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Suvarnabhumi

Suvarṇabhūmi (Sanskrit: सुवर्णभूमि; Pali: Suvaṇṇabhūmi)[a] is a toponym, that appears in many ancient Indian literary sources and Buddhist texts[1] such as the Mahavamsa,[2] some stories of the Jataka tales,[3][4] the Milinda Panha[5] and the Ramayana.[6]

Though its exact location is unknown and remains a matter of debate, Suvarṇabhūmi was an important port along trade routes that run through the Indian Ocean, setting sail from the wealthy ports in Basra, Ubullah, and Siraf, through Muscat, Malabar, Ceylon, the Nicobars, Kedah and on through the Strait of Malacca to fabled Suvarṇabhūmi.[7]

Ian Glover, Emeritus Reader in Southeast Asian Archaeology at the University of London, has said: "It is widely accepted in the 21st century that Suvarnabhumi as reported in early Indian literature was not a specific location which can be marked on a map. Rather, it was an idealised place, perhaps equivalent to Atlantis in Western history, a distant somewhere to the east of India where traders, sailors, and Buddhist and Hindu teachers went to make their fortunes and spread their teachings and bring back gold and other exotic products desired by a rising elite and the wealthy classes at home."[8]

Historiography edit

 
Crisa and Aureia, the Isles of Gold, near the Aurea Chersonese, the Golden Peninsula, near Java in the Indian Ocean, on the map of Andreas Walsperger, around 1448

Suvarṇabhūmi means 'golden land' or 'land of gold' and the ancient sources have associated it with one of a variety of places throughout the Southeast Asian region.

It might also be the source of the Western concept of Aurea Regio in Claudius Ptolemy's Trans-Gangetic India or India beyond the Ganges and the Golden Chersonese of the Greek and Roman geographers and sailors.[9] The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea refers to the Land of Gold, Chryse, and describes it as "an island in the ocean, the furthest extremity towards the east of the inhabited world, lying under the rising sun itself, called Chryse... Beyond this country... there lies a very great inland city called Thina".[10] Dionysius Periegetes mentioned: "The island of Chryse (Gold), situated at the very rising of the Sun".[11]

Or, as Priscian put it in his popular rendition of Periegetes: “if your ship… takes you to where the rising sun returns its warm light, then will be seen the Isle of Gold with its fertile soil.”[12] Avienius referred to the Insula Aurea (Golden Isle) located where "the Scythian seas give rise to the Dawn".[13] Josephus speaks of the "Aurea Chersonesus", which he equates with the Biblical Ophir, whence the ships of Tyre and Israel brought back the gold for the Temple of Jerusalem.[14] The city of Thina was described by Ptolemy's Geography as the capital city of the country on the eastern shores of the Magnus Sinus (Gulf of Thailand).

Location edit

The location of Suvarnabhumi has been the subject of much debate, both in scholarly and nationalistic agendas. It remains one of the most mystified and contentious toponyms in the history of Asia.[15] Scholars have identified two regions as possible locations for the ancient Suvarnabhumi: Insular Southeast Asia and Southern India.[16] In a study of the various literary sources for the location of Suvarṇabhūmi, Saw Mra Aung concluded that it was impossible to draw a decisive conclusion on this and that only thorough scientific research would reveal which of several versions of Suvarṇabhūmi was the original.[17]

Some have speculated that this country refers to the Kingdom of Funan. The main port of Funan was Cattigara Sinarum statio (Kattigara the port of the Sinae).[18]

Due to many factors, including the lack of historical evidence, and the absence of scholarly consensus, various cultures in Southeast Asia identify Suwannaphum as an ancient kingdom there and claim ethnic and political descendancy as its successors.[19] As no such claim or legend existed before the translation and publication of the Edicts, scholars see these claims as based on nationalism or attempts to claim the title of the first Buddhists in Southeast Asia.[15]

Mainland Southeast Asia edit

Cambodia edit

 
The territorial extent of the Kingdom of Funan (1st to 7th century) covers much of mainland Southeast Asia including present-day Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Funan (1st–7th century) was the first kingdom in Cambodian history and it was also the first Indianized kingdom that prospered in Southeast Asia. Both Hinduism and Buddhism flourished in this kingdom. According to the Chinese records, two Buddhist monks from Funan, named Mandrasena and Sanghapala, took up residency in China in the 5th to 6th centuries and translated several Buddhist sūtras from Sanskrit (or a Prakrit) into Chinese.[20]

The oldest archaeological evidence of Indianized civilization in Southeast Asia comes from central Burma, central and southern Thailand, and the lower Mekong Delta These finds belong to the period of Funan Kingdom or Nokor Phnom, present-day Cambodia, and South Vietnam including part of Burma, Lao, and Thailand, which was the first political centre established in Southeast Asia. Taking into account the epigraphic and archaeological evidence, the Suvarnabhumi mentioned in the early texts must be identified with these areas.[21] Of these areas, only Funan had maritime links with India through its port at Oc Éo. Therefore although Suvarnabhumi in time became a generic name broadly applied to all the lands east of India, particularly Sumatra, its earliest application was probably to Funan. Furthermore, the Chinese name "Funan" for Cambodia, may be a transcription of the "Suvaṇṇa" of Suvaṇṇabhumī.

 
The oldest Southeast Asian inscription from Cambodia, dated to the 7th century, issued during the reign of King Isanavarman I, identifies Suvarnabhumi with the kingdom of Chenla (6th-9th century), the successor of Funan (1st-7th century).

