Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T22:26:32.157Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Early Maritime Contacts Between South and Southeast Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2011

Abstract

An analysis of the archaeological data available in recent years indicates the development of local maritime networks both in peninsular Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent by the middle of the first millennium B.C. By the second-first centuries B.C. these networks formed a part of the larger regional sailing circuit in the Bay of Bengal. Tangible indicators of this are carnelian and glass beads and bronze bowls with a high tin content. A demarcation of these networks is essential, before questions like the organization of trade or the channels through which religious ideology spread, can be explained.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

This study is part of my research as a Homi Bhabha Fellow and I am grateful for the guidance and help from Professors Romila Thapar, Oliver Wolters, Ian Glover and Stanley O'Connor. I am also indebted to several institutions and scholars in Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore for their hospitality and support.

1 Wheatley, Paul, Nagara and Commandery (Chicago, 1983), p. 93.Google Scholar

2 The latest and comprehensive additions which cover much of the earlier ground are , Wheatley, op. cit.Google Scholar ; Wolters, O.W., History, Culture and Region in Southeast Asian Perspectives (Singapore, 1982)Google Scholar.

3 Mabbett, I.W., “The ‘Indianization’ of Southeast Asia: Reflections on the Historical Sources”, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 8, no. 2 (1977): 160.Google Scholar

4 Ibid., p. 161.

5 Thapar, Romila, “The Evolution of the State in the Ganges Valley in the Mid-first Millennium B.C.”, Studies in History 4, no. 2 (1982): 194–95Google Scholar; also see Thapar, Romila, From Lineage to State (Oxford University Press, 1984)Google Scholar.

6 Agarwala, V.S., India as Known to Panini (Lucknow, 1953), pp. 240ff.Google Scholar

7 Baudhyana Dharmasutra, 1.5.10, 23–25; Vasistha Dharmasutra, II, 40–42.

8 Sircar, D.C., Inscriptions of Asoka (Delhi, 1975).Google Scholar

9 Seneviratne, S., “Social Base of Early Buddhism in Southeast India and Sri Lanka” (Ph.D. diss., Jawaharlal Nehru University, 1985), p. 669.Google Scholar

10 Burgess, J., The Buddhist Stupas of Amaravati and Jaggayyapeta (Varanasi, 1970, reprint), pp. 2122.Google Scholar

11 Wheeler, R.E.M., et at., “Arikamedu: An Indo-Roman Trading Station on the East Coast of India”, Ancient India 2 (1946): 17124.Google Scholar

12 Begley, Vimla, “From Iron Age to Early Historical in South Indian Archaeology”, in Studies in the Archaeology of India and Pakistan, ed. Jacobson, J. (Oxford & IBH, 1986), fig. 1.Google Scholar

13 Begley, Vimla, “Arikamedu Reconsidered”, American Journal of Archaeology 87 (1983): 4681.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

14 Ghosh, N.C., Excavations at Satanikota 1977–80 (Memoirs Archaeological Survey of India, no. 82, 1986), p. 79.Google Scholar

15 Gupta, P.L., The Amaravati Hoard of Silver Punch-marked Coins (Hyderabad, 1963), pp. 144–45.Google Scholar

16 Indian Archaeology — a Review (hereafterIAR) 1960-1961: p. 70Google Scholar; 1961–62: p. 107; 1962–63: p. 46.

17 P.L. Gupta, p. 7.

18 Aravamuthan, T.G., “A Pandyan Issue of Punch-marked Coins”, Journal of the Numismatic Society of India (hereafter JNSI) 6 (1944): 1.Google Scholar

19 Banerji, R.D., “Inscriptions in the Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves”, Epigraphia Indica (hereafter El) 13 (1915-1916): 159–67.Google Scholar

20 Ghosh, A., “The Early Phase of the Stupa at Amaravati, Southeast India”, Ancient Ceylon 3 (1979): 97103.Google Scholar

21 Buehler, G., “The Bhattiprolu Inscriptions”, El 2 (1894): 323–29.Google Scholar

22 , Mahadevan, “Corpus of the Tamil Brahmi Inscriptions”, in Seminar on Inscriptions, ed. Nagaswamy, R. (Madras, 1968), p. 73.Google Scholar

23 Rea, A., South Indian Buddhist Antiquities (Madras, 1894), pp. 711.Google Scholar

24 Burgess, J., The Buddhist Stupas of Amaravati, p. 22.Google Scholar

25 Arthasastra, VII. 12.

26 Pearls were found in a monastery in Hopei and around the foundations of the Yung-ning stupa in Loyang. See The Northern Wei Stone Coffin unearthed at Ting-hsien, Hopei province”, K'ao-ku 5 (1966): 252–59Google Scholar.

