Maritime Malabar: Trade, Culture and Power

AUTHOR- Pius Malekandathil

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  • AUTHOR :Pius Malekandathil
  • HB ISBN :978-93-5572-103-7
  • Year :2022
  • Extent :378
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Maritime Malabar: Trade, Religion and Culture provides a broad overview and connected narrative of Malabar, a region whose fate has been shaped and reshaped over time by a maritime consciousness and sea-related activities. This volume examines the trade and faith related networks in the Asian waters through which Malabar became firmly integrated into the larger world of the Indian Ocean. By analysing the trajectories of commodities, people and ideas between Malabar and the wider Indian Ocean world, the book presents a nuanced and layered picture of the various historical processes of pre-modern Malabar vis-à-vis its various enclaves and spaces of power. Rich in empirical data, the book delves into the multiple facets and strands of the societal processes of Kerala by scrutinizing the trade as well as the urbanity of the port of Muziris and the cities of Calicut and Cochin in ways conditioned by the changing perceptions of the sea and its dynamics. The maritime orientation of Malabar’s economy has been studied from different perspectives by highlighting the different types of trade and also by indicating how its traders survived as well as sustained its maritime trade over centuries against overwhelming odds. The critical reading of primary sources provides congruent, contesting and alternative images of Malabar’s past opening up fresh and challenging themes for scholars and researchers interested in the maritime history of South Asia and the socio-economic history of Malabar.

The Author
Pius Malekandathil is Professor at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. He is the author of  The Mughals, the Portuguese and the Indian Ocean: Changing Imageries of Maritime India (2013); Maritime India: Trade, Religion and Polity in the Indian Ocean (2010); and Portuguese Cochin and the Maritime Trade of India (2001). He has also edited fourteen books including India, The Portuguese and Maritime Interactions (2 vols; 2019) and Jornada of Dom Alexis Menezes: A Portuguese Account of the Sixteenth Century Malabar (2003). His research interests lie in Maritime History, urban history of medieval India, Indian Ocean Studies, Religion and Society of South Asia, and history of trade.