In December 2017, Dr Vong Sotheara, of the Royal University of Phnom Penh, discovered a Pre-Angkorian stone inscription in the Province of Kampong Speu, Basedth District, which he tentatively dated to 633 AD. According to him, the inscription would “prove that Suvarnabhumi was the Khmer Empire.” The inscription was issued during the reign of King Isanavarman I (616–637 AD) of the Cambodian Kingdom of Chenla, the successor of Funan and the predecessor of the Khmer Empire. The inscription, translated, read:

“The great King Isanavarman is full of glory and bravery. He is the King of Kings, who rules over Suvarnabhumi until the sea, which is the border, while the kings in the neighbouring states honour his order to their heads”.

The Inscription is the oldest evidence ever found in Southeast Asia, mentioning Suvarnabhumi and identifying it with Chenla. The inscription is now exhibited in the National Museum of Cambodia in Phnom Penh. However, his claim and the findings are yet to be peer-reviewed, and they remain in doubt with other historians and archaeology experts across the region.[22]

Myanmar edit

Mon tradition maintains that the Thaton Kingdom in Lower Myanmar was called Suvannabhumi (Burmese: သုဝဏ္ဏဘူမိ Thuwunnabhumi).[23] However, dating the Thaton Kingdom independent of traditional chronicles gives an earliest founding year of 825; even this date remains unattested.[24]

There are archaeological sites within Mon State that local archeologists cite as Suvannabhumi. Suvarnabhumi City in Bilin Township is one such site with limited excavation work. The site, called Winka Old City by other archeologists, contains 40 high-grounds of which only 4 have been excavated.[25] The Winka site, along with nearby walled sites like Kyaikkatha and Kelasa, have been dated as early as the sixth century.[26] While the archaeology of early Lower Burmese sites requires more work, other urban centres in Myanmar like the Sri Ksetra Kingdom in modern-day Pyay were Buddhist as early as the 5th century.[15]

The scholarly search for Suvannabhumi within Myanmar is attached to various nationalistic and religious narratives about Suvannabhumi.[27] The fifteenth century legend of Shwedagon Pagoda enshrining a few hairs of the Buddha brought back by Mon merchants highlights the cultural significance placed on early Buddhist missionaries in Myanmar. In many such legends, the narrative of the conversion of Suvannabhumi is Burmanizes key historical Buddhist figures.[15]

Thailand edit

 
Territory extent of Suvarnabhumi Kingdom, according to the Thai Chronicles, before it was sacked by Funan in c. 1st-2nd centuries.

In Thailand, government proclamations and national museums insist that Suwannaphum was somewhere on the coast of the central plain, especially at the ancient city of U Thong, which might be the origin of the Mon Dvaravati Culture.[28] These claims are not based on any historical records but on archaeological evidence of human settlements in the area dating back more than 4,000 years and the findings of 3rd-century Roman coins.[29] The Thai government named the new Bangkok airport, Suvarnabhumi Airport, after the mythic kingdom of Suwannaphum, in celebration of this tradition. This tradition, however, is doubted by scholars[who?] for the same reason as the Burman claim. Suphan Buri (from the Sanskrit, Suvarnapura, "Golden City") in present-day west/central Thailand, was founded in 877-882 as a city of the Mon-speaking kingdom of Dvaravati with the name, Meuang Thawarawadi Si Suphannaphumi ("the Dvaravati city of Suvarnabhumi"), indicating that Dvaravati at that time identified as Suvarnabhumi.[30]

According to Thai chronicles, around 241 BCE, during the times that two Buddhist monks named Sona Thera and Uttara Thera came from Magadha to spread Buddhism to Suvarnabhumi, the majority of the kingdom's population were Mon people, while Thai people arrived later, around 50 BCE.[31] The Suvarnabhumi Kingdom was destroyed by the invasion of Funan around the 1st-2nd centuries,[32] and most of its population was forcibly moved to Funan resulting in it being left abandoned.[33] After Funan lost to Bhavavarman I of Chenla in 550, Suvarnabhumi de facto became the tributary state of Chenla as well.[32]

The kingdom's area reached Lamphakappa Nakhon (ลัมภกัปปะนคร, present-day Lampang) in the north and was ruled in mandala style with five king's cities, including Suvarnabhumi (the present-day old town of Nakhon Pathom), Ratchaburi, Singburi, Phetchaburi, and Tanintharyi.[34]

The area surrounding the old capital of Suvarnabhumi was resettled in 590 when Sri Sittichai Phromthep (ท้าวศรีสิทธิไชยพรหมเทพ) from Yossothon (possibly the city in Chenla) established the new city, Nakhon Chai Si (old name of the present-day Nakhon Pathom). Most of its population were Thai people from the Ngao, Yom, and Salween river basins.[33] Lavo was also founded during such a period. Both later created a new kingdom, Dvaravati; however, the new capital together, with the other nearest settlement, Pong Tuek (พงตึก, present-day Ratchaburi), was sacked by Chenla 300 years later, around the 8th-9th centuries.[35] After that, the center of Dvaravati culture shifted to Lavo,[36] and the people of the sacked Dvaravati moved westward and founded a new city in 807 in the area of the present-day Ladya subdistrict, Kanchanaburi (Kanchanaburi old city) while the affected area was almost left abandoned.[37] The new settlement was named Suvarnabhumi and was then renamed Sri Ayutthaya and Kanchanaburi, respectively.[37][38]

At the peak of power around the 13th-14th centuries, the border of the new Suvarnabhumi or Suphannabhumi met Lavo Kingdom at the Pasak River in the east, the west to Dawei on the coast of the outer sea (Andaman Sea), northwest to the south of Mawlamyine, which was the sea trading harbor of Chaliang kingdom (Si Satchanalai), while the south to the tip of the Malay Peninsula, and the north to Phraek Siracha (present-day Sankhaburi).[39] In 1351, the Suphannabhumi kingdom was merged into its succeeding state, Ayuttaya, after its last ruler, Uthong, moved eastward to create a new capital Ayutthaya on the present-day Ayutthaya island.

