Citations:Kambuja

place

 * 1981, Satya Prakash, Vijai Shankar Śrivastava, Cultural Contours of India, page 114:
 * The males and females brought from the countries noted above were subjected to slavery in Kambuja. If the present passage is taken to denote that these countries were in any way defeated or even subdued by Jayavarman VII, it would mean [...]
 * 1999, Sailendra Nath Sen, Ancient Indian History and Civilization, page 533:
 * Isanavarman was succeeded by Bhavavarman II (AD 638) and Jayavarman I (AD 657-674) who succeeded in maintaining the integrity of the kingdom. But afterwards there ensued a period of disintegration in Kambuja [...]

place: Cambodia

 * 1944, Ramesh Chandra Majumdar, Kambuja-deśa, or, An ancient Hindu colony in Cambodia, page 135:
 * It has not been possible for me to review the history of art in Kambuja in course of these lectures, because its evolution and chronology is still a matter of dispute and the subject therefore requires a separate and detailed treatment [...]
 * 1998, Suhas Chatterjee, Indian Civilization and Culture, page 411:
 * The southern doctrine of Saivism was made the state religion in Kambuja and Champa. Sanskrit was also made their state language and more than hundred inscriptions in that language have been discovered in Champa.
 * 2003, Mahesh Kumar Sharan, Studies In Sanskrit Inscriptions Of Ancient Cambodia, page 37:
 * He had to live in exile (Annam) while his wife Yuvarajadevi, a Brahmana girl, lived the life of an ascetic in Kambuja.

people

 * 1963, Ramesh Chandra Majumdar, Hindu colonies in the Far East, page 167:
 * The temple suffered much in the hands of the enemies, particularly the Kambujas, and was therefore repaired and endowed by a succession of kings, [...]
 * 1968, George Coedès, Walter F. Vella, The Indianized states of Southeast Asia, page 66:
 * [...] kings of Cambodia goes back to the union of the hermit Kambu Svayambhuva, eponymic ancestor of the Kambujas, with the celestial nymph Mera, who was given to him by Siva.
 * 1970, Wilfred G. Burchett, The second Indochina war: Cambodia and Laos, page 17:
 * In the northern part lived a race known as the Kambujas, who were apparently vassals of the Kingdom of Fou-Nan. In the middle of the sixth century, the governor of the Kambujas declared himself independent of Fou-Nan.