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E-raamat: Secondary Cities & Urban Networking in the Indian Ocean Realm, c. 1400-1800

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Comparative Urban Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jan-1955
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739130438
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Comparative Urban Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jan-1955
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739130438

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With the closure of the overland Silk Road in the fourteenth century following the collapse of the Mongol empire, the Indian Ocean provided the remaining vital link for wider cultural, political, and societal integrations prior to the Western colonial presence. Collectively, these studies explore the history of non-metropolitan urban settings c. 1400-1800 in the Indian Ocean realm, from the Ottoman Empire and the African coastline at the mouth of the Red Sea in the west to China in the east. This was an age of heightened international commercial exchange that pre-dated the European arrival, which in the Indian Ocean paired Islamic expansionism and political authority, and, alternately, in the case of mainland Southeast Asia, partnered Buddhism with new centralizing monarchies. While grounded in multi-disciplinary urban studies literature, the twelve studies in this collection explore secondary center networking, as this networking distinguishes secondary cities from metropolitan centers, which have traditionally received the most scholarly attention. The book features the research of international scholars, whose work addresses the representative history of small cities and urban networking in various parts of the Indian Ocean world in an era of change, allowing them the opportunity to compare approaches, methods, and sources in the hopes of discovering common features as well as notable differences. This volume is the result of a 2007 conference on "The Small City in Global Context," hosted by the Center for Middletown Studies at Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana, intended to expand the field of urban studies by encouraging scholars of diverse global interests and specializations to explore the history of non-metropolitan urban settings.

Arvustused

A very useful and provocative collection of twelve essays on a variety of themes and societies, stretching from China to Sudan. Will be of interest to historians of Asian cities, the Indian Ocean realm's economic and cultural networks, and the Early Modern world generally. -- Craig A. Lockard, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay

Illustrations vii
Contributors ix
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction
Kenneth R. Hall
1
1. Autonomy and Subordination: The Cultural Dynamics of Small Cities
Stephen Morillo
17
2. Suakin: A Port City of the Early Modern Sudan
Jay Spaulding
39
3. India from Aden: Khutba and Muslim Urban Networks in Late Thirteenth-Century India
Elizabeth Lambourn
55
4. At the Intersection of Empire and World Trade: The Chinese Port City of Quanzhou (Zaitun), Eleventh-Fifteenth Centuries
John Chaffee
99
5. Clearing the Fields and Strengthening the Walls: Defending Small Cities in Late Ming China
Kenneth M. Swope
123
6. Secondary Capitals of Dai Viet: Shifting Elite Power Bases
John K. Whitmore
155
7. Coastal Cities in an Age of Transition: Upstream-Downstream Networking and Societal Development in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Maritime Southeast Asia
Kenneth R. Hall
177
8. Missionary Buddhism in a Post-Ancient World: Monks, Merchants, and Colonial Expansion in Seventeenth-Century Cochinchina (Vietnam)
Charles Wheeler
205
9. Religious Networking and Upstream Buddhist Wall Paintings in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Burma
Alexandra Green
233
10. The Ottoman Balkan City: The Periphery as Center in Punitive Spectacle
Charles Argo
259
11. A Tale of Three Cities: Burhanpur from 1400 to 1800
Stewart Gordon
285
12. Secondary Cities and Spatial Templates in South India, 1300-1800
James Heitzman
303
Index 335
Kenneth R. Hall is professor of history at Ball State University.