Insular Southeast Asia edit

 
The Golden Chersonese - details from the eleventh map of Asia (southeast Asia). Details from Nicolaus Germanus' 1467 copy of a map from Ptolemy's Geography, showing the Golden Chersonese, i.e. the Malay Peninsula. The horizontal line represents the Equator, which is misplaced too far north due to its being calculated from the Tropic of Cancer using the Ptolemaic degree, which is only five-sixths of a true degree.

One of the clues referring to the Malay Peninsula came from Claudius Ptolemy's Geography, who referred to it as Golden Chersonese (literally 'golden peninsula'), which pinpointed exactly that location in South East Asia.[40]

The term Suvarnabhumi ('land of gold') is commonly thought to refer to the Southeast Asian Peninsula, including lower Burma and the Malay Peninsula. However there is another gold-referring term Suvarnadvipa (the Golden Island or Peninsula, where dvipa may refer to either a peninsula or an island),[41] which may correspond to the Indonesian Archipelago, especially Sumatra.[42] Both terms might refer to a powerful coastal or island kingdom in present-day Indonesia , possibly centered on Sumatra or Java. This corresponds to the gold production areas traditionally known in Minangkabau Highlands in Barisan Mountains, Sumatra, and interior Borneo.[42] An eighth century Indian text known as the "Samaraiccakaha" describes a sea voyage to Suvarnadvipa and the making of bricks from the gold rich sands which they inscribed with the name dharana and then baked.[43] These pointing out to the direction of western part of insular Southeast Asia, especially Sumatra, the Malay Peninsula, Borneo and Java.

Benefitting from its strategic location on the narrow Strait of Malacca, the insular theory argued that other than actually producing gold, it might also be based on such a kingdom's potential for power and wealth (hence, "Land of Gold") as a hub for sea-trade also known from vague descriptions of contemporary Chinese pilgrims to India. The kingdom referred to as the center of maritime trade between China and India was Srivijaya. Due to the Chinese writing system, however, the interpretations of Chinese historical sources are based on supposed correspondences of ideograms – and their possible phonetic equivalents – with known toponyms in the ancient Southeast Asian civilizations. Hendrik Kern concluded that Sumatra was the Suvarnadvipa mentioned in ancient Hindu texts and the island of Chryse mentioned in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea and by Rufius Festus Avienius.[44]

The Chinese pilgrim and Buddhist scholar, Yijing (義淨), visited the kingdom of Srivijaya on Sumatra in 672 and identified it with Suvarnadvipa, the Island of Gold (金洲 jin-zhou).[45]

The interpretation of early travel records is not always easy. The Javanese embassies to China in 860 and 873 CE refer to Java as rich in gold, although it was in fact devoid of any deposits. The Javanese would have had to import gold possibly from neighbouring Sumatra, Malay Peninsula or Borneo, where gold was still being mined in the 19th century and where ancient mining sites were located.[46] Even though Java did not have its own gold deposits, the texts make frequent references to the existence of goldsmiths, and it is clear from the archaeological evidence such as Wonoboyo Hoard, that this culture had developed a sophisticated gold working technology, which relied on the import of substantial quantities of the metal.[47]

 
Padang Roco Inscription dated 1286 from Sumatra, mentioned the statue of Amoghapasa Lokesvara taken from Bhumi Jawa to Svarnnabhūmi (Sumatra), in order to be erected at Dharmasraya

The Padang Roco Inscription of 1286 CE, states that an image of Buddha Amoghapasa Lokeshvara was brought to Dharmasraya on the Upper Batang Hari - the river of Jambi - was transported from Bhumi Java (Java) to Suvarnabhumi (Sumatra), and erected by order of the Javanese ruler Kertanegara: the inscription clearly identifies Sumatra as Suvarnabhumi.[48]

Butuan was so rich in treasures that a museum curator, Florina H. Capistrano-Baker, stated that it was even richer than the more well-known western maritime kingdom of Srivijaya; "The astonishing quantities and impressive quality of gold treasures recovered in Butuan suggest that its flourishing port settlement played an until recently little-recognized role in early Southeast Asian trade. Surprisingly, the amount of gold discovered in Butuan far exceeds that found in Sumatra, where the much better known flourishing kingdom of Srivijaya is said to have been located." This despite that most of the gold of Butuan were already looted by invaders.[49]

Bangladesh edit

A popular interpretation of Rabindranath Tagore's poem Amar Shonar Bangla serves as the basis for the claim that Suvarnabhumi was actually situated in central Bengal at Sonargaon.[50] In some Jain texts, it is mentioned that merchants of Anga (in present-day Bihar, a state of India that borders with Bengal) regularly sailed to Suvarnabhumi, and ancient Bengal was in fact situated very close to Anga, connected by rivers of the Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta. Bengal has also been described in ancient Indian and Southeast Asian chronicles as a "seafaring country", enjoying trade relations with Dravidian kingdoms, Sri Lanka, Java and Sumatra. Sinhalese tradition holds that the first king of Sri Lanka, Vijaya Singha, came from Bengal.[51] Moreover the region is commonly associated with golden color - the soil of Bengal is known for its golden color (Gangetic alluvial), golden harvest (rice), golden fruits (mangoes), golden minerals (gold and clay) and yellow-brown skinned people. Bengal is described in ancient Sanskrit texts as 'Gaud-Desh' (Golden/Radiant land). During the reign of the Bengal Sultans and the Mughal Empire, central Bengal was home to a prosperous trading town called "Sonargaon" (Golden village), which was connected to North India by the Grand Trunk Road and was frequented by Arab, Persian and Chinese travelers, including Ibn Battuta and Zheng He. Even today, Bengalis often refer to their land as 'Shonar Bangla' (Golden Bengal), and the national anthem of Bangladesh - Amar Shonar Bangla (My Bengal of Gold), from the omonym Tagore's poem - is a reference to this theory.[52]

