2002
DOI: 10.1017/s001041750200021x
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From the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean: Medieval History in Geographic Perspective

Abstract: It is widely acknowledged that Orientalist notions of political economy were marred by geographic determinism. From Marx to Wittfogel, generic concepts such as the "Asiatic mode of production," the "hydraulic state" or "Oriental despotism" involved simplistic observations relating to climate and, particularly, the presence of large rivers and alluvial plains which were invoked to explain essential and persistent differences with the West. 1 Considering its overwhelmingly important role in this earlier literatu… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…L2 may similarly have an origin in East‐West maritime trade across the Indian Ocean, as we infer it arose from a migration event from Eastern Africa to South Eastern Asia during the 1st millennium BCE. In this era, increased sophistication in ship technology allowed for longer voyages (Blench, ; Kent, ; Parkin & Barnes, ; Ray, ; Ray & Salles, ; Wink, ). L2 appears to have spread out of Southeast Asia, a highly connected region in our analyses of M.tb migration, and is currently found across Eastern Eurasia and throughout South Eastern Asia (Figures , , and ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…L2 may similarly have an origin in East‐West maritime trade across the Indian Ocean, as we infer it arose from a migration event from Eastern Africa to South Eastern Asia during the 1st millennium BCE. In this era, increased sophistication in ship technology allowed for longer voyages (Blench, ; Kent, ; Parkin & Barnes, ; Ray, ; Ray & Salles, ; Wink, ). L2 appears to have spread out of Southeast Asia, a highly connected region in our analyses of M.tb migration, and is currently found across Eastern Eurasia and throughout South Eastern Asia (Figures , , and ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…East‐West contact and trade across the Indian Ocean intensified in the first millennium BCE, when maritime networks expanded to include the eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea, and the Black Sea (Boussac & Salles, ; Dilke, ; Ray & Salles, ; Salles, ). Historical data from the Roman era indicate that crews on trading ships crossing the Indian Ocean comprised fluid assemblages of individuals from diverse regions, brought together under conditions favourable for the transmission of TB (André & Filliozat, ; Begley & De Puma, ; Rauh, ; Wink, ). These ships would have been an efficient means of spreading M.tb among the distant regions involved in trade.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our understanding of the Indian Ocean World is often presented as a largely Eurasian-centred view -in which connections have been followed across an Asian world (typically between Western Asia, India and South East Asia), with links to Europe through either through the Red Sea or Gulf routes, either in Classical antiquity or from the early modern period (Chaudhuri 1985(Chaudhuri , 1990McLaughlin 2014). When it has been visualised as a world system (Abu Lugard 1989), or as networks (Wink 2002), the entire western seaboard of the Indian Ocean is normally omitted -thus excluding the eastern African coast, typically from Ras Guardafui to Madagascar and southern Africa.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The symbiotic articulation of a 'sense of place' in maps and literature in early modern England is the focus of Sanford's ( 2002) study, while Kline (2001) provides a detailed examination of the literary, visual, oral and textual evidence of the medieval mappa mundi, particularly the Hereford mappa mundi, setting them within the context of medieval art, history and cosmology. Many studies are concerned with the morphology and cosmology of medieval cities (although see Wink, 2002, for a challenge to the emphasis on cities as the prime sites of medieval economic and cultural change). Work includes specific studies of towns and cities (Baigent, 2002;Yamamura, 2002) to more wide-ranging accounts of medieval urban life such as Lilley's Urban life in the Middle Ages 1000Ages -1450Ages (2001.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%