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Dissolving Hegemony or Changing Trade Pattern? Images of Srivijaya in the Chinese Sources of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

So Kee-Long
Affiliation:
The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Extract

The history of Srivijaya has been one of the most controversial subjects in premodern Southeast Asian history. Among the crucial issues in relation to this subject are the timing and cause of its decline and, in particular, to what extent changes in trade patterns contributed to such a development. Recent scholarship, largely derived from new interpretations of the epigraphical and archaeological findings in Southeast Asia, has contributed much to advance our understanding of this ancient empire. Yet, information available in those sources is still far from adequate to make a conclusive historical judgment. It is thus imperative to re-examine Chinese accounts of Srivijaya in the light of this new scholarship.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1998

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References

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16 There is an extensive literature on the Chinese export ceramics in Southeast Asia during this period. For instance, see Roxas-Lim, Aurora, The Evidence of Ceramics as an Aid in Understanding the Pattern of Trade in the Philippines and Southeast Asia (Bangkok: Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University, 1987), pp. 610Google Scholar. For the uses of Chinese ceramics in different localities in Southeast Asia, see Adhytman, Sumarah, Antique Ceramics Found in Indonesia, Various Uses and Origins (Jakarta: Ceramic Society of Indonesia, 1990), pp. 1822, 3448Google Scholar. For a general account of the export ceramics industry in southern Fujian, see Kee-long, So, “The Trade Ceramics Industry in South Fukien during the Sung”, Journal of Sung & Yuan Studies 24 (1994): 119Google Scholar.

17 Hall, , Maritime Trade, pp. 209214Google Scholar.

18 Tibbetts, , Arabic Texts, pp. 4354. 100128Google Scholar. See in particular those passages on Srivijaya by ‘Aja’ib al-Hind (c.1000), Mukhtasar al-‘Aja’ib (c.1000), Biruni (973–1048), Marwazi (c.1120), Idrisi (d.1165), Ibn Sa'id (d.1274).

19 Wolters, , “Capital of Srivijaya”, pp. 235–36Google Scholar.

20 Lin Tianwei has compiled a comprehensive, though not necessarily complete, list of tributary missions from Srivijaya to the Song court. See Tianwei, Lin, Songdai xiangyao maoyi shigao (Hongkong: Zhongguo xueshe, 1960), pp. 174212Google Scholar. Lin's list is more comprehensive than Wolters' but I still failed to find much information relevant to the internal situation of Srivijayan politics. Such a relationship can always be expected in foreign policy theoretically. To clearly establish a correlation in a constant pattern, e.g., more frequent missions reflect crisis, would be more difficult.

21 Wolters, O.W., “A Few and Miscellaneous pi-chi Jottings on Early Indonesia”, Indonesia 36 (1983): 4965CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Earlier attempts in this regard may be traced back to Groeneveldt, W.P.'s Historical Notes on Indonesia and Malaya Compiled from Chinese Sources (originally published in the Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen 39, in 1880Google Scholar; reprinted in Jakarta by C.V. Bhratara, 1960). These are, however, no longer of much use.

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23 Ibid., p. 55. Words and phrases in brackets are from Hirth, H. and Rockhill, W.W., Chau Ju-kua: His Work on the Chinese and Arab Trade in the twelfth and thirteenth Centuries, entitled Chu-fan-chih (St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1911), p. 64, n.7Google Scholar. Passages in italic are my own translations. For the original text, see Yu, Zhu, Pingzhou ketan (SKQS ed.), 2: 5a/bGoogle Scholar.

24 This is Wolters' translation. See his “pi-chi Jottings”, p. 56. Qufei, Zhou, Lingwai daida (SKQS ed.) 2: 13a/bGoogle Scholar.

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27 Ibid., p. 62. See also Rugua, Zhao, Zhufanzhi jiaozhu, ann. by Feng Zhengjun (Taibei: Shangwu yinshuguan, 1970), pp. 1517Google Scholar.