European Age of Discovery edit

The thirst for gold formed the most powerful incentive to explorers at the beginning of modern times; but although more and more extensive regions were brought to light by them, they sought in vain in the East Indian Archipelago for the Gold and Silver Islands where, according to the legends, the precious metals were to be gathered from the ground and did not need to be laboriously extracted from the interior of the earth. In spite of their failure, they found it difficult to give up the alluring picture. When they did not find what they sought in the regions which were indicated by the old legends and by the maps based thereon, they hoped for better success in still unexplored regions, and clutched with avidity at every hint that they were here to attain their object.[53]

The history of geography thus shows us how the Gold and Silver Islands were constantly, so to speak, wandering towards the East. Marco Polo spoke, in the most exaggerated language, of the wealth of gold in Zipangu, situated at the extremity of this part of the world, and had thus pointed out where the precious metals should preferably be sought. Martin Behaim, on his globe of 1492, revived the Argyre and Chryse of antiquity in these regions.[53]

In 1519, Cristóvão de Mendonça, was given instructions to search for the legendary Isles of Gold, said to lie to "beyond Sumatra", which he was unable to do, and in 1587 an expedition under the command of Pedro de Unamunu was sent to find them in the vicinity of Zipangu (Japan).[54] According to Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas, in 1528 Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón in the ship Florida on a voyage from the Moluccas to Mexico reached a large island which he took for the Isla del Oro. This island has not been identified although it seems likely that it is Biak, Manus or one of the Schouten Islands on the north coast of New Guinea.[55]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Spelled in various local languages as: Malay: Suwarna Bumi; Burmese: သုဝဏ္ဏဘူမိ, [θṵwʊ̀ɰ̃na̰bùmḭ]; Khmer: សុវណ្ណភូមិ, Sovannaphoum; and Thai: สุวรรณภูมิ, RTGSSuwannaphum.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Sailendra Nath Sen (1999). Ancient Indian History and Civilization. New Age International. ISBN 9788122411980. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  2. ^ "To Suvarnabhumi he [Moggaliputta] sent Sona and Uttara"; Mahānāma, The Mahāvaṃsa, or, The Great Chronicle of Ceylon, translated into English by Wilhelm Geiger, assisted by Mabel Haynes Bode, with an addendum by G.C. Mendis, London, Luzac & Co. for the Pali Text Society, 1964, Chapter XII, "The Converting of Different Countries", p.86.
  3. ^ Sussondi-Jātaka, Sankha-Jātaka, Mahājanaka-Jātaka, in Edward B. Cowell (ed.), The Jātaka: or Stories of the Buddha's Former Births, London, Cambridge University Press, 1897; reprinted Pali Text Society, dist. by Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1969, Vol. III, p.124; Vol. IV, p.10; Vol. VI, p.22
  4. ^ J. S. Speyer, The Jatakamala or Garland of Birth-Stories of Aryasura, Sacred Books of the Buddhists, Vol. I, London, Henry Frowde, 1895; reprint: Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1982, No.XIV, Supâragajâtaka, pp.453-462.
  5. ^ R.K. Dube, "Southeast Asia as the Indian El-Dorado", in Chattopadhyaya, D. P. and Project of History of Indian Science, Philosophy, and Culture (eds.), History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 1999, Vol.1, Pt.3, C.G. Pande (ed.), India's Interaction with Southeast Asia, Chapter 6, pp.87-109.
  6. ^ Anna T. N. Bennett (31 December 2009). "Gold in early Southeast Asia (paragraph no. 6)". Archeosciences. Revue d'Archéométrie (33). Open Edition: 99–107. doi:10.4000/archeosciences.2072. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  7. ^ Schafer, Edward H. (1963). The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A Study of Tang Exotics. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05462-2.
  8. ^ Ian Glover, “Suvarnabhumi – Myth or Reality?”, Banchā Phongphānit& Somčhēt Thinnaphong (ed.), Suvarnabhumi: the Golden Land: the New Finding for Suvarnabhumi Terra Incognita, Bangkok, Thailand, GISTDA and BIA, 2019, pp.11-16.
  9. ^ Paul Wheatley (March 1, 2011). "Presidential Address: India Beyond the Ganges—Desultory Reflections on the Origins of Civilization in Southeast Asia". The Journal of Asian Studies. 42 (1). cambridge org: 13–28. doi:10.2307/2055365. JSTOR 2055365. S2CID 161697583. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  10. ^ Lionel Casson (ed.), Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, Princeton University Press, 1989, p.91.
