Royal Order of Cambodia
The Royal Order of Cambodia (Khmer: គ្រឿងឥស្សរិយយសព្រះរាជាណាចក្រកម្ពុជា; French: Ordre royal du Cambodge) was a colonial order of chivalry of French Cambodia, and is still in use as an order of chivalry in the present-day Kingdom of Cambodia.
Royal Order of Cambodia | |
---|---|
Star, medal and current Great Ribbon of the Order | |
Awarded by King of Cambodia | |
Type | Order |
Established | 8 February 1864 1864 - 1955 (Order of French Protectorate of Cambodia) 1908 - present (as Cambodia Order) |
Status | Currently constituted |
Sovereign | Norodom Sihamoni |
Grades | Grand Cross Grand Officer Commander Officer Knight |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | Grand Order of National Merit |
History
Colonial
In 1845, Thailand and Vietnam established a joint protectorate over the ancient Khmer Empire. With French support, Cambodia gained independence under King Norodom in 1864, but he had to accept the French protectorate of Cambodia and a strong French interference in the administration of his country.
On 8 February 1864, the king founded the "Royal Order of Cambodia" as an order of merit with five degrees. After 1896, the French government and the kings of Cambodia each granted themselves the Order of Cambodia. The French president was rightly Grand Cross in the Royal Order of Cambodia. The order served to distinguish civilians and soldiers, subjects of the king or strangers, who had made themselves worthy. In 1896, the order was officially taken up in the French system of colonial orders of chivalry.
For French appointments, the recipient had to be at least 29 years old and enter the Order first as a knight, to be promoted to a higher grade after a certain period. Only officers of the Légion d'honneur could become a commander in the Order and only commanders of the Légion d'honneur could be Commanders or Officers of the Order. Apart from decorations for bravery or merit during foreign campaigns, the French colonial orders also required that a certain number of years had to have been spent in the tropics or overseas to be eligible - in this case, three years in Indochina, preferably in Cambodia. From 1933 the Order was also granted for the organization of exhibitions dedicated to Cambodia and sacred events important to the French colonies. None of these rules applied for grants by the King of Cambodia himself.
The colonial and overseas orders were immediately contingent on the French orders and awarded on ministerial orders. Those awarded it not only had to pay for their own registration and qualifications, but also had to buy their own insignia.
Post-colonial
In 1948 France ceased granting the order. Formally it remained a French colonial policy, but it was now only granted by the King of Cambodia. The order has since then been one of the historical orders of France.
On September 1, 1950 the (colonial) French order-system was reformed. The Order of the Star of Anjouan and the Order of the Black Star were formalised as French Overseas Orders. The other three were the "Order of States Associated to the French Union" (French: "Ordre des États de l'Union Française Associés"). In 1955, Cambodia became independent. The order was approved by King Norodom Sihanouk during his government and also granted during his exile in Beijing. Even after the restoration of the Khmer dynasty it remained the highest Cambodian distinction.
Degrees
"Dignités"
- Grand Cross
Medal worn on a large ribbon at the left hip and star worn to the gem's left.
- Grand Officer
Large medal on a ribbon round the neck, and the star of the order.
Other
- Commander
Large medal worn on a ribbon round the neck.
- Officer
Medal on a rosette on the left breast.
- Knight
Medal on a ribbon on the left breast, with no gold on the gem.
Insignia
The medal of the order comes in many different forms, as a slightly elongated silver or gold star surmounted by a Cambodian crown and with an image of the king's crown and coat of arms in gold on a violet blue background and surrounded by a red circle. The reverse of the medal is left rough. To promote the order if it was awarded by the French, the Cambodian crown was replaced with a European one surmounted by a small cross, and in the early years the order was even awarded without any crown.
The central image on the star of the order is the same as the medal, though the crown is missing and the rays are usually smooth. The star is elongated, with the vertical rays longer than the horizontal rays. The regalia of Knights is in silver, whilst those of the higher grades are gold. The medal and star are equally for civilians and soldiers. The ribbon of the order was originally green with a red border, changing in 1899 to white with an orange border (in the same year the French government changed the colours of the ribbons of all five colonial orders), before reverting to the original black ribbon when it became a purely Cambodian order again.
Recipients
- Emperor Akihito of Japan
- Marcel Alessandri
- Norodom Arunrasmy
- Aun Pornmoniroth
- Bảo Long
- Bảo Đại
- Bhumibol Adulyadej
- Jean-Baptiste Billot
- Chau Sen Cocsal Chhum
- Sarin Chhak
- Charles de Gaulle
- Hamengkubuwono VIII
- Hassan II of Morocco
- Emperor Hirohito of Japan
- Ibrahim of Johor
- Kim Il-sung[1]
- Nikolai Kolomeitsev
- Jean de Lattre de Tassigny
- Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque
- Leopold II of Belgium
- Bảo Long
- Manuel Luis Quezon
- Raoul Magrin-Vernerey
- Hun Manet
- Norodom Monineath
- Hor Nambora
- Hor Namhong
- Boun Oum
- Pakubuwono X
- Putra of Perlis
- Tengku Fauziah binti Almarhum Tengku Abdul Rashid
- Willem Rooseboom
- John Sanderson
- Yōhei Sasakawa
- Vong Savang
- Norodom Sihamoni
- Jagatjit Singh
- Sirajuddin of Perlis
- Tea Banh
- Thành Thái
- Josip Broz Tito
- Tuanku Tengku Fauziah
- Mardochée Valabrègue
- Sisavang Vong
- François Zimeray
- Leopold II of Belgium
- Prem Tinsulanonda
References
- News from Hsinhua News Agency: Daily Bulletin. London: Xin hua tong xun she. 1 October 1965. p. 53. OCLC 300956682.