Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T09:59:20.426Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Role of Indian Textiles in Southeast Asian Trade in the Seventeenth Century*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Get access

Extract

The role of Indian textiles in Southeast Asian trade in the seventeenth century was important in three ways. First, there was a great, almost unlimited, demand for these goods in all the Southeast Asian markets; second, they constituted the principal medium of exchange for the trade of Southeast Asia with the outside world; and third, they shaped the pattern of Inter-Asian trade of the European Companies, which laid the foundation of their wealth and commerce and later political power in the eighteenth century. The first two were important for Southeast Asian history only, but the last was of very great importance from the point of view of world history, not less important, in its far-reaching effects, than the voyages of discovery at the beginning of the modern period or the Industrial Revolution and the French Revolution in the eighteenth century. The poor Indian weavers shaped the course of world history by unconsciously laying the foundation of British and Dutch colonial empires.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1962

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 93 note 1. Moreland—India at the Death of Akbar, pp. 179181.Google Scholar

page 96 note 1. van Dam, PieterBeschryvinge van de Oostindische Compagnie, Boek II, Deel I, pp. 1427, Bijlage I and III.Google Scholar

page 96 note 2. Letters Received (English E. I. Co.), Vol. I, 16021613, pp. 68135.Google Scholar

page 96 note 3. Ibid., p. 18.

page 96 note 4. Letters Received, Vol. I, 16021613, pp. 254–55.Google Scholar

page 96 note 5. Corge meant 20 pieces.

page 97 note 1. Letters received, Vol. IV, 1616, p. 70.Google Scholar

page 97 note 2. Ibid., Vol. VI, 1617, p. 22.

page 97 note 3. Letters Received, Vol. II, 16131615, p. 314.Google Scholar

page 97 note 4. Ibid, Vol. III, 1615, p. 54.

page 97 note 5. Ibid, Vol. IV, 1616, p. 3 (Nicholls to the Agent at Bantam, 15 Jan.)

page 97 note 6. Factory Records — Java, Vol. III, Pt. II, p. 535 (Letters of 22 April.)Google Scholar

page 97 note 7. Letters Received, Vol. II, 16131615, p. 269Google Scholar (Jourdain to the Co., Bantam, Jan. 2, 1614/5).

page 98 note 1. English Factories in India, 16611664, p. 330.Google Scholar

page 98 note 2. Letters Received, Vol. II, 16131615, p. 275.Google Scholar

page 98 note 3. Ibid, Vol. IV, 1616, p. 25.

page 98 note 4. Ibid, p. 90.

page 98 note 5. Ibid, p. 165.

page 98 note 6. Factory Records — Java, Vol. III, Pt. I, no. 6-K-IV.

page 98 note 7. Dagh Register (Batavia), 1633, p. 143 (Jan. 28).Google Scholar

page 99 note 1. Letters Received, Vol. II, 16331615, p. 269.Google Scholar

page 99 note 2. English Factories in India, 16551660, pp. 344–46.Google Scholar

page 99 note 3. Letter Book, Vol. IX, 16881697, 245–53.Google Scholar

page 101 note 1. A more detailed account is to be found in Moreland, W. H.'s article, “Indian Exports of Cotton Goods in the Seventeenth Century” — Indian Journal of Economics (Allahabad), Vol. V, Pt. III, 01, 1925.Google Scholar

page 102 note 1. Factory Records — Java, Vol. III, Pt. II, pp. 263–64 (Letters from the English Council at Batavia to Surat, dated March 22, 1625).

page 103 note 1. Factory Records— Java, Vol. III, Pt. II, pp. 263–64. (03, 1625).Google Scholar

page 103 note 2. Ibid, Vol. IV, 1664–76, Report dated 23rd January 1667 by Q.B. (Quarts Browne) in Bantam.

page 104 note 1. Factory Records — Java, Vol. V. Letter to Bantam, , 1st 12 1664.Google Scholar

page 104 note 2. van Dam, PieterBeschryvinge van de Oostindische Compagnie, Boek II, Deel II, pp. 7980.Google Scholar

page 104 note 3. Ibid, pp. 220–221.

page 105 note 1. van Dam, Béschryvinge etc., Boek II, Deel III, pp. 104105.Google Scholar

page 106 note 1. Ibid, Boek II, Deel I, p. 262

page 106 note 2. Ibid, p. 290.

page 106 note 3. van Dam, Beschryving etc. Boek II, Deel III, pp. 291–92.Google Scholar

page 107 note 1. Boek II, Deel I, p. 19 (bijlage II).