  11. ^ Dionysios Oecumenis Periegetes (Orbis Descriptio), lines 589-90; Dionysii Orbis Terrae Descriptio
  12. ^ ”At navem pelago flectenti Aquilonis ab oris / Ad solem calido referentem lumen ab ortu, / Aurea spectetur tibi pinguibus insula glebis”; Priscianus Caesariensis, Periegesis Prisciani (lines 593-594), in Habes candide lector in hoc opere Prisciani volumen maius, Venetiis, Boneto Locatello, 1496, p.281.
  13. ^ Rufius Festus Avienius, Descriptio orbis terrae, III, v.750-779.Descriptio orbis terrae
  14. ^ "Solomon gave this command: That they should go along with his own stewards to the land that was of old called Ophir, but now the Aurea Chersonesus, which belongs to India, to fetch him gold."; Antiquities, 8:6:4.
  15. ^ a b c d "Facts and Fiction: The Myth of Suvannabhumi Through the Thai and Burmese Looking Glass". Academia. July 1, 2018. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  16. ^ R. C. Majumdar, Ancient Indian Colonies in the Far East, Vol. II, Suvarnadvipa, Calcutta, Modern Publishing Syndicate, 1937, Chapter IV, Suvarnadvipa, pp.37-47.Suvarnadvipa
  17. ^ Saw Mra Aung, "The Accounts of Suvannabhumi from Various Literary Sources", Suvannabhumi: Multi-Disciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Busan University of Foreign Studies, Korea), vol. 3, no.1, June 2011, pp.67-86.
  18. ^ George Coedès, review of Paul Wheatley, The Golden Khersonese (Kuala Lumpur, 1961), in T'oung Pao 通報, vol.49, parts 4/5, 1962, pp.433-439; Claudius Ptolemy, Geography, Book I, chapter 17, paragraph 4; Louis Malleret, L’Archéologie du Delta du Mékong, Tome Troisiéme, La culture du Fu-nan, Paris, 1962, chap.XXV, "Oc-Èo et Kattigara", pp.421-54; "Mr. Caverhill seems very fairly to have proved that the ancient Cattagara [sic] is the same with the present Ponteamass [Banteaymeas], and the modern city Cambodia [Phnom Penh] the ancient metropolis of Sinae, or Thina", The Gentleman's Magazine, December 1768, "Epitome of Philosophical Transactions", vol.57, p.578; John Caverhill, "Some Attempts to ascertain the utmost Extent of the Knowledge of the Ancients in the East Indies", Philosophical Transactions, vol.57, 1767, pp.155-174.
  19. ^ Prapod Assavavirulhakarn, The Ascendancy of Theravada Buddhism in Southeast Asia, Chieng Mai, Silkworm Books, 2010, p.55.
  20. ^ T'oung Pao: International Journal of Chinese Studies. 1958. p. 185
  21. ^ Pang Khat, «Le Bouddhisme au Cambodge», René de Berval, Présence du Bouddhisme, Paris, Gallimard, 1987, pp.535-551, pp.537, 538; Amarajiva Lochan, "India and Thailand: Early Trade Routes and Sea Ports", S.K. Maity, Upendra Thakur, A.K. Narain (eds,), Studies in Orientology: Essays in Memory of Prof. A.L. Basham, Agra, Y.K. Publishers, 1988, pp.222-235, pp.222, 229-230; Prapod Assavavirulhakarn, The Ascendancy of Theravada Buddhism in Southeast Asia, Chieng Mai, Silkworm Books, 2010, p.55; Promsak Jermsawatdi, Thai Art with Indian Influences, New Delhi, Abhinav Publications, 1979, chapter III, "Buddhist Art in Thailand", pp.16-24, p.17.
  22. ^ Rinith Taing, “Was Cambodia home to Asia’s ancient ‘Land of Gold’?”, The Phnom Penh Post, 5 January, 2018.
  23. ^ Shorto, H.L. (2002). "The 32 Myos in the medieval Mon Kingdom". In Vladimir I. Braginsky (ed.). Classical civilisations of South East Asia: an anthology of articles. Routledge. p. 590. ISBN 9780700714100.
  24. ^ Harvey, G. E. (1925). History of Burma: From the Earliest Times to 10 March 1824. London: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.
  25. ^ "Suvarnabhumi City Excavation to be Continued After Rainy Season". Mon News. 5 August 2014.
  26. ^ Moore, Elizabeth; San Win (Spring 2007). "The Gold Coast: Suvannabhumi? Lower Myanmar Walled Sites of the First Millennium A.D." Asian Perspectives. 46 (1). University of Hawai'i Press: 202–232. doi:10.1353/asi.2007.0007. JSTOR 42928710. S2CID 49343386.
  27. ^ Zhang, Yifan (July–December 2016). "A comparative study of Buddhist nationalistic movements in Myanmar and Sri Lanka: A case study on the 969 movement in Myanmar and the Bodu Bala Sena in Sri Lanka". Liberal Arts Journal. 16 (2). Thammasat University.
  28. ^ Damrong Rachanubhab, "History of Siam in the Period Antecedent to the Founding of Ayuddhya by King Phra Chao U Thong", Miscellaneous Articles: Written for the Journal of the Siam Society by His late Royal Highness Prince Damrong, Bangkok, 1962, pp.49-88, p.54; Promsak Jermsawatdi, Thai Art with Indian Influences, New Delhi, Abhinav Publications, 1979, pp.16-24. William J. Gedney, "A Possible Early Thai Route to the Sea", Journal of the Siam Society, Volume 76, 1988, pp.12-16.[1]
  29. ^ http://dasta.or.th/en/publicmedia/84-news/news-org [dead link]
