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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-027.mrc:74076349:18134
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-027.mrc:74076349:18134?format=raw

LEADER: 18134cam a2200553 i 4500
001 13201416
005 20180329164629.0
008 160330s2017 enkab b 001 0 eng c
010 $a 2016015197
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn911799173
040 $aNIC/DLC$beng$erda$cCOO$dDLC$dPUL$dYDXCP$dBTCTA$dBDX$dOCLCF$dSINLB$dIUL$dCHVBK$dUX0$dOCLCO
019 $a963361239$a963363740
020 $a9780415735537$q(hardback : alk. paper)
020 $a041573553X
020 $a9780415735544$q(pbk. : alk. paper)
020 $a0415735548
020 $z9781315641119$q(e-book)
020 $z1315641119
029 1 $aCHBIS$b010634334
029 1 $aCHVBK$b375245480
029 1 $aAU@$b000059562233
035 $a(OCoLC)911799173$z(OCoLC)963361239$z(OCoLC)963363740
042 $apcc
043 $aas-----
050 00 $aDS523$b.M55 2017
082 00 $a959/.01$223
049 $aZCUA
100 1 $aMiksic, John N.,$eauthor.
245 10 $aAncient Southeast Asia /$cJohn N. Miksic and Geok Yian Goh.
264 1 $aLondon :$bRoutledge/Taylor & Francis Group,$c2017.
300 $axxi, 631 pages :$billustrations, maps ;$c25 cm.
336 $atext$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$2rdacarrier
490 1 $aRoutledge world archaeology
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 553-609) and index.
520 $a"Provides readers with a much needed synthesis of the latest discoveries and research in the archaeology of region, presenting the evolution of complex societies in Southeast Asia from the protohistoric period, beginning around 500 BC, to the arrival of British and Dutch colonists in 1600. Well-illustrated throughout, this comprehensive account explores the factors which established Southeast Asia as a region of unique cultural fusion. Miksic and Goh explore how the local population exploited the abundant resources available, developing maritime transport routes which resulted in economic and cultural wealth, including some of the most elaborate art styles and monumental complexes ever constructed"--$cProvided by publisher.
505 00 $aMachine generated contents note:$g1.$tIntroduction: History, culture, and art in Seasia --$tDefining Seasia --$tSeasian demography --$tregion in search of a name and an identity --$tTheory in Seasian historical archaeology --$timportance of inter-regional comparisons --$timportance of links between Seasia and the world --$tWorld-systems theory, globalization, and interaction spheres --$tCultural evolution and environmental adaptation --$tPeriods of Seasian history, 500 BCE to 1600 CE --$tArt, technology, and society --$trole of the artist in early Seasia --$trole of the written word in early Seasia --$tArchaeology in Seasia --$tEthnicity and archaeology --$tDimensions of cultural evolution in Classic Seasia --$tUrbanization --$tMaritime trade --$tReligion --$tTechnology and art --$tMonumental construction --$tStatus of women --$tHistoriography of Seasia --$tframework for analysis of Classic Seasia: Political, artistic, and economic variables --$tCities and settlement patterns --$tSeasian concepts of settlement types --$tConclusion --$g2.