Sisowath Monivong
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Sisowath Monivong ស៊ីសុវត្ថិ មុនីវង្ស | |
---|---|
Kandal , Cambodia | |
Spouse |
and 19 other consorts and concubines |
Issue | with Kanviman Norleak Tevi: Sisowath Pinnareth Sisowath Thavet Roeungsi Sisowath Sariletlak Sisowath Kossamak Sisowath Nearirakh Sisowath Monireth Sisowath Monipong |
House | Sisowath |
Father | Sisowath |
Mother | Varni Van |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
Sisowath Monivong (
Life
Born in
In 1904, both of his uncles and his elder brother Essaravong died, resulting in Sisowath Monivong becoming the Crown Prince of Cambodia. In 1906, he traveled with his father, King Sisowath, to France.[2] There he was admitted to the Military School of Saint-Maixent. He graduated two years later with the rank sous lieutenant in the Foreign Legion. He was then posted to Brive and later to Paris. In 1909, he returned to Cambodia. In 1910, he was promoted to lieutenant, in 1916 to captain, and finally, in 1922, to chief of battalion. The same year he was released from military service. During the First World War, he actively recruited volunteer military personnel and workers. These services were recognized with the Cross of Commander of the Foreign Legion and the Cambodian title of Samdech Preah Keofea. He was then appointed secretary-general of the council of ministers and president of the council of the Royal Family.
Monivong had many consorts, at least six of whom were granted official recognition, having borne children to him.[2] One of these was a woman named Meak, a member of the Royal Ballet, who was given the title Khun Preah Moneang Bopha Norleak Meak. Meak bore Monivong's son, Prince Sisowath Kusarak, in 1926. Around 1934–1935, two of her young cousins came to live with her, a common Cambodian custom;[3] one of her cousins, named Saloth Sâr, would later adopt the name Pol Pot.
Monivong died on 23 April 1941 at the age of 65 at Bokor Mountain which was renamed Preah Monivong National Park in his honour.
Reign
In 1927, Sisowath Monivong's father died, so at age 52 Sisowath Monivong ascended to the throne. Like his father and his uncle, Monivong was simply a figurehead for the French administration and, in the words of one author, Monivong "caused the French no trouble".[4] The real power was in the hands of the French Resident-General. The King was surrounded by his Royal Council composed of his cousins: Sisowath Rathary (father of Sisowath Sirik Matak), Sisowath Watchayavong, Norodom Phanouvong, Norodom Suramarit and Norodom Singhara.
It was during Monivong's rule that Cambodia became open to outside communist influences. In 1930, the Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh founded the Indochinese Communist Party which subsequently obtained popularity in Cambodia. The Cambodian communists' primary objective was to overthrow the French.
In 1940, when the French Third Republic fell to Nazi Germany, the "Vichy France" regime took power in the unoccupied parts of France and in its overseas colonies, including Cambodia. In the late 1930s, a powerless Monivong noticed that Imperial Japan was making inroads in Vietnam. Japan then invaded and occupied Cambodia in early 1941. The Japanese allowed Cambodian Vichy French officials to administer, but only under Japanese protection. The Cambodian king was beholden to the Vichy French, who were in turn beholden to the Japanese. In western Cambodia, Thailand, now an ally of the Japanese, occupied territory. As the Japanese and Thai oppression of Cambodians became evident, Sisowath Monivong retired to Kampot in late 1941 and died at Bokor the same year.[5] He died taking the posthumous title of Preah Karuna Preah Sisowath Monivong Preah Khatiyakot (Khmer: ព្រះករុណាព្រះស៊ីសុវត្ថិ មុនីវង្ស ព្រះខត្តិយកោដ្ឋ).
His son Sisowath Monireth was the heir to the throne, but the French authorities chose Sisowath Kossamak's nineteen-year-old son Norodom Sihanouk to succeed him instead, mistakenly believing that he would be more pliable than Monireth.[6] Two of his children, Sisowath Monireth and Sisowath Monipong, would go on to serve as prime minister.
References
- ISBN 0-8132-0509-3
- ^ a b c Jeldres, Julio A., 2003, The Royal House of Cambodia, Monument Books, Phnom Penh
- ^ Chandler, David P., 1992, Brother Number One: A political biography of Pol Pot, Silkworm Books, Thailand: 8
- ISBN 0595166067. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
- ISBN 9780313357220.
- ISBN 0595166067. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
External links
Media related to Sisowath Monivong at Wikimedia Commons