  30. ^ Manit Vallibhotama, "Muang U-Thong", Muang Boran Journal, Volume 14, no.1, January–March 1988, pp.29-44; Sisak Wanliphodom, Suwannaphum yu thi ni, Bangkok, 1998; Warunee Osatharom, Muang Suphan Through Changing Periods, Bangkok, Thammasat University Press, 2004; The Siam Society, Miscellaneous Articles Written for the JSS by His Late Highness Prince Damrong, The Siam Society, Bangkok, B.E. 2505 (1962); William J. Gedney, "A Possible Early Thai Route to the Sea", Journal of the Siam Society, Volume 76, 1988, pp.12-16.[2]
  31. ^ Thepthani 1953, p. 22-23.
  32. ^ a b Thepthani 1953, p. 24.
  33. ^ a b Thepthani 1953, p. 26.
  34. ^ Thepthani 1953, p. 25.
  35. ^ Thepthani 1953, p. 27.
  36. ^ Thepthani 1953, p. 34-35.
  37. ^ a b Thepthani 1953, p. 30.
  38. ^ Thepthani 1953, p. 31.
  39. ^ Thepthani 1953, p. 45-46.
  40. ^ Gerini, G. E. (1909). "Researches on Ptolemy's geography of Eastern Asia (further India and Indo-Malay archipelago)". Asiatic Society Monographs. 1: 77–111.
  41. ^ Paul Wheatley (1961). The Golden Khersonese: Studies in the Historical Geography of the Malay Peninsula before A.D. 1500. Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya Press. pp. 177–184. OCLC 504030596.
  42. ^ a b Bennett, Anna T. N. (2009). "Gold in early Southeast Asia". Archeosciences (33): 99–107. doi:10.4000/archeosciences.2072.
  43. ^ Dube, 2003: 6
  44. ^ H. Kern, "Java en het Goudeiland Volgens de Oudste Berichten", Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsch-Indië, Volume 16, 1869, pp.638-648.[3]; See also Gabriel Ferrand, "Suvarņadvīpa", in L'empire sumatranais de Crivijaya, Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1922, p.121-134.
  45. ^ “Yi-tsing designates this country both under the name of Fo-che and Che-li-fo-che; he twice calls it 金洲 kin-tcheou "the island of gold": "金洲 kin-tcheou [Jinzhou] exactly embraces Suvarna-dvipa.” Gabriel Ferrand, « Le royaume de Çrivijaya », Journal Asiatique, tome xiv, Juillet-Août 1919, p.155, citing Edouard Chavannes, Mémoire composé à l'époque de la grande dynastie T'ang sur les religieux éminents: qui allèrent chercher la loi dans les pays d'Occident, par I-Tsing (Memoire composed in the time of the Great T'ang dynasty on the eminent religious who went to seek the Law in the countries of the West, by Yijing), Paris, E. Leroux 1894, pp.179, 181, 186; I-ching, Chinese Monks in India: Biography of Eminent Monks who went to the Western World in search of the Law during the Great T'ang Dynasty, translated by Latika Lahiri, Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1986, pp.120, 137.
  46. ^ Colless, 1975; Miksic, 1999: 19; Manning et al., 1980
  47. ^ Wahyono Martowikrido, 1994; 1999
  48. ^ Gabriel Ferrand, "Suvarņadvīpa", in L'empire sumatranais de Crivijaya, Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1922, p.123-125; See also George Coedès, Les états hindouisés d'Indochine et d'Indonésie, Paris, De Boccard, 1948, p.337.
  49. ^ "The Kingdom of Butuan". Philippine Gold: Treasures of Lost Kingdoms. Asia Society New York. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
  50. ^ Chung Tan (2015-03-18). Himalaya Calling. World Scientific. ISBN 9781938134609. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  51. ^ Sailendra Nath Sen (1999). Ancient Indian History and Civilization...Ramayana refers to Yavadvipa. New Age International. ISBN 9788122411980. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  52. ^ Chung, Tan (2015-03-18). Himalaya Calling: The Origins of China and India. World Scientific. ISBN 9781938134616.
  53. ^ a b E.W. Dahlgren, "Were the Hawaiian Islands visited by the Spaniards before their Discovery by Captain Cook in 1778?", Kungliga Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens Handlingar, Band 57. No.1, 1916–1917, pp.1-222, pp.47-48, 66.
  54. ^ The Travels of Pedro Teixeira, tr. and annotated by W.F. Sinclair, London, Hakluyt Society, Series 2, Vol.9, 1902, p.10; H. R. Wagner and Pedro de Unamuno, "The Voyage of Pedro de Unamuno to California in 1587", California Historical Society Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 2 (Jul., 1923), pp. 140-160, p.142.[4]
  55. ^ “Alvaro de Saavedra….anduvieron 250 Leguas, hasta la isla del Oro, adonde tomaron Puerto, que es grande, y de Gente Negra, y con los cabellos crespos, y desnuda”; Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas, Historia General de los Hechos de los Castellanos en las Islas i Tierra Firme del Mar Oceano, Madrid, 1601, Decada IV, libro III, cap.iv, p.60. June L. Whittaker, (ed.), Documents and Readings in New Guinea History: Pre-history to 1889, Milton, Jacaranda, 1975, pp,183-4.

