Phnom Penh is a lovely, laid-back old city. Once the jewel of French Indochina, it still has a particular crumbling grace and beauty not found in other Asian capitals. It is divided up by a few major thoroughfares-Monivong and Norodom Boulevards going north-south and Pochentong and Sihounouk boulevards going east-west. These, along with major
wats, markets and monuments, form the skeleton of Phnom Penh from which the city grows. Whether you are off to explore cultural highlights, take in the nightlife, eat a hearty meal, or just find a place to sit and watch the bustle of the city, most places can be found if you know the nearest landmark.
North and Wat Phnom At the end of Norodom Boulevard in the northern part of town,
Wat Phnom, at 27 meters above sea level, is the Cambodian capital's highest point. It was around this
wat that the city is supposed to have been centered, and it is after the woman who built this structure-a lady named Penh-that the city is named. Locals still come here...
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National Museum
What the British Museum is to the Elgin Marbles of Greece's Parthenon, the National Museum of Phnom Penh, opened in 1920 by King Sisowath, is to...
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- Central/ Psar Thmei
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Wat Phnom
This is Cambodia's "Church on the Hill." Legend has it that sometime in the 14th century, a woman named Penh found sacred Buddhist objects in the...
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- Attractions
- Central/ Psar Thmei
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Tuol Sleng, Museum of Genocide
The grounds of this former high school are just as they were in 1979 at the end of Cambodia's bloody genocide. During the violent recent history...
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- Museums
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