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Indo-Roman relations

The first documented relations between ancient Ancient India and Ancient Rome occurred during the reign of Caesar Augustus (27 BCE – 14 CE), the first Roman Emperor.

Roman maritime trade in India and Scythia according to the Periplus Maris Erythraei, 1st century CE.

The presence of Europeans, including Romans, in the region known at the time as "India" (modern South Asia, including India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan), during the period of the Roman Empire, is poorly documented. Before the conquests of Alexander, there are no surviving accounts by contemporaries or near-contemporaries of contact between Europe and South Asia, so modern understanding depends on more abundant literary, numismatic, and archaeological evidence, mainly relating to the trade between them.

Early contacts

 
Kushan ring with portraits of Septimius Severus and Julia Domna, a testimony to Indo-Roman relations.

Indo-Roman relations were built on trade. Roman trade in India began with overland caravans and later by direct maritime trade following the conquest of Egypt by Augustus in 30 BCE.

According to Strabo (II.5.12), not long after Augustus took control of Egypt, while Gallus was Prefect of Egypt (26–24 BCE), up to 120 ships were setting sail every year from Myos Hormos to modern-day India:

"At any rate, when Gallus was prefect of Egypt, I accompanied him and ascended the Nile as far as Syene and the frontiers of Ethiopia, and I learned that as many as one hundred and twenty vessels were sailing from Myos Hormos to India, whereas formerly, under the Ptolemies, only a very few ventured to undertake the voyage and to carry on traffic in Indian merchandise."

— Strabo II.5.12. [2]

Augustus maintained the Ptolemaic Red Sea ports and the picket service from the Red Sea to the Nile, whence goods could be carried downstream to the ports of Pelusium and Alexandria. He also replaced the Ptolemaic patrol fleet on the Red Sea to keep piracy in check. He received embassies from Indian kings in 26 and 20 BCE and, although little specific is known about them, as Carey puts it: "These missions were certainly intended for something more than an exchange of empty compliments."[1]

By the time of Augustus, if not before, a sea-captain named Hippalus had "discovered" (or, rather, brought news to the West of) the relatively safe and punctual contact over the open sea to India by leaving from Aden on the summer monsoon and returning on the anti-trade winds of winter. This would be made safer and more convenient by the Roman sack of Aden in a naval raid c. 1 BCE.[2]

Cassius Dio (d. sometime after 229 CE) in his Hist. Rom. 54.9 wrote:

Many embassies came to him (Augustus), and the Indians having previously proclaimed a treaty of alliance, concluded it now with the presentation, among other gifts, of tigers, animals which the Romans, and, if I mistake not, the Greeks as well, saw for the first time. . . .[3]

The overland caravans would gain more convenient access into India after the expansion of the Kushans into northern India during the 1st century CE, and then down the Ganges Valley in the early 2nd century.[4]

"From those land routes at least in the time of Augustus several embassies reached Rome. At least four such embassies are mentioned in the Latin literature, namely 1) the embassy from Puru country (the territory between the Jhelum and Beas) took with it to Rome serpents, monals, tigers and a letter written in Greek language, 2) the embassy from Broach was accompanied by a Buddhist monk named Germanos, 3) an embassy from the Chera country. It was reported in Rome that at Muziris (near Cranganore) was built a temple in honour of Augustus and 4) and embassy from the Paṇḍya country (Pandya Kingdom) brought with it precious stones, pearls and an elephant. We know that in the time of Augustus commercial relations between India and Rome grew but in this the balance of trade was in favour of India from the very beginning and as a result of this Roman gold poured into the country."[5]

The Periplus

The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, written by an anonymous sea-captain in Greek, can now be confidently dated to between 40 and 70[6] and, probably, between 40 and 50 CE.[7]

The author of the Periplus lists ports from Barbarikon at the mouth of the Indus in the west near modern Karachi, right around the southern tip of the Indian peninsula and north as far as the mouth of the Ganges near modern Kolkata (Calcutta). In contrast to the wealth of information on some of the west coast ports, the author gives no political information on the ports up the east coast of India,[8] perhaps indicating that he had not personally visited them. In fact the text seems to imply that western vessels normally did not travel beyond the tip of Indian peninsula, probably leaving onward trade to local boats as the passage between India and the northern tip of Palaisimundu or Taprobanê (Sri Lanka) was very shallow for trans-oceanic vessels, while the route around the island was long[9] and may have forced skippers to pass another season in the region before the winds were right for the return to Egypt.

