserve.[2]

Etymology

Kampong Thom in Khmer means "great port" or "great harbor". Kampong in Khmer translates as port or harbor. The word Kampong is shared in other Austronesian languages, the Malaysian and Indonesian, both meaning "village." Thom in the Khmer language means "big," "grand," or "large."

Administration

The province is subdivided into 8 districts.

ISO Code District Romanization
0601 បារាយណ៍ Baray
0602 កំពង់ស្វាយ Kampong Svay
0603 ស្ទឹងសែន Stueng Saen
0604 ប្រាសាទបល្ល័ង Prasat Ballang
0605 ប្រាសាទសំបូរ Prasat Sambour
0606 សណ្ដាន់ Sandan
0607 សន្ធុក Santuk
0608 ស្ទោង Stoung

History

The previous name of the province was Kampong Pous Thom (Port/City of the Great Snakes). According to local legend, at a lakeside dock near the Sen River, a pair of large snakes inhabited a nearby cave. On every Buddhist holiday, the snakes would make appearances to the people nearby who then began to refer to the area as Kampong Pous Thom. Eventually the snakes disappeared and the name was shortened to Kampong Thom. During the Colonial Cambodia period, the French divided Cambodian territory into provinces and named most of them according to the local popular names for the respective areas.

Kampong Thom was a powerful capital in Southeast Asia during the Funan period.[citation needed] Prasat Sambor Prei Kuk, dating from the Chenla Era, is in Kampong Thom Province.[3]

Geography

Two of the three core areas in Tonlé Sap Biosphere Reserve are located in Kampong Thom.

Prey Pras, Kampong Thom

Economy

Kampong Thom Province is rich in tourism potential, attracting tourists with its exotic lakes, rivers, forests, mountains and more than 200 ancient temples.

Much of Kampong Thom is located on the floodplain of the Tonlé Sap lake. In 2003–04, it was a significant producer of wild fish (18,800 tons) and the fourth largest producer of fish through aquaculture in Cambodia (1,800 tons). Most of the fish-raising is done by home production, with a growing segment devoted to rice field aquaculture.[5]

Kampong Thom is also one of the largest producers of cashew nuts in Cambodia, with 6,371 hectares under production in 2003–04.[6]

The province is one of the largest producer of cashews in the country.
Rice paddies in Baray District.
Irrigation canals and farmlands

Notable people

References

  1. ^ "General Population Census of Cambodia 2008 – Provisional population totals" (PDF). National Institute of Statistics, Ministry of Planning. 3 September 2008.
  2. ^ http://www.tsbr-ed.org
  3. ^ Kubo, Sumiko; Shimamoto, Sae; Nagumo, Naoko; Yamagata, Mariko; Him, Sophorn; So, Sokuntheary; Chang, Vitharong; Lun, Votey; Shimoda, Ichita; Nakagawa, Takeshi (March 2012). "Geomorphology, Archaeo-stratigraphy, and 14C Ages of Sambor Prei Kuk Pre-Angkorean Site, Central Cambodia" (PDF). BULLETIN of the Graduate School of Education of Waseda University. 22. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  4. ^ Save Cambodia's Wildlife. The Atlas of Cambodia: National Poverty & Environment Maps, SWC, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 2006, p. 72.
  5. ^ Save Cambodia's Wildlife. The Atlas of Cambodia: National Poverty & Environment Maps, SWC, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 2006, pp. 78–81.
  6. ^ Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry & Fisheries, The Fruit Crops: Agricultural Statistics, 2003–04, Phnom Penh, 2004.

External links

Official Website