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Siem Reap : ウィキペディア英語版
Siem Reap


|settlement_type = City
|image_skyline = File:Siem Reap river.JPG
|nickname = Great Gate to Angkor
|image_caption = Siem Reap, town and river
|image_flag =
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|map_caption = Location of Siem Reap, Cambodia
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|dot_x = |dot_y =
|pushpin_map = Cambodia
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|coordinates_region = KH
|subdivision_type = Country
|subdivision_name =
|subdivision_type1 = Province
|subdivision_name1 = Siem Reap
|subdivision_type2 =
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|subdivision_type3 =
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|subdivision_name4 =
|government_footnotes =
|government_type =
|leader_title = District Chief & Governor
|leader_name = Khim Bunsong (CPP)
|leader_title1 = Deputy Governor
|leader_name1 = Kim Chay Hieng (CPP)
|leader_title2 =
|leader_name2 =
|leader_title3 =
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|leader_title4 =
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|established_title = Settled
|established_date = 802
|established_title2 = Official
|established_date2 = 1907
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|population_as_of = 2008
|population_footnotes = 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=2008 Census )
|population_note =
|population_total = 174265
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|timezone = Cambodia
|utc_offset = +7
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|latd=13 |latm=21 |lats=44 |latNS=N
|longd=103 |longm=51 |longs=35 |longEW=E
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|elevation_m = 18
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}}
Siem Reap ((クメール語:ក្រុងសៀមរាប), ; (タイ語:เสียมราฐ)) is the capital city of Siem Reap Province in northwestern Cambodia, and a popular resort town as the gateway to Angkor region.
Siem Reap has colonial and Chinese-style architecture in the Old French Quarter, and around the Old Market. In the city, there are museums, traditional Apsara dance performances, a Cambodian cultural village, souvenir and handycraft shops, silk farms, rice-paddies in the countryside, fishing villages and a bird sanctuary near the Tonle Sap Lake.
Siem Reap today—being a popular tourist destination—has a large number of hotels, resorts, restaurants and businesses closely related to tourism. This is much owed to its proximity to the Angkor temples, the most popular tourist attraction in Cambodia.
==History==

The name Siem Reap can be translated to mean 'Defeat of Siam' (Cambodians call Thailand Siam or "Siem"), and is commonly taken as a reference to an incident the centuries-old conflict between the Siamese and Khmer kingdoms, although this is probably apocryphal. According to oral tradition, King Ang Chan (1516–1566) had named the town "Siem Reap", meaning "the defeat of Siam", after he repulsed an army sent to invade Cambodia by the Thai King Maha Chakkraphat in 1549. However, scholars consider this derivation to be simply a modern folk etymology, and maintain that the actual origin of the name is unknown.
The traditional tale claims that King Ang Chan of Cambodia tried to assert greater independence from Siam, which was then going through internal struggles. The Siamese King Chairacha had been poisoned by his concubine, Lady Sri Sudachan, who had committed adultery with a commoner, Worawongsathirat, while the king was away leading a campaign against the Kingdom of Chiang Mai. Sudachan then placed her lover on the throne. The Thai nobility lured them outside the city on a royal procession by barge to inspect a newly discovered white elephant. After killing the usurper, along with Sudachan and their newly born daughter, they invited Prince Thianracha to leave the monkhood and assume the throne as King Maha Chakkraphat (1548–1569). With the Thais distracted by their internal problems, King Ang Chan decided the time was right to attack. He seized the Siamese city of Prachin Buri in 1549, sacking the city and making slaves of its inhabitants. Only then did he learn that the succession had been settled and that Maha Chakkkraphat was the new ruler. Ang Chan immediately retreated to Cambodia, taking his captives with him. King Maha Chakkraphat was furious over the unprovoked attack, but Burma had also chosen to invade through the Three Pagodas Pass. The Burmese army posed a much more serious threat, as it captured Kanchanaburi and Suphanburi. It then appeared before Ayutthaya itself.
The Thai army managed to defeat the Burmese, who quickly retreated through the pass. Maha Chakkraphat's thoughts then turned to Cambodia. Not only had Ang Chan attacked and looted Prachin Buri, turning its people into slaves, but he also refused to give Maha Chakkraphat a white elephant he had requested, rejecting even this token of submission to Siam. Maha Chakkraphat ordered Prince Ong, the governor of Sawankhalok, to lead an expedition to punish Ang Chan and recover the Thai captives. The rival armies met, and Ang Chan killed Prince Ong with a lucky musket shot from elephant back. The leaderless Thai army fled, and Ang Chan allegedly captured more than 10,000 Siamese soldiers. To celebrate his great victory, King Ang Chan supposedly named the battleground "Siem Reap", meaning "the total defeat of Siam".
In reality, surviving historic sources make this folk tale appear very unlikely, since they date the decline of the Angkor kingdom to more than a century before this, when a military expedition from Ayutthaya captured and sacked Angkor Wat, which began a long period of vassal rule over Cambodia. The 1431 capture coincided with the decline of Angkor, though the reasons behind its abandonment are not clear. They may have included environmental changes and failings in the Khmer infrastructure.
From the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries, infighting among the Khmer nobility led to periodic intervention and domination by both of Cambodia's more powerful neighbors, Vietnam and Siam. Siem Reap, along with Battambang (Phra Tabong) and Sisophon, major cities in the northwest of Cambodia, was under Siamese administration and the provinces were collectively known as Inner Cambodia from 1795 until 1907, when they were ceded to French Indochina. In fact, during the 18th century, under the rule of the Ayutthaya Kingdom, it was known as Nakhorn Siam (Siam's city), not as "Siam's Defeat".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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