Pliny's accounts

 
Indian art also found its way into Italy: in 1938 the Pompeii Lakshmi was found in the ruins of Pompeii (destroyed in an eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE).

Gaius Plinius Secundus (23–79 CE), generally known as Pliny the Elder, writing c. 77 CE, left probably the most important account of India and its trade with Rome that has survived in Classical literature. He gives quite a lot of detail about India, albeit not all accurate, but his observations do more than just outline the bare bones of history, and help give us some picture of how intimately Indian culture and trade was becoming known:

"Coral is as highly valued among the Indians as Indian pearls. It is also found in the Red Sea, but there it is darker in colour. The most prized is found in the Gallic Gulf around the Stoechades Islands, in the Sicilian Gulf around the Aeolian Islands, and around Drepanum. . . . Coral-berries are no less valued by Indian men than specimen Indian pearls by Roman ladies. Indian soothsayers and seers believe that coral is potent as a charm for warding off dangers. Accordingly they delight in its beauty and religious power. Before this became known, the Gauls used to decorate their swords, shields and helmets with coral. Now it is very scarce because of the price it commands, and is rarely seen in its natural habitat." Pliny. Natural History (77 CE) (XXXII, chaps. 21, 23).[10]

Although his estimate of the value of Rome's trade to the East at some 100 million sesterces annually (Pliny, NH, VI, 26, 6 & NH, XII, 41, 2) has often been thought to be an exaggeration but, if it is interpreted as referring to the total value of the trade rather than as coinage, it becomes quite believable:

"For example, just one documented consignment from Muziris (Chera kingdom, modern-day South India) to Alexandria consisted of 700-1,700 pounds of nard (an aromatic balsam), over 4,700 pounds of ivory and almost 790 pounds of textiles. This has been calculated as worth a total value of 131 talents, enough to purchase 2,400 acres of the best farmland in Egypt. When it is borne in mind that an average Roman cargo ship would have held about 150 such consignments, Pliny's figure becomes entirely plausible. With such staggering profits it is little wonder that the Roman government in Egypt encouraged – and profited by! – the trade: a 25 per cent tax on all goods from India was levied by the Romans at the Red Sea port of Leuce Come."[11]

Trajan

After the Roman Emperor Trajan defeated the Dacians and annexed the Nabataean Arabs centered in Petra c. 105 CE, he returned to Rome where:

"...ever so many embassies came to him from various barbarians, including the Sindi [people of the Indus Valley]. And he gave spectacles on one hundred and twenty-three days, in the course of which some eleven thousand animals, both wild and tame, were slain, and ten thousand gladiators fought."[12]

Trajan later defeated Parthia and, sailing down the Tigris River (115–16), reached the northern shores of the Persian Gulf.[13] "Roman troops had beaten the might of Parthia from the field and had reached the Persian Gulf; and their victorious Imperator, Trajan, had dreamed of repeating Alexander's march to the northwestern subcontinent, only to acquiesce in giving up the project on account of his age."[14]

Later references

 
Muziris, near the southern tip of India, in the Peutinger Table.

The Peutinger Table, a medieval copy of a 4th or early 5th century map of the world, shows a "Temple to Augustus" at Muziris, one of the main ports for trade to the Roman Empire on the southwest coast of India.[15] This and evidence of agreements for loans between agents, one of whom most likely lived in Muziris, and a rather oblique reference in the Periplus, all seem to point to a settlement of Roman subjects living in the region.[16]

Embassies are recorded as arriving from the "Indians of the East" at the court of Constantine the Great (c. 272–337):

"Ambassadors from the Indians of the East brought presents . . . . which they presented to the king (Constantine the Great) as an acknowledgment that his sovereignty extended to their ocean. They told him, too, how Princes of India had dedicated pictures and statues in his honour in token that they had recognised him as their autocrat and king." Eusebius of Caesarea (c. 263–339) De Vita Constant. IV. 50.[17]

More embassies are mentioned from "the Indian nations" in 361 CE:

"Embassies from all quarters flocked to him (the Emperor Julian in 361 A.D.), the Indian nations vying with emulous zeal in sending their foremost men with presents, as far as from the Divi (Maldives) and the Serendivi (Cylonese)[sic]." Ammianus Marcellinus. History XXII.vii.10.[18]

Finally, Johannes Malala or John Malalas (c. 491–578), p. 477, records that, in 530 CE, "an ambassador of the Indians was sent to Constantinople."[17]

Archaeological record

 
Roman piece of pottery from Arezzo in Italy, found at Virampatnam, Arikamedu (1st century CE).

