The Vietnamese—who, unlike other Southeast Asian peoples, …

Years: 1540 - 1683

The Vietnamese—who, unlike other Southeast Asian peoples, have patterned their culture and their civilization on those of China—had by the late fifteenth century defeated the once-powerful kingdom of Champa in central Vietnam.

Thousands of Chams flee into Khmer territory.

By the early seventeenth century, the Vietnamese have reached the Mekong Delta, which is inhabited by Khmer people.

In 1620 the Khmer king Chey Chettha II (1618-28) marries a daughter of Sai Vuong, one of the Nguyen lords (1558-1778), who rules southern Vietnam for most of the period of the restored Le dynasty (1428-1788).

Three years later, Chey Chettha allows the Vietnamese to establish a custom-house at Prey Nokor, near what is today Ho Chi Minh City (until 1975, Saigon).

By the end of the seventeenth century, the region is under Vietnamese administrative control, and Cambodia is cut off from access to the sea

Trade with the outside world is possible only with Vietnamese permission.

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