On the Eighteenth Century as a Category of Asian History: Van Leur in RetrospectLeonard Blussé, F. S. Gaastra The starting point of this volume is the scathing attack, far-reaching in its consequences, launched in 1942 by J.C. van Leur on the views then current on the character and significance of the 18th century as a category in Asian history. His denial of European pre-eminence in Asian waters represented a direct attack on colonial historiography. The essays here derive from an international conference held 50 years later, to assess the impact of van Leur's work. In part historiographic, in part drawing on new research, they aim to delimit the boundaries of European-Asian interaction, and to provide case studies of what this period actually meant for the history of South and East Aia. |
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Page 109
... Ayutthaya kingdom's territories , and an important trading centre for forest produce . This whole rebellion - especially the identity of its leader - was shrouded in mystery , a subject of much speculation among the foreign residents of ...
... Ayutthaya kingdom's territories , and an important trading centre for forest produce . This whole rebellion - especially the identity of its leader - was shrouded in mystery , a subject of much speculation among the foreign residents of ...
Page 115
... Ayutthaya's grandest wat . As many visitors to Ayutthaya may remember , opposite Wat Maheyong stands an equally impressive edifice : Wat Kudi Dao , the monastery patronized by King Thaisa's younger brother the wang na prince ( later ...
... Ayutthaya's grandest wat . As many visitors to Ayutthaya may remember , opposite Wat Maheyong stands an equally impressive edifice : Wat Kudi Dao , the monastery patronized by King Thaisa's younger brother the wang na prince ( later ...
Page 126
... Ayutthaya kingdom's adminis- trative elite , the khunnang , was gradually absorbing new elements . In the early and mid - seventeenth century the ' Moors ' ( notably the Persians ) assumed a large role in royal trade and administration ...
... Ayutthaya kingdom's adminis- trative elite , the khunnang , was gradually absorbing new elements . In the early and mid - seventeenth century the ' Moors ' ( notably the Persians ) assumed a large role in royal trade and administration ...
Contents
A Short Life in History | 13 |
The Eighteenth Century in Southeast Asia | 39 |
The Long Eighteenth Century and the New Age of Commerce | 57 |
Copyright | |
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activity administration advance agricultural areas Asian Ayutthaya became Bengal British capital cent China Chinese collection colonial commercial commodities Company's continued Coromandel court cultivation dated decades decline demand dominated Dutch East Dutch East Indies early East India Company economic effect eighteenth century Empire English established Europe European evidence example export factory families figures foreign French groups important increase indigenous Indonesian influence institutions interest Japan Japanese Java King labour land late later Letter Leur's Madras merchants million Mughal nineteenth century officials opium period Persian political population ports position present production profit province records region relations result royal rule rulers Sayid seems seventeenth Siam Siamese silver social society sources South Southeast Asia supply textiles trade turn Van Leur village Western
References to this book
Kings, Nobles and Commoners: States and Societies in Early Modern Europe Jeremy Black No preview available - 2004 |