The best archeological record of Roman presence can be found in southern India, specifically at Arikamedu.

Arikamedu was a Tamil fishing village which was formerly a major Chola port dedicated to bead making and trading with Roman traders. It flourished for centuries until the Romans left in the 5th century CE.

Various Roman artifacts, such as a large number of amphorae bearing the mark of Roman potter schools VIBII, CAMURI and ITTA, have been found at the site, supporting the view on a huge ancient trade between Rome and the ancient Tamil country, which today include Tamil Nadu and regions of Sri Lanka.

Another place full of archeological records is Muziris, in the Kerala region. Muziris was a major centre of trade in Tamilakkam between the Chera Empire and the Roman Empire. Large hoards of coins and innumerable shards of amphorae found in the town of Pattanam have elicited recent archeological interest in finding a probable location of this port city.[19]

Numismatic record

Numerous hoards of Roman gold coins from the time of Augustus and emperors of the 1st and 2nd centuries CE have been uncovered in India, predominantly, but not exclusively, from southern India. Attention may be drawn to the large number of Roman aurei and denarii of Augustus to Nero spanning approximately 120 years, found all along the route from about Mangalore through the Muziris area and around the southern tip of India to the south eastern Indian ports.

Under the rule of Augustus, (63 BCE–CE 14) the silver content of the denarius fell to 3.9 grams. It remained at nearly this weight until the time of Nero (CE 37–68).[20][21] This would also indicate that the land route from the West coast to the East coast via the Palghat pass in the Western Ghats was much more popular than the risky or circuitous sea route rounding the Cape or Sri Lanka.[22]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Carey (1954), p. 496.
  2. ^ Carey (1954), pp. 567.
  3. ^ Majumdar (1960), pp. 451–452.
  4. ^ Hill (2003).
  5. ^ Chandra (1977), p. 111.
  6. ^ Casson (1989) p. 7.
  7. ^ Fussman (1991), pp. 37–38.
  8. ^ Casson (1989), p. 47.
  9. ^ Casson (1989), pp. 24, 83, 89.
  10. ^ Healy (1991), p. 281.
  11. ^ Ball (2000), p. 123.
  12. ^ Dio Cassius, Roman History Bk. 68 [1]
  13. ^ Carey (1954), p. 646.
  14. ^ Narain (1968), p. 233.
  15. ^ Ball (2000), p. 123
  16. ^ Casson (1989), p. 24.
  17. ^ a b Majumdar (1960), p. 453.
  18. ^ Majumdar (1960), p. 452.
  19. ^ BBC News: Search for Muziris
  20. ^ George Menachery, 'Kodungallur...' (1987, repr. 2000)
  21. ^ "Kodungallur : The Cradle of Christianity in India 2000".
  22. ^ George Menachery, 'Kodungallur...' (1987, repr. 2000)

