Cross-cultural Networking in The Eastern Indian Ocean Realm, c. 100–1800
EDITOR: Kenneth R. Hall, Suchandra Ghosh, Kaushik Gangopadhyay and Rila Mukherjee
HB ₹1495 . $64.95 . ₤44.95 |
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INFORMATION
- EDITOR: Kenneth R. Hall, Suchandra Ghosh, Kaushik Gangopadhyay and Rila Mukherjee
- HB ISBN: 978-93-5290-903-2
- Year: 2019
- Extent: 380
- Discount available on checkout
- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
Cross-Cultural Networking in the Eastern Indian Ocean Realm examines the history of the Bay of Bengal and beyond, as initially documented in archaeological recoveries from AD 100 to AD 900 and subsequently the variety of regional historical evidence that demonstrates India’s eastern Indian Ocean maritime and northern overland connections to the nineteenth century. In sum, the book highlights the importance and variety of consequence in east-coast India’s linkage with the coastlines of the Bay of Bengal and the extended eastern Indian Ocean, especially India’s eastern maritime and overland networking with South-East Asia and China. In the eighth century post-Gupta era the Buddhist religious centre at Nalanda in north-west Bengal assumed a major role as the destination of Indian and international Buddhist pilgrims who arrived by sea and land to study at Nalanda, and returned to promote Buddhist and Hindu religious and cultural exchanges in wider India and Sri Lanka, South-East Asia, and China through the fifteenth century. The book details India’s long-term historical relationships with the legendary Sumatra-based Srivijaya thalassocracy and its successors in the Straits of Melaka region, sequential Vietnam coastline-based polities c.600–1800s, and the Andaman Islands and Tibet, as populations in northern and eastern Asia selectively localized South Asian culture.
Kenneth R. Hall is Professor of History at Ball State University in the United States. His recent books are Networks of Trade, Polity, and Societal Integration in Chola-Era South India, c.875–1279 (2014); A History of Southeast Asia: Maritime Trade and Societal Development, 100–1500 (2011); and Primary and Secondary Urban Networking in the Indian Ocean Realm, c.900–1800 (2008/2011).
Suchandra Ghosh is Professor of Ancient Indian History & Culture at the University of Calcutta. She has recently published From the Oxus to the Indus: A Political and Cultural Study, c.300 BCE to c.100 BCE (2017); and Exploring Connectivity: South Eastern Bengal and Beyond (2014).
Kaushik Gangopadhyay is Assistant Professor in the Department of Archaeology, University of Calcutta. He conducts archaeological and historical studies projects focal on coastal West Bengal, funded by the Indian Council of Historical Research, New Delhi.
Rila Mukherjee is Professor of History at the University of Hyderabad. Her books include Merchants and Companies in Bengal: Kasimbazar and Jugdia in the Eighteenth Century (2007) and Strange Riches: Bengal in the Mercantile Map of South Asia (2006); she has edited a series of collected Indian Ocean studies volumes.