General references edit

  • Thepthani, Phra Borihan (1953). (in Thai). S. Thammasamakkhi. Archived from the original on 5 November 2023. Retrieved 5 November 2023.

See also edit

suvarnabhumi, this, article, about, ancient, toponym, airport, serving, bangkok, airport, 18th, century, settlement, present, district, northeast, thailand, suwannaphum, district, suvarṇabhūmi, sanskrit, वर, णभ, pali, suvaṇṇabhūmi, toponym, that, appears, many. This article is about the ancient toponym For the airport serving Bangkok see Suvarnabhumi Airport For the 18th century settlement and present day district in Northeast Thailand see Suwannaphum District Suvarṇabhumi Sanskrit स वर णभ म Pali Suvaṇṇabhumi a is a toponym that appears in many ancient Indian literary sources and Buddhist texts 1 such as the Mahavamsa 2 some stories of the Jataka tales 3 4 the Milinda Panha 5 and the Ramayana 6 Though its exact location is unknown and remains a matter of debate Suvarṇabhumi was an important port along trade routes that run through the Indian Ocean setting sail from the wealthy ports in Basra Ubullah and Siraf through Muscat Malabar Ceylon the Nicobars Kedah and on through the Strait of Malacca to fabled Suvarṇabhumi 7 Ian Glover Emeritus Reader in Southeast Asian Archaeology at the University of London has said It is widely accepted in the 21st century that Suvarnabhumi as reported in early Indian literature was not a specific location which can be marked on a map Rather it was an idealised place perhaps equivalent to Atlantis in Western history a distant somewhere to the east of India where traders sailors and Buddhist and Hindu teachers went to make their fortunes and spread their teachings and bring back gold and other exotic products desired by a rising elite and the wealthy classes at home 8 Contents 1 Historiography 2 Location 2 1 Mainland Southeast Asia 2 1 1 Cambodia 2 1 2 Myanmar 2 1 3 Thailand 2 2 Insular Southeast Asia 2 3 Bangladesh 3 European Age of Discovery 4 Notes 5 Citations 6 General references 7 See alsoHistoriography edit nbsp Crisa and Aureia the Isles of Gold near the Aurea Chersonese the Golden Peninsula near Java in the Indian Ocean on the map of Andreas Walsperger around 1448 Suvarṇabhumi means golden land or land of gold and the ancient sources have associated it with one of a variety of places throughout the Southeast Asian region It might also be the source of the Western concept of Aurea Regio in Claudius Ptolemy s Trans Gangetic India or India beyond the Ganges and the Golden Chersonese of the Greek and Roman geographers and sailors 9 The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea refers to the Land of Gold Chryse and describes it as an island in the ocean the furthest extremity towards the east of the inhabited world lying under the rising sun itself called Chryse Beyond this country there lies a very great inland city called Thina 10 Dionysius Periegetes mentioned The island of Chryse Gold situated at the very rising of the Sun 11 Or as Priscian put it in his popular rendition of Periegetes if your ship takes you to where the rising sun returns its warm light then will be seen the Isle of Gold with its fertile soil 12 Avienius referred to the Insula Aurea Golden Isle located where the Scythian seas give rise to the Dawn 13 Josephus speaks of the Aurea Chersonesus which he equates with the Biblical Ophir whence the ships of Tyre and Israel brought back the gold for the Temple of Jerusalem 14 The city of Thina was described by Ptolemy s Geography as the capital city of the country on the eastern shores of the Magnus Sinus Gulf of Thailand Location editThe location of Suvarnabhumi has been the subject of much debate both in scholarly and nationalistic agendas It remains one of the most mystified and contentious toponyms in the history of Asia 15 Scholars have identified two regions as possible locations for the ancient Suvarnabhumi Insular Southeast Asia and Southern India 16 In a study of the various literary sources for the location of Suvarṇabhumi Saw Mra Aung concluded that it was impossible to draw a decisive conclusion on this and that only thorough scientific research would reveal which of several versions of Suvarṇabhumi was the original 17 Some have speculated that this country refers to the Kingdom of Funan The main port of Funan was Cattigara Sinarum statio Kattigara the port of the Sinae 18 Due to many factors including the lack of historical evidence and the absence of scholarly consensus various cultures in Southeast Asia identify Suwannaphum as an ancient kingdom there and claim ethnic and political descendancy as its successors 19 As no such claim or legend existed before the translation and publication of the Edicts scholars see these claims as based on nationalism or attempts to claim the title of the first Buddhists in Southeast Asia 15 Mainland Southeast Asia edit Cambodia edit nbsp The territorial extent of the Kingdom of Funan 1st to 7th century covers much of mainland Southeast Asia including present day Cambodia Laos Myanmar Thailand and Vietnam Funan 1st 7th century was the first kingdom in Cambodian history and it was also the first Indianized kingdom that prospered in Southeast Asia Both Hinduism and Buddhism flourished in this kingdom According to the Chinese records two Buddhist monks from Funan named Mandrasena and Sanghapala took up residency in China in the 5th to 6th centuries and translated several Buddhist sutras from Sanskrit or a Prakrit into Chinese 20 The oldest archaeological evidence of Indianized civilization in Southeast Asia comes from central Burma central and southern Thailand and the lower Mekong Delta These finds belong to the period of Funan Kingdom or Nokor Phnom present day Cambodia and South Vietnam including part of Burma Lao and Thailand which was the first political centre established in Southeast Asia Taking into account the epigraphic and archaeological evidence the Suvarnabhumi mentioned in the early texts must be identified with these areas 21 Of these areas only Funan had maritime links with India through its port at Oc Eo Therefore although Suvarnabhumi in time became a generic name broadly applied to all the lands east of India particularly Sumatra its earliest application was probably to Funan Furthermore the Chinese name Funan for Cambodia may be a transcription of the Suvaṇṇa of Suvaṇṇabhumi nbsp The oldest Southeast Asian inscription from Cambodia dated to the 7th century issued during the reign of King Isanavarman I identifies Suvarnabhumi with the kingdom of Chenla 6th 9th century the successor of Funan 1st 7th century In December 2017 Dr Vong Sotheara of the Royal University of Phnom