Geoff WADE (韋傑夫)
Geoff Wade is a historian with interests in Sino-Southeast Asian historical interactions and comparative historiography. He has worked on a range of other related issues including early Islam in Southeast Asia, Chinese expansions, Asian commercial networks, Chinese textual references to Southeast Asia and the Cold War in Southeast Asia. His online database, Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi-lu: An Open Access Resource(http://epress.nus.edu.sg/msl/), provides in English translation 3,000+ references to Southeast Asia as extracted from the Ming imperial annals, while his most recent edited work China and Southeast Asia (Routledge, 2009) comprises a 6-volume survey of seminal works on Southeast Asia-China interactions.
[http://nsc.iseas.edu.sg/about_us.htm]
Southeast Asia in the Fifteenth Century: The China Factor
著者:Geoff Wade and Sun Laichen編
出版日期:2010年6月 512 pages
出版社:Nus Press(新加坡 國立大學出版);香港大學出版
內容簡介:
The fifteenth century is an enigma in Southeast Asian history - too late for classical inscriptions, and generally too early for indigenous texts or European observations. The arrival of European ships, ideas and economies in the early sixteenth century has long been seen as the origin of the early modern era in Southeast Asia , but the present collection challenges this view, suggesting that intense and lasting political and economic changes were already well underway by 1500.
The argument rests on developments such as the introduction of firearms, more intensive rice agriculture, Thai and Viet ceramic exports, Korean and Ryukyu contacts with Southeast Asia, the demise of Champa, the climax of Viet and northern Tai statecraft, the birth of the Melayu-Muslim kingship in Melaka and the creation of a new Muslim Javanese civilization on Java’s north coast. Coincident with these changes, Ming China’s engagement with Southeast Asia grew as a result of overland expansion into the Tai and Viet polities, state-sponsored maritime voyages, and private Chinese trade and migration to the region.
Southeast Asia in the Fifteenth Century: The China Factor draws together the great changes that occurred in Southeast Asia during the fifteenth century, and considers the extent to which Ming China’s engagement with the region helped usher in the early modern period of Southeast Asian history.
作者簡介
Geoff WADE(韋傑夫) is a Historian with interests in Sino-Southeast Asian interactions, comparative historiography and the use of Chinese texts as sources for Southeast Asian history.
SUN Laichen(孫來臣) is an Associate Professor at California State University, Fullerton. He specializes in early modern Southeast Asian history, particularly the interaction between China and Mainland Southeast Asia.
目次
List of Tables
List of Maps. Figures and Chart
Acknowledgements
I. 15TH-CENTURY SOUTHEAST ASIA AND MING CHINA─OVERVIEWS
1. Southeast Asia in the 15th Century Geoff Wade
2. Assessing the Ming Role in China ’s Southern Expansion Sun Laichen
Ⅱ. ÐẠI VIẼT AND THE MING
3. The Ming Factor and the Emergence of the Việt in the 15th Century Li Tana
4. Paperwork: The Rise of the New Literati and Ministerial Power and the Effort toward Legibility in Ðại Việt John K.Whitmore
5. Nation and Geo-Body in Early Modern Vietnam : A Preliminary Study through Sources of Geomancy Momoki Shiro
6. Contextualising the Book-Burning Episode during Ihe Ming Invasion and Occupation of Vietnam Ong Eng Ann. Alexander
Ⅲ. TAl AND KHMER POLITIES AND THE MING
7. Shan Gems. Chinese Silver and the Rise of Shan
Principalities in Northern Bunna . c. 1450-1527 Sun Laichen
8. The Northern Tai Polity of Lan Na (Ba-bai Da-dian) in the 14th and 15th Centuries: The Ming Factor Volker Grabowsky
9. Agricultural Technology and the Consolidation of Tay Politics in Northern Continental Southeast Asia during the15th Century Christian Daniels
10. Cambodia and Its Neighbours in the 15th Century Michael Vickery
IV. MARITIME SOUTHEAST ASIA AND THE MING
11. Hybrid Identities in the 15th-century Straits Anthony Reid
12. New Ships for New Networks: Trends in Shipbuilding in the South China Sea in the 15th and 16th Centuries Pierre-Yves Manguin
13. A Ming Gap? Data from Southeast Asian Shipwreck Cargoes
Roxanna M.Brown
14. Before and After Zheng He: Comparing Some Southeast Asian Archaeological Sites of the 14th and 15th Centuries John N. Miksic
Contributors
Bibliography
Index
http://www.nus.edu.sg/nuspress/subjects/history/978-9971-69-448-7.html
http://www.books.com.tw/exep/prod/booksfile.php?item=0010478306