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MARITIME TRADITION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   187137


From sea to the shore: texts, traditions and the maritime practices in the western Indian Ocean, 1600–1800 AD / Chowdhary, Mir Kamruzzaman   Journal Article
Chowdhary, Mir Kamruzzaman Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract When it comes to the maritime history of the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), there are few available textual resources and written pieces of evidence which can help undertake a cogent reconstruction. This article attempts to retrieve some of those maritime practices that prevailed among the mariners and sailors on the basis of a few available written documents, such as travellers’ accounts, Mughal court chronicles, European factory records and other written documents. Such historical reconstruction is important since, in the past few decades, the Indian Ocean has become significant object of study in its own right. The article seeks to recover “forgotten” oceanic histories of law or practices in the western IOR, and examine how these got institutionalised as admiralty law in India. More precisely, it focuses on the process of the transformation of maritime law from tradition to admiralty law in some detail.
Key Words Indian Ocean  Islamic Law  Littoral  Maritime Tradition  Admiralty Law 
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2
ID:   133062


History of the twenty-first-century Chinese Navy / Cole, Bernard D   Journal Article
Cole, Bernard D Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract China historically has been a continental rather than a maritime power, despite its more than eleven thousand miles of coastline and more than six thousand islands. It has more often viewed the sea as a potential invasion route for foreign aggressors rather than as a medium for achieving national goals, a tendency that has contributed to the weakness of the Chinese maritime tradition. This attitude had changed by the beginning of the twenty-first century. The remarkable growth of China's economy beginning in the last two decades of the twentieth century, the broadening of Beijing's global political and economic interests, and resolution of almost all border disputes with its many contiguous neighbors have contributed to increased attention to threats to the vital sea lines of communication (SLO Cs) on which China increasingly depends.
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