Kampong Cham Province
Kampong Cham is a province of Cambodia located on the central lowlands of the Mekong River. It borders the provinces of Kampong Chhnang to the west, Kampong Thom and Kratié to the north, Tboung Khmum to the east, and Prey Veng and Kandal to the south.| Tap on a place to explore it |
- Type: province of Cambodia with 1,060,000 residents
- Description: province of Cambodia
- Also known as: “Kampong Cham”, “Kampong Cham province”, “Khêt Kâmpóng Cham”, “Khet Kompong Cham”, “Khétt Kâmpóng Cham”, “Kompong Chan”, “Province de Kompong Cham”, and “Résidence de Kompong Cham”
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Prey Chhor.
Prey Chhor
Town
Prey Chhor is a district located in Kampong Cham province, Cambodia. The district capital is Prey Totueng town located around 29 kilometres east of the provincial capital of Kampong Cham and 95 kilometres north west of Phnom Penh by road.
Kampong Cham Province
- Location: Cambodia, Southeast Asia, Asia
- View on OpenStreetMap
This page is based on GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Kampong Cham Province from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Achinese to Yue Chinese—“Kampong Cham Province” goes by many names.
- Achinese: “Kampong Cham”
- Achinese: “Propinsi Kampong Cham”
- Arabic: “كامبونغ تشام”
- Azerbaijani: “Kamponqtyam vilayəti”
- Belarusian: “Кампангцям”
- Belarusian: “Кампонгцям”
- Bengali: “কামপং চাম প্রদেশ”
- Bulgarian: “Кампонг Тям”
- Catalan: “província de Kampong Cham”
- Catalan: “Província de Kampong Cham”
- Cebuano: “Kampong Cham (lalawigan)”
- Cebuano: “Kampong Cham”
- Chinese: “Kampong Cham Séng”
- Chinese: “磅湛省”
- Danish: “Kampong Cham Province”
- Dimli (individual language): “Kampong Cham (wılayet)”
- Dimli (individual language): “Kampong Cham”
- Dutch: “Kampong Cham”
- Esperanto: “Kampongcamo”
- Esperanto: “KH-3”
- Estonian: “Kâmpóng Chami provints”
- Finnish: “Kâmpóng Cham”
- French: “Kampong Cham”
- French: “Province de Kampong Cham”
- Galician: “provincia de Kampong Cham”
- German: “Kampong Cham (Provinz)”
- German: “Kampong Cham”
- German: “Provinz Kampong Cham”
- Greek: “Καμπόνγκ Τσαμ”
- Gujarati: “કામ્પોંગ ચેમ પ્રાંત”
- Hebrew: “קמפונג צ’אם”
- Hindi: “कम्पोंग चाम प्रांत”
- Hindi: “कम्पोंग चाम प्रान्त”
- Indonesian: “Provinsi Kampong Cham”
- Italian: “provincia di Kampong Cham”
- Italian: “Provincia di Kampong Cham”
- Japanese: “コンポンチャム州”
- Kannada: “ಕಂಪೊಂಗ್ ಚಾಮ್ ಪ್ರಾಂತ್ಯ”
- Khmer: “ខេត្តកំពង់ចាម”
- Khmer: “ខេត្តកំពង់ចាម”
- Korean: “캄퐁참주”
- Lao: “ແຂວງກຳປົງຈາມ”
- Latvian: “Kamponķhnanas province”
- Lithuanian: “Kampong Čiamo provincija”
- Malay: “Kampong Cham Province”
- Marathi: “काम्पोंंग चाम प्रांत”
- Min Nan Chinese: “Kampong Cham Séng”
- Nepali: “कम्पोङ चाम”
- Northern Frisian: “Kampong Cham”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Kampong Cham”
- Norwegian: “Kampong Cham”
- Pampanga: “Kampong Cham Lalawigan”
- Persian: “استان کامپونگ چام”
- Polish: “Kâmpóng Cham”
- Polish: “Prowincja Kampong Cham”
- Portuguese: “Kampong Cham”
- Russian: “Кампонгтям”
- Sinhala: “කැම්පොන්ග් චැම් පළාත”
- Spanish: “Provincia de Kompung Cham”
- Swedish: “Kampong Cham”
- Tamil: “கம்போங் சாம் மாகாணம்”
- Telugu: “కాంపోంగ్ చామ్ ప్రావిన్స్”
- Telugu: “కాంపోంగ్ చామ్ రాష్ట్రభాగం”
- Thai: “จังหวัดกำปงจาม”
- Turkish: “Kampong Cham”
- Ukrainian: “Кампонгтям”
- Urdu: “کامپونگ چام صوبہ”
- Vietnamese: “Kampong Cham”
- Waray (Philippines): “Kampong Cham”
- Welsh: “Talaith Kampong Cham”
- Western Panjabi: “صوبہ کمپونگ چام”
- Yue Chinese: “磅湛省”
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as Phumĭ Slêng and Prey Chhor.
Notable Places Nearby
Highlights include Bœ̆ng Kéh and Boeng Tuek.
Cambodia: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, Angkor Archaeological Park, and Battambang.
Curious Places to Discover
Uncover intriguing places from every corner of the globe.
About Mapcarta. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikipedia page “Kampong Cham Province”. Photo: Paul Arps, CC BY 2.0.