ABSTRACT

This book traces connections in pre-modern Asia by looking at different worlds across geography, history and society. It examines how regions were connected by people, families, trade and politics as well as how they were maintained and remembered. The volume analyses these intersections of memory and narrative, of people and places and the routes that took people to these places, using a variety of sources. It also studies whether these intersections remain in later and present times, and their larger impact on our understanding of history.

The narratives cover several journeys drawn from archaeology, texts and cultural imagination: trade routes, marts, fairs, forts, religious pilgrimages, inscriptions, calligraphy and coinages spanning diverse regions, including India–Tibet–British forays, India–Malay intersections, corporate enterprise in the Indian Ocean, impacts of slave trade in Southeast Asia shaped by the Dutch East India company, movements and migrations around Indo-Iranian borderlands and those in western and southern India.

The book will greatly interest scholars and researchers of history and archaeology, cultural studies and literature.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Intersections: narratives, routes and marts in the pre-modern Asian world

chapter 1|28 pages

Imagination, Memory and History

Narrating India-Malay intersections in the early modern period

chapter 3|12 pages

Movements and Migrations Around the Porous Indo-Iranian Borderlands

The view from archaeology and texts (c. third century BCE–third century CE)

chapter 6|11 pages

Goa at the Intersection of World Trade Routes in the Pre-Modern Age

Strangers at home and at home with strangers

chapter 11|8 pages

Fairs and Pilgrimages as Points of Intersections

The case of medieval western Maharashtra

chapter 12|7 pages

Continuing Routes, Changed Intersections

A study of Fort St. George (Madras) in the seventeenth century