ID | 147664 |
Title Proper | Transitions from late prehistory to early historic periods in mainland Southeast Asia, c. early to mid-first millennium CE |
Language | ENG |
Author | Stephen A. Murphy and Miriam T. Stark ; Murphy, Stephen A ; Stark, Miriam T |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Studies of early Southeast Asia focus largely on its ‘classical states’, when rulers and their entourages from Sukhothai and Ayutthaya (Thailand), Angkor (Cambodia), Bagan (Myanmar), Champa and Dai Viet (Vietnam) clashed, conquered, and intermarried one another over an approximately six-century-long quest for legitimacy and political control. Scholarship on Southeast Asia has long held that such transformations were largely a response to outside intervention and external events, or at least that these occurred in interaction with a broader world system in which Southeast Asians played key roles. As research gathered pace on the prehistory of the region over the past five decades or so, it has become increasingly clear that indigenous Southeast Asian cultures grew in sophistication and complexity over the Iron Age in particular. This has led archaeologists to propose much greater agency in regard to the selective adaptation of incoming Indic beliefs and practices than was previously assumed under early scholarship of the nineteenth and early to mid-twentieth century. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of South East Asian Studies Vol. 47, No.3; Oct 2016: p.333-340 |
Journal Source | Journal of South East Asian Studies 2016-09 47, 3 |
Key Words | Transitions ; Mainland Southeast Asia |