In Cambodia, acharya (Khmer: អាចារ្យ, commonly pronounced achar) refers to a learned ritual specialist who bridges royal, Brahmanical, and Buddhist traditions across Cambodian history.

The word acharya comes from Sanskrit ācārya, meaning “religious teacher” or “master of sacred writings,” and appears throughout Indian Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain traditions.
In the Khmer context, historical lexicons and research gloss acharya/achar as a knowledgeable religious guide, emphasizing teaching and ritual expertise rather than simply priestly status.
During the Angkorian period, Brahmin specialists formed an integral part of the royal court, overseeing sacrifices, consecrations, and the preservation of Sanskrit learning.
Inscriptions and later scholarship indicate that acharya was used as a title for royal Brahmins who served as chaplains, temple priests, and tutors to the king, placing them at the intersection of power and ritual.
The transmission of Hindu epics and Dharmashastra literature into Cambodia, such as the Ramayana, Mahabharata, and various Purāṇas, depended on these acharyas as custodians and interpreters of sacred texts.
From Brahmin acharya to Buddhist achar
Over time, as Theravāda Buddhism became dominant, the Indic acharya evolved into the Khmer achar, a lay Buddhist ritual specialist who preserved many Brahmanical elements within a new religious framework.
Today’s achar are usually respected laymen, often former monks, who act as masters of ceremony for weddings, funerals, pagoda inaugurations, and numerous rites, mediating between monks and lay communities.
Researchers have noted clear continuities between the Vedic priest of Angkorian sacrifices and the modern achar, especially in their management of offerings, recitations, and the overall choreography of ritual.
Role in contemporary Cambodian Buddhism
In contemporary Cambodia, the achar plays a central role in major ceremonies, including the establishment of sīmā boundaries for ordination halls, where he coordinates offerings and directs the flow of the ritual while monks recite canonical texts.
At funerals, specialists such as the achar yogi or achar khmaoch guide the process from end-of-life chants to the lighting of the cremation fire, ensuring that religious norms and social etiquette are properly observed.
Although formally subordinate to monks in the religious hierarchy, achar wield significant practical authority; in many pagodas, public preaching or important decisions are structured around their invitations and organizational work.
Status, titles, and ongoing transformations
The title acharya/achar is not restricted to village ritualists: inscriptions and modern honorifics show that it can mark court preceptors, Pali graduates, and high-ranking religious dignitaries.
Compound titles combining acharya with auspicious Sanskrit-Pali elements underline its prestige as a marker of doctrinal mastery and ritual competence.
At the same time, some reform-minded achar today seek to limit residual Brahmanical practices and emphasize a more text-based Theravāda identity, revealing an ongoing negotiation between inherited Hindu forms and contemporary Buddhist self-understanding.


