27 Maloney, C.T., “The Effect of Early Coastal Sea Traffic on the Development of Civilization in South India” (Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1968), p. 26.Google Scholar

28 Seneviratne, S., Social Base of Early Buddhism, p. 522.Google Scholar

29 Aham, pp. 200, 210.

30 Paranavitana, S., Inscriptions of Ceylon (Colombo, 1970), no. 368.Google Scholar

31 Ibid., p. 76.

32 Ibid., pp. 28, 46, 72; Gunawardana, R.A.L.H., “Changing Patterns of Navigation in the Indian Ocean and their Impact on Pre-colonial Sri Lanka”, in The Indian Ocean: Explorations in History, Commerce and Politics, ed. Chandra, Satish (New Delhi, 1987)Google Scholar.

33 Ray, H.P., Monastery and Guild: Commerce under the Satavahanas (Oxford University Press, 1986).Google Scholar

34 Lueders, H., A List of Brahmi Inscriptions (Calcutta, 1912), nos. 1230, 1261.Google Scholar

35 Burgess, J., The Buddhist Stupas of Amaravati, p. 91.Google Scholar

36 Sarma, I.K., “Some More Inscriptions from Amaravati Excavations and the Chronology of the Manastupa”, Studies in Indian Epigraphy 1 (1975): 66.Google Scholar

37 Sircar, D.C., “More Inscriptions from Nagarjunakonda”, El 35 (1963): 136.Google Scholar

38 Mahadevan, I., “Corpus of Tamil Brahmi”, nos. 30, 34, 37, 38, 43, 66.Google Scholar

39 Sarma, I.K., Coinage of the Satavahana Empire (Delhi, 1980), pp. 99, 103.Google Scholar

40 Chattopadhyaya, B.D., Coins and Currency Systems in South India (Delhi, 1977), pp. 1617.Google Scholar

41 Elliot, Walter, Coins of Southern India (Delhi, 1970, reprint), pp. 3638.Google Scholar

43 II.11.79,81. Traditionally the Arthasastra is dated to the Mauryan period, though Trautmann, T.R., Kautilya and the Arthasastra (Leiden, 1971), p. 174Google Scholar has shown that it has several authors, but the core does date to the Mauryan period. Also Sarkar, H.B., “A Geographical Introduction to South-East Asia”, Bijdragen Tot de Taal, Land en Volkenkunde 137 (1981): 293323CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

44 II.3.8.

45 XI1.85.

46 Lahiri, B., “India's Earliest Inscribed Coins: The City Issues”, JNSI 38 (1976): 3554.Google Scholar

47 Narain, A.K., ed., Seminar Papers on the Local Coins of Northern India (Varanasi, 1968).Google Scholar

48 Shrimali, K.M., History of Pancala (New Delhi, 1983).Google Scholar

49 Seeley, Nigel & Turner, Paula, “Metallurgical Investigations of Three Early Indian Coinages”, South Asian Archaeology, ed. Allchin, B. (Cambridge University Press, 1984), p. 332.Google Scholar

50 Marshall, J., Taxila (Cambridge University Press, 1951).Google Scholar

51 Margabandhu, C., Archaeology of Satavahana-Kshatrapa Times (New Delhi, 1985), p. 77.Google Scholar

52 Khandalavala, K., “Brahmapuri”, Lalit Kala 1 (1960): 2975.Google Scholar

53 Goetz, H., “A Unique Indian Bronze from South Arabia”, Journal of the Oriental Institute 7 (1962): 241–3.Google Scholar

54 Burgess, J. & Indraji, Bhagwanlal, Inscriptions from the Cave Temples of Western India, ASWI X (Varanasi, 1976, reprint), p. 47.Google Scholar