28 Yuanjing, Chen, Shilin guangji (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1990), 8:48aGoogle Scholar. For a discussion about the author and the date of publication of the book, see the foreword written by Wu Daojing for the 1963 Zhonghua shuju edition. Morita Kenji gives a detailed examination of the extant Yuan, Ming and Japanese editions of this work in his “Jirin kôki no shohanbon ni tsuite”, in Sôdai no chishikijin, ed. kai, Sôshi kenkyû (Tokyo: Kyûko shoin, 1993), pp. 287316Google Scholar.

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30 Yanwei, Zhao, Yunlu manchao (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1996), 5, p. 88Google Scholar.

31 Wolters, , Early Indonesian Commerce, pp. 95127Google Scholar.

32 Wheatley, Paul, “Geographical Notes on Some Commodities involved in Sung Maritime Trade”, Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 32,2 (1959): 119Google Scholar.

33 Tinggui, Ye, Nanfan xiangluGoogle Scholar, quoted in Jing, Chen, Xinzuan xiangpu, 1: 4bGoogle Scholar.

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35 Tinggui, Ye, Nanfan xiangluGoogle Scholar, quoted in Jing, Chen, Xinzuan xiangpu, 1: 3bGoogle Scholar. For a general account of camphor being imported into China, see Toon, Han Wai, “Notes on Bornean Camphor Imported into China”, trans. Kee-long, So, Brunei Museum Journal 6,1 (1985): 131Google Scholar.

36 Jitsuzô, Kuwabara, Hojukô no jiseki (Tokyo: Kazama Shobô, 1935), pp. 5253Google Scholar. For the original text, see Zhufan zhi jiaozhu, p. 49.

37 Kee-long, So, “Economic Developments of South Fukien, 964–1276” (Ph.D. dissertation, Australian National University, 1982), pp. 133–34Google Scholar.

38 Zhiqi, Lin, Zhuozhai wenji (SKQS ed.), 15: 12a/bGoogle Scholar. Partially cited in Li Donghua, 1986, 170, but just to demonstrate that there were many foreign residents in Quanzhou. See also Clark, Hugh, Community, Trade, and Networks: Southern Fujian Province from the Third to the Thirteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991), pp. 127–29 and n. 37CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

39 Hugh Clark has argued that the later account of Zhao should override that of Lin, an argument I do not accept. See his Muslims and Hindus in the Culture and Morphology of Quanzhou from the Tenth to the Thirteenth Century”, Journal of World History 6,1 (1995): 5463Google Scholar.

40 To To, , Song shi (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1977), 433: 12861Google Scholar.

41 Song huiyao jigao, fanyi, 4: 75a. Fujian tongzhi, 1867, 90: 14b.

42 Yanwei, Zhao, Yunlu manchao, 5: 88Google Scholar. For putchuk, see Wheatley, , “Geographical Notes”, p. 62Google Scholar.

43 In contrast, by the early fourteenth century, most became dependencies of Danmaling (Tambralinga) instead. See bianzuan weiyuanhui, Guangzhoushi difangzhi ed., Yuan Dade Nanhai zhi canben (Guangzhou: Renmin chubenshe, 1991), p. 46Google Scholar. The section on foreign countries given in this Yuan gazetteer of Guangzhou noted 11 major polities under whose jurisdictions certain numbers of dependent countries are listed. These polities and their respective numbers of dependencies (in brackets) are given as the following: (1) Vietnam [2]; (2) Champa [71]; (3) Chenla [5]; (4) Siam [1]; (5) Danmaling (Tambralinga?) [12, including Foluoan and Pengfeng]; (6) Srivijaya [17]; (7) Brunei [9]; (8) Dangzhongbuluoguo (?) [25]; (9) Java [16]; (10) Nanpi/Mabaer (Malabar?) [5]; and (11) Dagulin (Quilon?) [33].

44 An intriguing example of similar selective raids on mercantile ships in the Straits of Malacca by the local pirates, i.e., targeting only those from the Indian Ocean, can be found in the early 14th century. See Wang Dayuan, ann. by Su, Jiqing, Daoyi zhilüe jiaoshi (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1981), p. 214Google Scholar. I am indebted to John Miksic for calling my attention to this case.