References

  • Ball, Warwick. (2000). Rome in the East: The transformation of an empire. Routledge. London and New York. ISBN 0-415-11376-8.
  • Begley, Vimala and de Puma, Richard Daniel (eds). (1991). Rome and India: The Ancient Sea Trade. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-12640-4.
  • Carey, M. (1954). A History of Rome down to the reign of Constantine. 1st edition 1935,. 2nd edition 1954. Reprint 1970 by Macmillan, St. Martin's Press.
  • Casson, Lionel. The Periplus Maris Erythraei: Text With Introduction, Translation, and Commentary. Princeton University Press, 1989. ISBN 0-691-04060-5.
  • Chami, F. A. 1999. “The Early Iron Age on Mafia island and its relationship with the mainland.” Azania Vol. XXXIV, pp. 1–10.
  • Chami, Felix A. 2002. "The Graeco-Romans and Paanchea/Azania: sailing in the Erythraean Sea." From: Red Sea Trade and Travel. The British Museum. Organised by The Society for Arabian Studies.
  • Chandra, Moti. (1977). Trade and Trade Routes in Ancient India. Abhinav Publications. New Delhi.
  • Fussman, G. 1991. "Le Periple et l'histoire politique del'Inde". Journal Asiatique 279 (1991):31–38.
  • Healy, John F. (1991). Pliny the Elder. Natural History: A Selection. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-044413-0.
  • Hill, John. (2004). A draft annotated translation of "The Peoples of the West" from the Weilüe: A Chinese description of the West, including the Roman Empire (Da Qin), especially Sections 11–21 and notes at: [3].
  • Hill, John E. (2009). Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty, First to Second Centuries CE. BookSurge. ISBN 978-1-4392-2134-1., See especially Sections 11–16 and notes.
  • Huntingford, G. W. B. (1980). The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, transl. (Hakluyt Society). ISBN 0-904180-05-0 (also includes translation of Red Sea material from Agatharchides)
  • Majumdar, R. C. (1960). The Classical Accounts of India. Firma KLM Private Ltd., Calcutta. Reprint 1981.
  • Menachery, George, "Kodungallur the Cradle of Christianity in India", Azhikode, 1987, repr.2000.
  • Menachery, George, "The St. Thomas Christian Encyclopaedia of India", Ed. George Menachery, Vol.I 1982, II 1973, III 2009.
  • Menachery, George, The Indian Church History Classics, Vol.I, "The Nazranies", SARAS, Ollur, 1998.
  • Miller, J. Innes. 1969. The Spice Trade of The Roman Empire: 29 B.C. to A.D. 641. Oxford University Press. Special edition for Sandpiper Books. 1998. ISBN 0-19-814264-1.
  • Nagaswamy, R. 1995 Roman Karur: A peep into Tamil's past. Brahad Prakashan, Madras.
  • Narain, A. K. (1968). "The Date of Kaniṣka." In: Papers on the Date of Kaniṣka. Edited by A. L. Basham. Leiden. E. J. Brill.
  • Robin, C. 1991. "L'Arabie du sud et la date du Périple de la mer érythrée". Journal Asiatique 279:1–30.
  • Schoff, Wilfred Harvey, translator (1912). Periplus of the Erythraean Sea: Travel and Trade in the Indian Ocean by a Merchant of the First Century, Translated from the Greek and Annotated. (First published 1912, New York, New York: Longmans, Green, and Co.) Reprinted 1995, New Delhi: Munshiram Monoharlal Publishers, ISBN 81-215-0699-9 .
  • Smith, Vincent A. (1908). The Early History of India: From 600 B.C. to the Muhammadan Conquest including the invasion of Alexander the Great. 2nd edition, revised and enlarged. Oxford at the Clarendon Press.

External links

  • [4] "The present text has been digitalized from the translation of William H. Schoff, The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea: Travel and Trade in the Indian Ocean by a Merchant of the First Century (New York: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1912). Some additional commentary including alternate spellings or translations from Lionel Casson's more recent edition are given in square brackets."
  • Ancient history sourcebook: The basic text from Schoff's 1912 translation.