$tEnvironments, languages, cultures, and people --$tGeography and climate --$tBiodiversity and exchange networks --$tSeasonality and culture --$tEquatorial ecology and human adaptation --$tGenes, artifacts, and languages --$tLanguage distribution --$tSubregions and mandalas --$tSettlement pattern studies in Seasia --$tTopography: The sea unites, the land divides --$tSubregions of the tropical mainland: Defining subregions --$tSubregions of Seasia --$gType 1$tMainland river systems: Chao Phraya, Ayeyarwadi, Mekong, and Red --$tSubregions along the Mekong --$tLower Mekong: Northern portion --$tFoothills of the Seasian massif --$tKhorat Plateau --$tNorth Cambodian subregion --$tMekong Delta --$tChao Phraya --$tAyeyarwadi (Irrawaddy) --$tDry Zone of central Myanmar --$tRakhine (Arakan) --$tRed River --$tSouth Vietnam littoral --$gType 2$tmainland massif --$tShan Plateau --$tCardamom Mountains --$tCentral highlands of Vietnam --$tSubregions of the equatorial region and the eastern isles --$gType 3$tSiamo-Malay peninsula and the Seasian archipelago --$tisthmian region: From the Isthmus of Kra to the fringe of the equatorial zone --$tPeninsular Malaysia --$tSouth China Sea --$tMangrove fringes and sea nomads --$tIslands west of the Wallace Line --$tSumatra --$tNorth coast Sumatra (Barus, Aceh, Kota Cina) --$tSoutheast Sumatra --$tNorth coastal Java: The pesisir --$tNorth Bali --$tKalimantan (Borneo) --$tPhilippines --$gType 4$tIsland hinterlands --$tSumatra: Central Rift valleys, Pasemah, Rejang Lebong --$tJava: The pedalaman, or hinterland --$tSouth Bali --$tLombok --$tSulawesi --$g3.$tPrehistory: Two million to 2,000 years ago --$tend of the Palaeolithic and the beginning of the next phase --$tPalaeolithic-Neolithic-Bronze-Iron Age system and its discontents --$tDiffusion vs. independent origin; influence vs. appropriation --$tMigration and in situ evolution --$tPreclassic period --$tMegaliths --$tMaritime skills --$tPleistocene: Palaeolithic tools and human fossils --$tEarly research on Seasian palaeontology --$tPleistocene technology --$tPalaeolithic artifacts beyond Java --$tUpper Palaeolithic --$tSummary --$tHolocene: From the end of the Ice Age to the beginning of history --$tHoabinhian --$tNeolithic = agriculture? --$tToalian --$tearly Metal Age: Metal and society --$tDongson culture: 500 BCE to 200 CE --$tDongson drum distribution as an indicator of a sphere of artistic interaction --$tCo Loa --$tMoats, ramparts, mounds, and settlement patterns of mainland Seasia --$toldest ramparted and moated sites: The banteay kou of Cambodia and Vietnam --$tMoats and ramparts in the Angkor area --$tKhorat --$tSites, cemeteries, and artifacts --$tMoats and nature --$tEarly miners --$tChao Phraya valley --$tIron Age of central and northeast Thailand --$tgrowth of trade --$tIron Age influence from India? --$tTrading ports of the Preclassic era --$tRegional symbiosis in the Preclassic? --$tKhao Sam Kaeo --$tEvidence for a foreign enclave --$twestern terminus: Phu Khao Thong --$tSouthern peninsular ports of the Preclassic --$tMainland markets: Ban Don Ta Phet, Chansen --$tPreclassic cultures of the South China Sea: Sahuynh and Kalanay --$tArtifacts and interaction spheres --$tProtoclassic in the eastern archipelago --$tBali --$tKalimantan (Borneo) --$tSikendeng Buddha --$g4.$tProtoclassic: 1 to 600 CE --$tHistorical sources --$tGeomorphology and history --$tSettlement patterns: Dendritic and central place models --$tRelations between Buddhism and Hinduism --$tNan Yue and Sinification --$tAu Lac --$tNan Yue --$tSinification of northern Vietnam --$tFunan --$tArchaeology of Funan --$tEpigraphy of Funan --$tAngkor Borei --$tCeramics --$tOc-eo's hinterland --$tBanteay Prei Nokor --$tProhear --$tAngkor region --$tUpper Mun valley, Khorat Plateau: Non Ban Jak --$tSeasia and South Asia --$tKings, gods, and gods of the kings (devaraja) --$tTemples --$tGods, gurus, and ancestors --$tCaste system --$tWriting and literature --$tHistoriography of Indian contact with Seasia --$tSeasians in India --$tisthmian region and early maritime trade --$tDunsun --$tPanpan --$tVisnu images