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Trading and Raiding in the Philippines Archipelago in the 7th-18th Centuries: History and Archaeology of Muslim and Spanish Encounters

  • Uris Hall, Go8 Central Campus Ithaca, NY United States (map)

Organizer: Maria Einaudi Center for International Studies, Cornell University

Type/Location: In person / Ithaca, New York

Description:

The history of the Philippines is unique in Southeast Asia's islands in that the country has 14 massive islands, 7000+ smaller islands, and 200+ languages. Strangely, among the historical entities in these thousands of equatorial islands, none of the area's languages were written down.  Both historical and archaeological evidence shows us that Chinese, Japanese, Indonesians, Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Indic populations all powered trade well before the 10th century.  Area ports sent commerce and numerous missions to the Chinese court. Islamic groups in the Philippines, particularly in what would become Manila, as well as from the southernmost island of Mindanao prior to the influx of Spanish colonizers in the 16th century, also participated in diplomacy and trade. The extensive diversity of various groups on the rugged Filipino landscape, including small bands of Ata and tribal peoples (Bukidnon) living in the mountainous cores of massive islands, supplied equatorial products that connected chains of manufacture sailing from the west and north, down to the tropical belt. In this presentation, archaeologist and ethnohistorian Laura L. Junker melds anthropology with "material histories" (such as archaeology) and "written histories" (from many viewpoints) in telling this complex story.  

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Book Launch & Talk - Japan’s Quiet Leadership: Reshaping the Indo-Pacific

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