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Temple, Territory, Tensions: The Roots of the Thailand-Cambodia Border Fight

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  • The French demarcation of 1906 was presented to the court of Siam and Cambodia; both accepted and that dealt with that issue. In 1929 a Royal Princess of the Thai court wanted to visit a Khmer temple

  • Seagull Sam
    Seagull Sam

    So there we have the nub of the issue - colonialism. The French draw an arbitrary border in 1907 and the nations are fighting still. The British drew an arbitrary line through Punjab in 1948 and

  • Face, pride, stubbornness, arrogance etc etc

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23 hours ago, Sydebolle said:


The autocorrect was creating this confusion. A "plazet" roots in the German language and is used in other languages also as "agreement", "approval" - like the "déjà-vu" being borrowed from French for "seen already", "happened before" etc. 

A play of words ....... 

Placet comes from the Latin verb "placere," which means "to please". In use in various European languages since the 1500s  to mean an official vote of agreement or assent.

Thanks.  I’m always happy to learn new words but I’m confused.  Was the word plazet autocorrected to placet or was placet the word intended?  It seems as though placet is legalese.

On 7/27/2025 at 11:04 PM, daejung said:

No, in French, the word "placet" comes from the Latin placet, meaning "it pleases" or "may it please." And indeed, it directly ties in with the expression "please the king"—a classic expression of deference in petitions addressed to the sovereign. Which makes perfect sense here. "Plazet" comes from latin too. The French borrowed it from latin as the German did.


Indeed, the root is Latin and the German word "Plazet" roots in the group of Indo-European languages which forms the basic of approx. 3 billion people's languages from India all the way across to Europe. Colonialism expanded that further so the Latin word is the root for the same word/meaning in many European languages, like French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and German - among others. 

On 7/27/2025 at 8:57 PM, westsail said:

Construction of the Preah Vihear temple began in the 9th century A.D..  It wasn't until the 11th century that rulers of the Khmer Empire began to convert from Hinduism to Buddhism.


Noted, thanks for the input. As I did not know the finer details nor was I present back in the day I mentioned Hindu traces. With 5,000 gods being actively busy these days - the subject of religion did not get any easier 8-) 

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