indo, roman, relations, first, documented, relations, between, ancient, ancient, india, ancient, rome, occurred, during, reign, caesar, augustus, first, roman, emperor, roman, maritime, trade, india, scythia, according, periplus, maris, erythraei, century, pre. The first documented relations between ancient Ancient India and Ancient Rome occurred during the reign of Caesar Augustus 27 BCE 14 CE the first Roman Emperor Roman maritime trade in India and Scythia according to the Periplus Maris Erythraei 1st century CE The presence of Europeans including Romans in the region known at the time as India modern South Asia including India Bangladesh Pakistan and Afghanistan during the period of the Roman Empire is poorly documented Before the conquests of Alexander there are no surviving accounts by contemporaries or near contemporaries of contact between Europe and South Asia so modern understanding depends on more abundant literary numismatic and archaeological evidence mainly relating to the trade between them Contents 1 Early contacts 2 The Periplus 3 Pliny s accounts 4 Trajan 5 Later references 6 Archaeological record 7 Numismatic record 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 External linksEarly contacts Edit Kushan ring with portraits of Septimius Severus and Julia Domna a testimony to Indo Roman relations Further information Sino Roman relations and Indo Roman trade relations Indo Roman relations were built on trade Roman trade in India began with overland caravans and later by direct maritime trade following the conquest of Egypt by Augustus in 30 BCE According to Strabo II 5 12 not long after Augustus took control of Egypt while Gallus was Prefect of Egypt 26 24 BCE up to 120 ships were setting sail every year from Myos Hormos to modern day India At any rate when Gallus was prefect of Egypt I accompanied him and ascended the Nile as far as Syene and the frontiers of Ethiopia and I learned that as many as one hundred and twenty vessels were sailing from Myos Hormos to India whereas formerly under the Ptolemies only a very few ventured to undertake the voyage and to carry on traffic in Indian merchandise Strabo II 5 12 2 Augustus maintained the Ptolemaic Red Sea ports and the picket service from the Red Sea to the Nile whence goods could be carried downstream to the ports of Pelusium and Alexandria He also replaced the Ptolemaic patrol fleet on the Red Sea to keep piracy in check He received embassies from Indian kings in 26 and 20 BCE and although little specific is known about them as Carey puts it These missions were certainly intended for something more than an exchange of empty compliments 1 By the time of Augustus if not before a sea captain named Hippalus had discovered or rather brought news to the West of the relatively safe and punctual contact over the open sea to India by leaving from Aden on the summer monsoon and returning on the anti trade winds of winter This would be made safer and more convenient by the Roman sack of Aden in a naval raid c 1 BCE 2 Cassius Dio d sometime after 229 CE in his Hist Rom 54 9 wrote Many embassies came to him Augustus and the Indians having previously proclaimed a treaty of alliance concluded it now with the presentation among other gifts of tigers animals which the Romans and if I mistake not the Greeks as well saw for the first time 3 The overland caravans would gain more convenient access into India after the expansion of the Kushans into northern India during the 1st century CE and then down the Ganges Valley in the early 2nd century 4 From those land routes at least in the time of Augustus several embassies reached Rome At least four such embassies are mentioned in the Latin literature namely 1 the embassy from Puru country the territory between the Jhelum and Beas took with it to Rome serpents monals tigers and a letter written in Greek language 2 the embassy from Broach was accompanied by a Buddhist monk named Germanos 3 an embassy from the Chera country It was reported in Rome that at Muziris near Cranganore was built a temple in honour of Augustus and 4 and embassy from the Paṇḍya country Pandya Kingdom brought with it precious stones pearls and an elephant We know that in the time of Augustus commercial relations between India and Rome grew but in this the balance of trade was in favour of India from the very beginning and as a result of this Roman gold poured into the country 5 The Periplus EditThe Periplus of the Erythraean Sea written by an anonymous sea captain in Greek can now be confidently dated to between 40 and 70 6 and probably between 40 and 50 CE 7 The author of the Periplus lists ports from Barbarikon at the mouth of the Indus in the west near modern Karachi right around the southern tip of the Indian peninsula and north as far as the mouth of the Ganges near modern Kolkata Calcutta In contrast to the wealth of information on some of the west coast ports the author gives no political information on the ports up the east coast of India 8 perhaps indicating that he had not personally visited them In fact the text seems to imply that western vessels normally did not travel beyond the tip of Indian peninsula probably leaving onward trade to local boats as the passage between India and the northern tip of Palaisimundu or Taprobane Sri Lanka was very shallow for trans oceanic vessels while the route around the island was long 9 and may have forced skippers to pass another season in the region before the winds were right for the return to Egypt Pliny s accounts Edit Indian art also found its way into Italy in 1938 the Pompeii Lakshmi