and Buddhist stupas --$tLangkasuka --$tTha Chana --$tKhao Sam Kaeo --$tKhlong Thorn (Khuan Luk Pat), Krabi --$tChampa --$tChampa and Lin Yi --$tVocanh --$tDevanika and overland trade --$tSingapura --$tMy Son --$tArt --$tArchaeology --$tCentral and northeast Thailand: Prelude to Dvaravati --$tCoinage --$tProtoclassic sites in central Thailand --$tU Thong --$tPhong Tuek --$tChansen --$tPhromthin Tai --$tNakhon Pathom --$tBan Khu Muang --$tNortheast Thailand --$tWalled settlements in Myanmar's dry zone --$tBeikthano --$tHalin --$tMaingmaw --$tWodi --$tSri Ksetra --$tDating the sites --$tWalls, moats, and other structural features --$tSite sizes --$tLocation and topography --$tArtifacts --$tarchaeological culture? --$tEarly urban sites? --$tProtoclassic period in the Straits of Melaka (peninsular Malaysia and Sumatra) --$teffect of wind on history --$tProtoclassic sites: Sentang, Air Sugihan, and Karangagung Tengah, South Sumatra --$tKota Kapur, Bangka Island --$tKedah, northwest Malaysia --$tArchaeological research in Kedah: Sungai Mas (Golden River) and Sungai Batu (Stone River) --$tFunan connections and early ships --$trise of Sumatra and the decline of Oc-eo --$tProtoclassic Java --$tBuni Complex --$tJava in early inscriptions and texts --$tGe-ying --$tHe-lo-dan --$tTaruma (Taruma) --$tCibuaya Delta: Batujaya and Cibuaya --$tEarly Buddha images --$g5.$tEarly Classic: 600 to 900 CE --$tEarly Classic economy --$tLabour and human relations --$tIndonesian money --$tUrbanization --$tCities as forts: Warfare in the Early Classic period --$tArchitecture: Temple building --$tsima --$tEarly Buddhism --$tBrahminism --$tRulership in Seasia --$tState formation --$tmandala model --$tTitles --$tRules of succession --$tdevaraja --$tPatron-client ties --$tEarly classic culture in the Chao Phraya basin and the Khorat Plateau --$tDvaravati --$tInscriptions --$tArt of Dvaravati --$tDharmacakra/wheel of the law --$tPhrakhon Chai hoard --$tCoins and medals --$tDvaravati sites --$tNakhon Pat horn --$tU Thong --$tPhong Tuek --$tPhanom Surin shipwreck, Samut Sakhon Province --$tKamphaeng Saen --$tSi Thep --$tMuang Phra Rot --$tMuang Si Mahasot --$tKhorat and the Siamo-Malay Peninsula --$tSema stones of northeast Thailand --$tEarly Classic pottery of Khorat --$tMuang Sema --$tSri Canasa (Chanasa) --$tMuang Fa Daed 259 --$tKhmer power in the Mun River valley --$tEarly Classic temples in Thailand --$tEarly Classic Cambodia --$tbeginning of the Angkor period --$tWat Phu and Champassak, southern Laos --$tTrans-Annamite Cordillera connections --$tZhenla --$tZhenla and Sambor Prei Kuk --$tReturn to Angkor Borei --$tEarly Classic Angkor --$tMahendraparvata and Phnom Kulen (Hill of Lychees) --$tHariharalaya --$tPreah Ko --$tPre-Bagan Myanmar: Sri Ksetra and Tagaung --$tTagaung: The polity of the north --$tEarly Classic Sri Ksetra --$tRegional connections --$tSummary --$tWalled settlements in lower Myanmar and Arakan: Suvannabhumi and Vesali --$tLower Myanmar: Suvannabhumi --$twestern littoral: Vesali and Dhanyawadi --$tKedah and south Thailand in the Early Classic --$tisthmian region --$tTakuapa --$tChaiya --$tLangkasuka --$tLigor inscription --$tChitu, the Red Earth kingdom --$tDandan --$tKedah: Southern Kalah --$tKuala Selinsing --$tSrivijaya: At the crossroads of the world --$tYijing (635 -- 713) --$tInscriptions of Srivijaya --$tTalang Tuwo inscription --$tSrivijaya's capital --$tSrivijaya and China --$tKarimun inscription --$treligion of Srivijaya --$tNalanda and Srivijaya --$tArabo-Persian sources --$tArchaeology of Palembang --$tTrade and society in Srivijaya and Sumatra --$tLocal trade in Sumatra --$tUpstream, downstream, and overland --$tSumatran transport and settlement: Regional analysis --$tSulawesi and Borneo during the Early Classic --$tEast Kalimantan --$tWest Kalimantan --$tSulawesi --$tHistory of Early Classic Java to 800 --$tChinese sources and the transfer to central Java --$tJavanese sources of Classic history --$tTuk Mas --$tCanggal/Mount Wukir --$tOld Malay inscriptions of Java --$tSailendra (Shailendra) --$tKings and a queen of Java, ninth century --$tSignificant inscriptions --$tEconomy and trade in central Java --$tcash economy --$tWonoboyo hoard and the royal hermitage --$tBelitung shipwreck --$tLegend and history in central Java: Archaeological sites of the ninth century --$tDieng Plateau --$tBuddhist temples of central Java --$tKalasan --$tSewu --$tPlaosan --$tRatubaka --$tBorobudur
505 00 $aNote continued:$tPrambanan and the resurgence of Hinduism --$tend of the Early Classic period in Java --$tEarly Classic Bali --$tChampa: The northern phase --$tChampa in texts --$tReligion in Champa --$tArchitecture of Champa --$tProtectorate of Annam --$tninth-century crisis --$tAfter Annam: The foundation of independent Vietnam --$g6.$tMiddle Classic: 900 to 1200 CE --$tUrbanization --$tEconomic systems of the Middle Classic period --$tChinese immigration --$tLate Srivijaya --$tEast Java --$tClothing and textiles --$tBagan: Buddhist mandala --$tBuddhist oecumene --$tIntercultural exchanges within the oecumene --$tBagan art and architecture --$tBagan as an urban center --$tdemise of Bagan --$ttriumph of Angkor --$tKhmer king and the naga queen --$tHarsavarman I (Harsavarman, Harshavarman) --$tJayavarman IV and the move to Koh Ker --$tend of the Jayavarman II dynasty and the rise of the Dynasty of the Sun --$tMahidharapura dynasty --$tAngkor Wat --$tJayavarman VII, the builder --$tAngkor Thorn --$tTemples of Jayavarman VII --$tBayon --$tMajor monuments of Jayavarman VII --$tPreah Pithu --$tTa Prohm --$tBanteay Kdei --$tCommon people of Angkor --$teconomy --$tSettlement --$tCeramics in Angkor: Local and Chinese --$tWater and Angkor --$tReligions of the Classic period --$tKhmer Empire in Khorat and the Chao Phraya basin --$tPhimai --$tOther major Khmer sites in Thailand --$tTambralingga --$tGeography and resources --$tArchaeology and ceramics --$tSrivijaya, 900 to 1030 --$tChola invasion of 1025 --$tPalembang after 1030 --$tTanah Abang (Bumi Ayu) --$tKedah archaeology in the Middle Classic --$tForeign enclaves in north Sumatra --$tBarus --$tKota Cina --$tMalayu and Muara Jambi --$tWhere did Atisha go? --$tArchaeology of Jambi --$teconomy --$tInscriptions --$tCandi Gumpung consecration deposits --$tMiddle Classic sites of the hinterland: Padang Lawas, Muara Takus --$tButuan, Mait, and Brunei --$tNorth Borneo --$tMiddle Classic Java --$tperiod of east Javanese unity: Wawa to Airlangga --$tJavanese kings of the tenth century --$tKings of Kediri and Janggala --$tLiterature of the Kediri period --$tArchaeological sites of the Middle Classic --$tPenanggungan: The holy mountain of east Java --$teconomy of Middle Classic Java --$tWest Java during the Middle Classic --$tBali --$tBalinese economy --$tSembiran edicts --$tArchaeological sites of Middle Classic Bali --$tShipwrecks of the Middle Classic --$tIntan --$tCirebon (Nanhan) and Karawang --$tJepara --$tDai Viet (Ly dynasty) and Champa --$tLy kingship --$tBuddhism in Ly dynasty Dai Viet --$tLy art and iconography --$tThang Long Citadel --$tRole of trade in the development of Dai Viet --$tDai Viet's relations with Champa --$tMiddle Classic Champa --$tCham architecture --$tConclusion --$g7.