Old Malacca
Seiten
1996
|
New edition
OUP Australia and New Zealand (Verlag)
978-983-56-0012-8 (ISBN)
OUP Australia and New Zealand (Verlag)
978-983-56-0012-8 (ISBN)
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A thriving fishing settlement centuries before Parameswara arrived in AD 1400, Malacca became one of the most important trade centres in the world. Drawing on early chronicles and travellers' tales, this book introduces the golden age of Malacca and the influences that helped shape the modern city.
Beginning as a fishing settlement long before Parameswara, a renegade prince from Palembeng in Sumatra, arrived in about the year 1400, Malacca was to become one of the world's greatest trading centres, 'crammed so full of all kinds of goods that they almost flowed into the river itself' and a strategic port. Its location attracted merchants from China, the East Indies, India and the Persian Gulf, and gave Malacca fame, wealth, and prestige under the Malay sultanate of which it became the centre in its golden age of the fifteenth century. Brought under European control by the Portuguese in 1511, it was captured by the Dutch in 1641 and remained under the Netherlands East Indies Company until 1795 when it was acquired by the British. Finally, Malacca fell into decline as it was overshadowed by the newly established ports of Penang and Singapore. Drawing on travellers' tales, contemporary chronicles, and the work of modern historians, this book introduces the reader to old Malacca and to some of the personalities connected with its history. It concludes with a chapter on modern Malacca and its efforts to build a future and reclaim its past.
Beginning as a fishing settlement long before Parameswara, a renegade prince from Palembeng in Sumatra, arrived in about the year 1400, Malacca was to become one of the world's greatest trading centres, 'crammed so full of all kinds of goods that they almost flowed into the river itself' and a strategic port. Its location attracted merchants from China, the East Indies, India and the Persian Gulf, and gave Malacca fame, wealth, and prestige under the Malay sultanate of which it became the centre in its golden age of the fifteenth century. Brought under European control by the Portuguese in 1511, it was captured by the Dutch in 1641 and remained under the Netherlands East Indies Company until 1795 when it was acquired by the British. Finally, Malacca fell into decline as it was overshadowed by the newly established ports of Penang and Singapore. Drawing on travellers' tales, contemporary chronicles, and the work of modern historians, this book introduces the reader to old Malacca and to some of the personalities connected with its history. It concludes with a chapter on modern Malacca and its efforts to build a future and reclaim its past.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 2.12.1996 |
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Reihe/Serie | Images of Asia Series |
Zusatzinfo | 42 illustrations, (16 colour ) bibliog |
Verlagsort | Melbourne |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 130 x 190 mm |
Gewicht | 171 g |
Themenwelt | Reisen ► Bildbände ► Asien |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Geschichte ► Regional- / Ländergeschichte | |
ISBN-10 | 983-56-0012-0 / 9835600120 |
ISBN-13 | 978-983-56-0012-8 / 9789835600128 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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