55 Sastry, V.V. Krishna, The Proto and Early Historical Cultures of Andhra Pradesh (Hyderabad, 1983), pp. 167–68.Google Scholar

56 Sircar, D.C., “More Inscriptions from Nagarjunakonda”, El 35: 136.Google Scholar

57 Leshnik, L.S., South Indian Megalithic Burials (Wiesbaden, 1974), p. 15.Google Scholar

58 Chakrabarti, Dilip K., “The Problem of Tin in Early India — A Preliminary Survey”, Man and Environment 3 (1979): 7172.Google Scholar

59 Nigel J. Seeley and Paula J. Turner, p. 331.

60 Sec. 49.

61 Nigel J. Seeley and Paula J. Turner, p. 332.

62 Casson, L., Ancient Trade and Society (Detroit, 1984), p. 237.Google Scholar

63 Miller, J.I., The Spice Trade of the Roman Empire (Oxford, 1969), pp. 8687.Google Scholar

64 Huyen, Pham Minh, “Various phases of development of primitive metallurgy in Vietnam” (Paper read at XV Pacific Science Congress, Dunedin, 1983).Google Scholar

65 Bellwood, P., Man's Conquest of the Pacific (New York, 1979), p. 183.Google Scholar

66 Manguin, Pierre-Yves, “Pre-European Malay World Shipping in Trade” (Paper read at the International Conference on Malay Civilisation, Kuala Lumpur, 1986).Google Scholar

67 Sorensen, P., “The Ongbah Cave and its fifth Drum”, in Early South East Asia, ed. Smith, R. B. and Watson, W. (New York, 1979), pp. 7897.Google Scholar

69 Bellwood, P., Prehistory of the Indo-Malaysian Archipelago (Academic Press, 1985), p. 292.Google Scholar

70 Srisuchat, T., “The Early Historic Sites and the Remains in Southern Thailand”, SPAFA Consultative Workshop on Archaeological and Environmental Studies on Srivijaya, Indonesia, 16–30 Sept. 1985, Appendix 5B.Google Scholar

72 Of these the Klang and Tembeling (Batu Pasir Garam) were both dated on stylistic grounds to the second century B.C., while at Kampong Sungai Lang two large drumheads were found buried side by side on a wooden plank, possibly of a canoe dated somewhat uncertainly to between 500 B.C. and A.D. 200. Again the associated finds at these sites include glass beads and bronze and iron implements. Loewenstein, J., “The Origin of the Malayan Metal Age”, Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 19 (1956): 578Google Scholar ; Peacock, B.A.V., “Recent Archaeological Discoveries in Malaysia 1964”, JMBRAS 38 (1965): 248–55Google Scholar.

73 Taha, Adi bin Haji, “Recent Archaeological Discoveries in Peninsular Malaysia, 1976–82”, JMBRAS 56 (1983): 4763Google Scholar ; Batchelor, B.C., “Post Hoabinhian Coastal Settlement indicated by finds in Stanniferous Langat River Alluvium near Dengkil, Selangor, Peninsular Malaysia”, Federation Museums Journal 22 (1977): 26Google Scholar.

74 Rajpitak, W., “The Development of Copper Alloy Metallurgy in Thailand in the Pre-Buddhist Period with Special Reference to High Tin Bronzes” (Ph.D. diss., University of London, 1983), p. 457.Google Scholar

75 Ibid., pp. 131–519.

76 Sorensen, P., “Prehistoric Iron Implements from Thailand”, Asian Perspectives 16 (1974): 134–73.Google Scholar

77 J. Loewenstein, p. 48.

78 B.C. Batchelor, p. 16.

79 Bellwood, P., Prehistory of the Indo-Malaysian Archipelago, p. 292.Google Scholar

80 Christie, Jan, “Port Settlement to Trading Empire: Genesis and Growth of Coastal States in Maritime Southeast Asia” (forthcoming).Google Scholar

81 Liu, Xinru, Ancient India and Ancient China (Oxford University Press, 1988), pp. 5458.Google Scholar

82 Glover, I.C., “Knobbed Ware Vessels in South Asia and their Correlates in Thailand” (Paper read at 9th International Conference of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe, Venice, 6–10 July 1987).Google Scholar