$tLate Classic: 1200 to 1400 CE --$tUrban life in China during the Late Classic --$tMoney in the Late Classic --$tEarly Chinese maritime guidebooks --$tintroduction of Islam --$tEarly Islamic sites of Southeast Asia --$tEarly Islam in Java: Majapahit --$tSukhothai, Ayutthaya, Lan Xang, and other early Thai kingdoms --$tSukhothai and the beginning of Muang Thai --$tAyutthaya: The golden age --$tLan Na: "A million ricefields" and the center of the north --$tLan Xang, "A million elephants": Progenitor of Laos --$tFragmented states of Myanmar --$tMyanmar in the Late Classic --$tLate Classic east Java and Bali --$tSinghasari --$tMajapahit --$tLife in the capital city --$tCommerce --$tArchaeology of Majapahit --$tsite of Trowulan --$tTemple sites of the upper Brantas valley --$tCandi Kidal --$tCandi Jago --$tSinghasari --$tCandi Jawi --$tNgrimbi --$tPanataran --$tLate Classic literature --$tDesavarnana --$tPararaton --$tKunjarakarna --$tSutasoma --$tParthayajna --$tSivaratrikalpa --$tBali --$tLate Classic sites in Borneo --$tLate Classic Sumatra: Malayu --$tAdityavarman --$tClassic archaeology in the west Sumatran highlands --$tlegal code from Kerinci --$tPadang Lawas --$tTran dynasty and Champa --$tMongol invasions between 1257 and 1288 --$tCham invasions of the late fourteenth century --$tTechnology and industry during the Tran period --$tBuddhist art, architecture, and iconography --$tChampa --$tCham architecture --$tCham kilns --$tEnd of the Tran dynasty --$tBarus, Aceh, Brunei --$tAceh: Lambri --$tSamudera-Pasai --$tMuslim tombstones of the Late Classic period --$tBrunei --$tArchaeology of Brunei --$tTemasik --$tSunda Pajajaran --$tArchaeology of Late Classic west Java --$tArchaeology of Sunda: Banten Girang --$tUnderwater archaeology of the Late Classic --$tPulau Buaya --$tJava Sea wreck --$tSabah: The Jade Dragon wreck --$tTanjong Simpang Mengayau wreck --$tBreaker Shoal wreck --$g8.$tPostclassic: 1400 to 1600 CE --$timpact of the Ming dynasty on Seasia and the disappearance of overseas Chinese communities --$tArrival of Europeans --$tShipwrecks of the Postclassic period --$tTuriang --$tBakau (Maranei) wreck --$tRoyal Nanhai --$tBukit Jakas --$tPandanan wreck --$tCu Lao Cham --$tBrunei Junk --$tLena Shoal Junk --$tFall of Angkor, fragmented polities in Vietnam and Champa --$tFall of Angkor: The move to Longvek and Phnom Penh --$tFragmented polities in Vietnam and Champa: Ho, Le So, Mac, Le (north), and Nguyen (south) --$tHo dynasty (1400 -- 1407) --$tMing occupation of Vietnam (1407 -- 1427) --$tLe So/Le dynasty (1428 -- 1527) --$tMac Interregnum (1527 -- 1592) --$tChampa and the Nguyen (1558 -- 1788) in the south --$tHeirs of Srivijaya and Malayu: Palembang and Melaka --$tMelaka --$tPostclassic Sanskritic culture in Java --$tChinese sources --$tTemples and religion of the Postclassic period --$tPenanggungan --$tLawu --$tWest Java --$tOther Postclassic sites of the fifteenth century --$tSumatra: Aceh --$tAru --$tBorneo (Brunei) --$tIslam in Java --$tPostclassic Islamic sites: Java --$tGresik --$tTuban --$tDemak --$tMelaka's successor: Banten Lama --$tArrival of Europeans.
651 0 $aSoutheast Asia$xAntiquities.
651 0 $aSoutheast Asia$xHistory$yTo 1500.
650 7 $aAntiquities.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00810745
651 7 $aSoutheast Asia.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01240499
651 7 $aSüdostasien$2gnd$0(DE-588)4058448-3
648 7 $aTo 1500$2fast
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01411628
700 1 $aGoh, Geok Yian,$eauthor.
830 0 $aRoutledge world archaeology.
852 00 $bbar$hDS523$i.M55 2017