Personally, one of the most important places I can not miss when I come to Phnom Penh is the Tashan Temple, because it has a direct connection with the origin of the name of Phnom Penh. Tashan legend is a hill built by a mother-in-law named Bian to worship the statue of Buddha floating from the Mekong River. In memory of this mother-in-law, later generations call it Phnom Penh. Phnom is a mountain and Penh is the name of Bian-in-law. So in Cambodian, Phnom Penh should mean Bian-po Mountain. There are many people coming to worship during the Spring Festival and the holidays. There is another small temple beside the hall, which is built by later generations to remember Bian-ma. Inside the temple, the statue of Bian-ma is worshipped. In addition, there is a large ashes pagoda behind the Buddha Hall, which buries the first king of the Angkor Dynasty who moved to Phnom Penh, and his statue on the hillside. Tashan is not very high, so it is wrong to say that people can overlook Phnom Penh on it.