Fr. 45.90

Muslim Merchants of Premodern China - The History of a Maritime Asian Trade Diaspora, 750-1400

Englisch · Taschenbuch

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Informationen zum Autor John W. Chaffee is Distinguished Service Professor in the Departments of History and Asian and Asian American Studies at Binghamton University, State University of New York. He also directs the Institute for Asia and Asian Diasporas. He co-edited with Professor Denis Twitchett Volume 5 of The Cambridge History of China: Sung China, 960–1279, Part 2 (Cambridge, 2015). Klappentext In this major new history of Muslim merchants and their trade links with China, John W. Chaffee uncovers 700 years of history, from the eighth century, when Muslim communities first established themselves in southeastern China, through the fourteenth century, when trade all but ceased. These were extraordinary and tumultuous times. Under the Song and the Mongols, the Muslim diaspora in China flourished as legal and economic ties were formalized. At other times the Muslim community suffered hostility and persecution. Chaffee shows how the policies of successive dynastic regimes in China combined with geopolitical developments across maritime Asia to affect the fortunes of Muslim communities. He explores social and cultural exchanges, and how connections were maintained through faith and a common acceptance of Muslim law. This ground breaking contribution to the history of Asia, the early Islamic world, and to maritime history explores the networks that helped to shape the pre-modern world. Zusammenfassung An engaging new history of the Muslim merchants who settled in China's port cities from the eighth to fourteenth centuries. As a far-flung trade diaspora bound by a common faith! they contributed greatly to the maritime trade that flourished across maritime Asia and which helped to shape the pre-modern world. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; 1. Merchants of an imperial trade; 2. The reorientation of trade; 3. The maturation of merchant communities; 4. Mongols and the concentration of merchant power; 5. Endings and continuities....

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