83 Glover, I.C., “Indian Thai Exchanges in the Protohistoric Period”, Research Conference on Early Southeast Asia (Bangkok, 1985), p. 345.Google Scholar

84 C. Margabandhu, p. 231.

85 Margabandhu, C., “Some Etched Beads and Pendants from Kondapur — Their Cultural and Chronological Significance”, Journal of Indian History 56 (1978): 38.Google Scholar

86 Glover, I.C., “Knobbed Ware Vessels”.Google Scholar

87 Walker, M.J. and Sentoso, S., “Romano-Indian Rouletted Pottery in Indonesia”, in Prehistoric Indonesia — A Reader, ed. Velde, Pieter Van de (Dordrecht, 1984), pp. 376–83.Google Scholar

88 Soejono, R.P., “The Significance of the Excavations at Gilimanuk (Bali)”, in Early South East Asia, ed. Smith, R. B. and Watson, W., p. 193.Google Scholar

89 O'Connor, S.J. and Harrisson, T., “Gold Foil Amulets in Bali, Philippines and Borneo”, JMBRAS 44 (1971): 7177.Google Scholar

90 Thaw, Aung, Report on the Excavations at Beikthano (Rangoon, 1968), pp. 46.Google Scholar

91 Ibid., pp. 28,50.

92 Bronson, B., “The Late Prehistory and Early History of Central Thailand with Special Reference to Chansen”, in Early South East Asia, ed. Smith, R. B. and Watson, W., p. 329.Google Scholar

93 Bronson, B., Excavations at Chansen and the Cultural Chronology of Protohistoric Central Thailand (Michigan, 1976), p. 27.Google Scholar

93 Malleret, L., L'Archeologie du delta du Mekong, vol. 3 (Paris, 1962), Chap. 19.Google Scholar

96 Wicks, Robert S., “A Survey of Native Southeast Asian Coinage” (Ph.D. thesis, Cornell University, 1983).Google Scholar

97 Gutman, P., “The Ancient Coinage of Southeast Asia”, Journal of the Siam Society 66 (1978): 13.Google Scholar

98 Srisuchat, T., “The Early Historic Sites”, p. 127.Google Scholar

99 Veeraprajak, K., “Inscriptions from South Thailand”, SPAFA Consultative Workshop, pp. 131–43.Google Scholar

100 Stargardt, J., “The Isthmus of the Malay Peninsula in Long-distance Navigation — New Archaeological Findings”, Trade and Shipping in the Southern Seas (SPAFA, 1984), p. 6.Google Scholar

101 Evans, I.H.N., “Excavations at Tanjong Rawa, Kuala Selinsing, Perak”, Journal of the Federated Malay States Museum 15 (1932): 79134Google Scholar ; Sieveking, G. de, “The Iron Age Collections of Malaya”, JMBRAS 29 (1956): 79138Google Scholar.

102 Evans, p. 89.

103 O'Connor, S.J., Hindu Gods of Peninsular Siam (Ascona, 1972), p. 39.Google Scholar

104 O'Connor, S.J., The Archaeology of Peninsular Siam (Bangkok, 1986), pp. 159–63.Google Scholar

105 O'Connor, S.J., Hindu Gods, p. 39.Google Scholar

106 Wales, H.G. Quaritch, “Archaeological Researches on Ancient Indian Colonization in Malaya”, JMBRAS 18 (1940): 185.Google Scholar

107 Das, S.R., Rajbadidanga: 1962 (Asiatic Society, 1968), p. 25.Google Scholar

108 Taylor, K.W., The Birth of Vietnam (Berkeley, 1983), pp. 312–13.Google Scholar

109 Higham, C.F.W., “The Ban Chiang Culture in Wider Perspective”, Proceedings of the British Academy 69 (1983): 253.Google Scholar

110 Wolters, O. W., Early Indonesian Commerce (Ithaca, 1967), p. 40.Google Scholar

111 Wang, G.W., “The Nanhai Trade”, JMBRAS 31 (1958): 8.Google Scholar

112 Ibid., p. 90.

113 Wolters, O.W., History, Culture and Region in Southeast Asian Perspectives (Singapore, 1982), p. 2.Google Scholar