was found in the ruins of Pompeii destroyed in an eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE Gaius Plinius Secundus 23 79 CE generally known as Pliny the Elder writing c 77 CE left probably the most important account of India and its trade with Rome that has survived in Classical literature He gives quite a lot of detail about India albeit not all accurate but his observations do more than just outline the bare bones of history and help give us some picture of how intimately Indian culture and trade was becoming known Coral is as highly valued among the Indians as Indian pearls It is also found in the Red Sea but there it is darker in colour The most prized is found in the Gallic Gulf around the Stoechades Islands in the Sicilian Gulf around the Aeolian Islands and around Drepanum Coral berries are no less valued by Indian men than specimen Indian pearls by Roman ladies Indian soothsayers and seers believe that coral is potent as a charm for warding off dangers Accordingly they delight in its beauty and religious power Before this became known the Gauls used to decorate their swords shields and helmets with coral Now it is very scarce because of the price it commands and is rarely seen in its natural habitat Pliny Natural History 77 CE XXXII chaps 21 23 10 Although his estimate of the value of Rome s trade to the East at some 100 million sesterces annually Pliny NH VI 26 6 amp NH XII 41 2 has often been thought to be an exaggeration but if it is interpreted as referring to the total value of the trade rather than as coinage it becomes quite believable For example just one documented consignment from Muziris Chera kingdom modern day South India to Alexandria consisted of 700 1 700 pounds of nard an aromatic balsam over 4 700 pounds of ivory and almost 790 pounds of textiles This has been calculated as worth a total value of 131 talents enough to purchase 2 400 acres of the best farmland in Egypt When it is borne in mind that an average Roman cargo ship would have held about 150 such consignments Pliny s figure becomes entirely plausible With such staggering profits it is little wonder that the Roman government in Egypt encouraged and profited by the trade a 25 per cent tax on all goods from India was levied by the Romans at the Red Sea port of Leuce Come 11 Trajan EditAfter the Roman Emperor Trajan defeated the Dacians and annexed the Nabataean Arabs centered in Petra c 105 CE he returned to Rome where ever so many embassies came to him from various barbarians including the Sindi people of the Indus Valley And he gave spectacles on one hundred and twenty three days in the course of which some eleven thousand animals both wild and tame were slain and ten thousand gladiators fought 12 Trajan later defeated Parthia and sailing down the Tigris River 115 16 reached the northern shores of the Persian Gulf 13 Roman troops had beaten the might of Parthia from the field and had reached the Persian Gulf and their victorious Imperator Trajan had dreamed of repeating Alexander s march to the northwestern subcontinent only to acquiesce in giving up the project on account of his age 14 Later references Edit Muziris near the southern tip of India in the Peutinger Table The Peutinger Table a medieval copy of a 4th or early 5th century map of the world shows a Temple to Augustus at Muziris one of the main ports for trade to the Roman Empire on the southwest coast of India 15 This and evidence of agreements for loans between agents one of whom most likely lived in Muziris and a rather oblique reference in the Periplus all seem to point to a settlement of Roman subjects living in the region 16 Embassies are recorded as arriving from the Indians of the East at the court of Constantine the Great c 272 337 Ambassadors from the Indians of the East brought presents which they presented to the king Constantine the Great as an acknowledgment that his sovereignty extended to their ocean They told him too how Princes of India had dedicated pictures and statues in his honour in token that they had recognised him as their autocrat and king Eusebius of Caesarea c 263 339 De Vita Constant IV 50 17 More embassies are mentioned from the Indian nations in 361 CE Embassies from all quarters flocked to him the Emperor Julian in 361 A D the Indian nations vying with emulous zeal in sending their foremost men with presents as far as from the Divi Maldives and the Serendivi Cylonese sic Ammianus Marcellinus History XXII vii 10 18 Finally Johannes Malala or John Malalas c 491 578 p 477 records that in 530 CE an ambassador of the Indians was sent to Constantinople 17 Archaeological record Edit Roman piece of pottery from Arezzo in Italy found at Virampatnam Arikamedu 1st century CE The best archeological record of Roman presence can be found in southern India specifically at Arikamedu Arikamedu was a Tamil fishing village which was formerly a major Chola port dedicated to bead making and trading with Roman traders It flourished for centuries until the Romans left in the 5th century CE Various Roman artifacts such as a large number of amphorae bearing the mark of Roman potter schools VIBII CAMURI and ITTA have been found at the site supporting the view on a huge ancient trade between Rome and the ancient Tamil country which today include Tamil Nadu and regions of Sri Lanka Another place full of archeological records is Muziris in the Kerala region Muziris was a major centre of trade in Tamilakkam between the Chera Empire and the Roman Empire Large hoards of coins and innumerable shards of amphorae found in the town of Pattanam have elicited