Year published :1999

Size :15x23 cm.

Rights :Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and Myanmar

ISBN: 9789747047585

Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, 1450–1680; Volume Two: Expansion and Crisis

by Anthony Reid

Between the fifteenth and the mid-seventeenth centuries, when the Renais­sance and early capitalism were transforming Europe, changes no less dramatic were occurring in Southeast Asia. This diverse tropical region was integrated into a global trade system, while trade-based cities came to dominate its affairs. Its states became more centralized and absolutist, and its people adopted scrip­tural faiths of personal morality. The pace of these changes finds parallels only in our own era.

Anthony Reid has analyzed and vividly portrayed this Southeast Asian age of commerce in two volumes. The first volume, published to great acclaim, explored the physical, material, cultural, and social structures of the region. The second and concluding volume focuses on the profound changes that defined the age of commerce as a period. The spice trade that animated the global boom of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries made possible revolutionary changes in urbanization, commercialization, state structure, and belief. Islam, Christianity, and Theravada Buddhism made rapid gains in alliance with the new states. Reid discerns common ground between these developments and forces transforming Europe and Japan, but identifies particular limitations on the growth of private capital and the stability of states in Southeast Asia. A final chapter explores the crisis in the mid-seventeenth century that disengaged Southeast Asians from the world economy for the next three centuries.

"With this book and its predecessor, Professor Reid has made a major contribu­tion to Southeast Asian studies." -Michael Smithies, The Nation

About the Author

Anthony Reid is professor of Southeast Asian history, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian University

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