Las redes comerciales precoloniales en el sureste de Asia
Main Article Content
Keywords
Sureste Asiático, Redes Comerciales, Diásporas Marítimas, China, India, Medio Oriente
Resumen
El Sureste Asiático es una región que actualmente constituye un centro económico, político y cultural de gran importancia en el mundo. Para llegar a serlo ha pasado por una serie de diferentes procesos históricos complejos de larga data, uno de los cuales son las redes comerciales interregionales desarrolladas durante los siglos XIII-XV, antes de la llegada de representantes de poderes imperiales europeos y la posterior colonización. Su posición geopolíticamente estratégica, como parte de la red principal de comercio entre China, el Sureste de Asia, la India y el Medio Oriente, hizo que esta región experimentara una interacción religiosa, cultural, política y comercial, gracias a las diásporas marítimas. A lo largo de la historia, el Sureste Asiático se ha constituido como un espacio dinámico, caracterizado por un movimiento de personas y objetos; cuyo dinamismo data de un período anterior al contacto con europeos. En ese sentido, se hace pertinente el análisis de las redes de intercambio previas a dicho contacto, las cuales a su vez permitirán comprender el contexto actual regional e identificar las características que forjaron su historia y dejaron la huella en las relaciones comerciales visibles aún en el mundo contemporáneo.
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Di Meglio, R. R. (1970). Arab Trade with Indonesia and the Malay Peninsula from the 8th to the 16th Century. En Islam and the trade of Asia: A colloquium. Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 105-135.
Gunn, G. C. (2011).History without borders: The making of an Asian world region, 1000-1800.Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
Hall, K. R (2010).Ports-of-Trade, Maritime Diasporas, and Networks of Trade and Cultural Integration in the Bay of Bengal Region of the Indian Ocean: c. 1300-1500.Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 53, 109-148.
Hamashita, T. (2011).The Lidai Baoan and the Ryukyu Maritime Tributary Trade Network with China and Southeast Asia, the fourteenth to Seventeenth Centuries. En Chinese Circulations: Capital, Commodities, and Networks in Southeast Asia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, pp 107-130.
Heng, D. (2009).Sino-Malay Trade and Diplomacy from The Tenth through the fourteenth Century. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press.
Lieberman, V.(2003, 2009) Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c. 800-1830, Vol.1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
_____ (2010).Maritime influences in Southeast Asia, c. 900–1300: Some further thoughts. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 41, pp 529-539.
Meilink-Roelofsz, M.A.P (1970). Trade and Islam in the Malay-Indonesian Archipelago Prior to the Arrival of the Europeans. EnD.S. Richards (Ed), Islam and the trade of Asia. Brunon Cassirer Oxford and University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 137-158.
Prabha, R. H. (1989). Early Maritime Contacts between South and Southeast Asia.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, vol. 20, No. 1 pp. 42-54.
Reid, A.(1993).Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, 1450-1680, Vol.2: Expansion and Crisis. New Haven: Yale University Press.
_____ (1988).Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, 1450-1680, Vol.1: The Lands below the Winds. New Haven: Yale University Press.
_____ (2000).Chams in the Southeast Asian Maritime System. En Charting the shape of early modern Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asia Studies.
_____ (2011).Chinese on the Mining Frontier in Southeast Asia. En Chinese Circulations: Capital, Commodities, and Networks in Southeast Asia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011, pp. 21-37.
Shaffer, L. (1996). Maritime Southeast Asia to 1500. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.
Solheim, W. G. (2006).Archaeology and Culture in Southeast Asia: Unraveling the Nusantao. Manila: University of the Philippines Press. 16 Que corresponde a los tres pilares actuales en aras de alcanzar una Comunidad ASEAN en el 2020: la Comunidad Económica, la Comunidad política y de Seguridad, y la Comunidad Socio cultural.
Stuart-Fox, M. (2003). Sea Power, tribute and trade.En A short history of China and Southeast Asia: tribute, trade and influence. Sydney: Allen &Unwin, pp.73-94.
Sluglett, P. (2012). La propagación del Islam en el Sureste Asiático c.1275-c.1625. Singapur, Universidad Nacional de Singapur. Middle East Institute, no. 55.
Tagliacozzo, E. & Chang, W. (2011).The Arc of Historical Commercial Relations between China and Southeast Asia. En Chinese Circulations: Capital, Commodities, and Networks in Southeast Asia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. pp 1-17.
Taylor, K. (1992). The Early Kingdoms. En The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia, vol 1, From Early Times to c.1800. Tarling, N. (Ed). Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress, pp. 137-82.
Wade, G. (2009). An Early Age of Commerce in Southeast Asia, 900-1300 CE. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, vol. 40, no. 2. pp. 221-265