recent archeological interest in finding a probable location of this port city 19 Numismatic record EditNumerous hoards of Roman gold coins from the time of Augustus and emperors of the 1st and 2nd centuries CE have been uncovered in India predominantly but not exclusively from southern India Attention may be drawn to the large number of Roman aurei and denarii of Augustus to Nero spanning approximately 120 years found all along the route from about Mangalore through the Muziris area and around the southern tip of India to the south eastern Indian ports Under the rule of Augustus 63 BCE CE 14 the silver content of the denarius fell to 3 9 grams It remained at nearly this weight until the time of Nero CE 37 68 20 21 This would also indicate that the land route from the West coast to the East coast via the Palghat pass in the Western Ghats was much more popular than the risky or circuitous sea route rounding the Cape or Sri Lanka 22 See also EditAncient Greece Ancient India relations Ancient maritime history Economic history of India Historic GDP of India 1 1947 CE Indian Ocean trade Indo Roman trade relations India Italy relations Greece India relations Indus Mesopotamia relations Indian maritime history Meluhha trade with Sumer Periplus of the Erythraean Sea Silk RoadFootnotes Edit Carey 1954 p 496 Carey 1954 pp 567 Majumdar 1960 pp 451 452 Hill 2003 Chandra 1977 p 111 Casson 1989 p 7 Fussman 1991 pp 37 38 Casson 1989 p 47 Casson 1989 pp 24 83 89 Healy 1991 p 281 Ball 2000 p 123 Dio Cassius Roman History Bk 68 1 Carey 1954 p 646 Narain 1968 p 233 Ball 2000 p 123 Casson 1989 p 24 a b Majumdar 1960 p 453 Majumdar 1960 p 452 BBC News Search for Muziris George Menachery Kodungallur 1987 repr 2000 Kodungallur The Cradle of Christianity in India 2000 George Menachery Kodungallur 1987 repr 2000 References EditBall Warwick 2000 Rome in the East The transformation of an empire Routledge London and New York ISBN 0 415 11376 8 Begley Vimala and de Puma Richard Daniel eds 1991 Rome and India The Ancient Sea Trade University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 12640 4 Carey M 1954 A History of Rome down to the reign of Constantine 1st edition 1935 2nd edition 1954 Reprint 1970 by Macmillan St Martin s Press Casson Lionel The Periplus Maris Erythraei Text With Introduction Translation and Commentary Princeton University Press 1989 ISBN 0 691 04060 5 Chami F A 1999 The Early Iron Age on Mafia island and its relationship with the mainland Azania Vol XXXIV pp 1 10 Chami Felix A 2002 The Graeco Romans and Paanchea Azania sailing in the Erythraean Sea From Red Sea Trade and Travel The British Museum Organised by The Society for Arabian Studies Chandra Moti 1977 Trade and Trade Routes in Ancient India Abhinav Publications New Delhi Fussman G 1991 Le Periple et l histoire politique del Inde Journal Asiatique 279 1991 31 38 Healy John F 1991 Pliny the Elder Natural History A Selection Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 044413 0 Hill John 2004 A draft annotated translation of The Peoples of the West from the Weilue A Chinese description of the West including the Roman Empire Da Qin especially Sections 11 21 and notes at 3 Hill John E 2009 Through the Jade Gate to Rome A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty First to Second Centuries CE BookSurge ISBN 978 1 4392 2134 1 See especially Sections 11 16 and notes Huntingford G W B 1980 The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea transl Hakluyt Society ISBN 0 904180 05 0 also includes translation of Red Sea material from Agatharchides Majumdar R C 1960 The Classical Accounts of India Firma KLM Private Ltd Calcutta Reprint 1981 Menachery George Kodungallur the Cradle of Christianity in India Azhikode 1987 repr 2000 Menachery George The St Thomas Christian Encyclopaedia of India Ed George Menachery Vol I 1982 II 1973 III 2009 Menachery George The Indian Church History Classics Vol I The Nazranies SARAS Ollur 1998 Miller J Innes 1969 The Spice Trade of The Roman Empire 29 B C to A D 641 Oxford University Press Special edition for Sandpiper Books 1998 ISBN 0 19 814264 1 Nagaswamy R 1995 Roman Karur A peep into Tamil s past Brahad Prakashan Madras Narain A K 1968 The Date of Kaniṣka In Papers on the Date of Kaniṣka Edited by A L Basham Leiden E J Brill Robin C 1991 L Arabie du sud et la date du Periple de la mer erythree Journal Asiatique 279 1 30 Schoff Wilfred Harvey translator 1912 Periplus of the Erythraean Sea Travel and Trade in the Indian Ocean by a Merchant of the First Century Translated from the Greek and Annotated First published 1912 New York New York Longmans Green and Co Reprinted 1995 New Delhi Munshiram Monoharlal Publishers ISBN 81 215 0699 9 Smith Vincent A 1908 The Early History of India From 600 B C to the Muhammadan Conquest including the invasion of Alexander the Great 2nd edition revised and enlarged Oxford at the Clarendon Press External links Edit 4 The present text has been digitalized from the translation of William H Schoff The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea Travel and Trade in the Indian Ocean by a Merchant of the First Century New York Longmans Green and Co 1912 Some additional commentary including alternate spellings or translations from Lionel Casson s more recent edition are given in square brackets Ancient history sourcebook The basic text from Schoff s 1912 translation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indo Roman relations amp oldid 1115121068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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