Penh discovered a Pre Angkorian stone inscription in the Province of Kampong Speu Basedth District which he tentatively dated to 633 AD According to him the inscription would prove that Suvarnabhumi was the Khmer Empire The inscription was issued during the reign of King Isanavarman I 616 637 AD of the Cambodian Kingdom of Chenla the successor of Funan and the predecessor of the Khmer Empire The inscription translated read The great King Isanavarman is full of glory and bravery He is the King of Kings who rules over Suvarnabhumi until the sea which is the border while the kings in the neighbouring states honour his order to their heads The Inscription is the oldest evidence ever found in Southeast Asia mentioning Suvarnabhumi and identifying it with Chenla The inscription is now exhibited in the National Museum of Cambodia in Phnom Penh However his claim and the findings are yet to be peer reviewed and they remain in doubt with other historians and archaeology experts across the region 22 Myanmar edit See also Thaton Kingdom Mon tradition maintains that the Thaton Kingdom in Lower Myanmar was called Suvannabhumi Burmese သ ဝဏ ဏဘ မ Thuwunnabhumi 23 However dating the Thaton Kingdom independent of traditional chronicles gives an earliest founding year of 825 even this date remains unattested 24 There are archaeological sites within Mon State that local archeologists cite as Suvannabhumi Suvarnabhumi City in Bilin Township is one such site with limited excavation work The site called Winka Old City by other archeologists contains 40 high grounds of which only 4 have been excavated 25 The Winka site along with nearby walled sites like Kyaikkatha and Kelasa have been dated as early as the sixth century 26 While the archaeology of early Lower Burmese sites requires more work other urban centres in Myanmar like the Sri Ksetra Kingdom in modern day Pyay were Buddhist as early as the 5th century 15 The scholarly search for Suvannabhumi within Myanmar is attached to various nationalistic and religious narratives about Suvannabhumi 27 The fifteenth century legend of Shwedagon Pagoda enshrining a few hairs of the Buddha brought back by Mon merchants highlights the cultural significance placed on early Buddhist missionaries in Myanmar In many such legends the narrative of the conversion of Suvannabhumi is Burmanizes key historical Buddhist figures 15 Thailand edit nbsp Territory extent of Suvarnabhumi Kingdom according to the Thai Chronicles before it was sacked by Funan in c 1st 2nd centuries See also Suphan Buri Dvaravati and History of Thailand In Thailand government proclamations and national museums insist that Suwannaphum was somewhere on the coast of the central plain especially at the ancient city of U Thong which might be the origin of the Mon Dvaravati Culture 28 These claims are not based on any historical records but on archaeological evidence of human settlements in the area dating back more than 4 000 years and the findings of 3rd century Roman coins 29 The Thai government named the new Bangkok airport Suvarnabhumi Airport after the mythic kingdom of Suwannaphum in celebration of this tradition This tradition however is doubted by scholars who for the same reason as the Burman claim Suphan Buri from the Sanskrit Suvarnapura Golden City in present day west central Thailand was founded in 877 882 as a city of the Mon speaking kingdom of Dvaravati with the name Meuang Thawarawadi Si Suphannaphumi the Dvaravati city of Suvarnabhumi indicating that Dvaravati at that time identified as Suvarnabhumi 30 According to Thai chronicles around 241 BCE during the times that two Buddhist monks named Sona Thera and Uttara Thera came from Magadha to spread Buddhism to Suvarnabhumi the majority of the kingdom s population were Mon people while Thai people arrived later around 50 BCE 31 The Suvarnabhumi Kingdom was destroyed by the invasion of Funan around the 1st 2nd centuries 32 and most of its population was forcibly moved to Funan resulting in it being left abandoned 33 After Funan lost to Bhavavarman I of Chenla in 550 Suvarnabhumi de facto became the tributary state of Chenla as well 32 The kingdom s area reached Lamphakappa Nakhon lmphkppankhr present day Lampang in the north and was ruled in mandala style with five king s cities including Suvarnabhumi the present day old town of Nakhon Pathom Ratchaburi Singburi Phetchaburi and Tanintharyi 34 The area surrounding the old capital of Suvarnabhumi was resettled in 590 when Sri Sittichai Phromthep thawsrisiththiichyphrhmethph from Yossothon possibly the city in Chenla established the new city Nakhon Chai Si old name of the present day Nakhon Pathom Most of its population were Thai people from the Ngao Yom and Salween river basins 33 Lavo was also founded during such a period Both later created a new kingdom Dvaravati however the new capital together with the other nearest settlement Pong Tuek phngtuk present day Ratchaburi was sacked by Chenla 300 years later around the 8th 9th centuries 35 After that the center of Dvaravati culture shifted to Lavo 36 and the people of the sacked Dvaravati moved westward and founded a new city in 807 in the area of the present day Ladya subdistrict Kanchanaburi Kanchanaburi old city while the affected area was almost left abandoned 37 The new settlement was named Suvarnabhumi and was then renamed Sri Ayutthaya and Kanchanaburi respectively 37 38 At the peak of power around the 13th 14th centuries the border of the new Suvarnabhumi or Suphannabhumi met Lavo Kingdom at the Pasak River in the east the west to Dawei on the coast of the outer sea Andaman Sea northwest to the south of Mawlamyine which was the sea trading harbor of Chaliang kingdom Si Satchanalai while the south to the tip of the Malay Peninsula and the north to Phraek Siracha present day Sankhaburi 39 In 1351 the Suphannabhumi kingdom was merged into its succeeding state Ayuttaya after its last ruler Uthong moved eastward to create a new capital Ayutthaya on the present day Ayutthaya island Insular Southeast Asia edit nbsp The Golden Chersonese details from the eleventh map of Asia southeast Asia Details from Nicolaus Germanus 1467 copy of a map from Ptolemy s Geography showing the Golden Chersonese i e the Malay Peninsula The horizontal line represents the Equator which is misplaced too far north due to its being calculated from the Tropic of Cancer using the Ptolemaic degree which is only five sixths of a true degree One of the clues referring to the Malay Peninsula came from Claudius Ptolemy s Geography who referred to it as Golden Chersonese literally golden peninsula which pinpointed exactly that location in South East Asia 40 The term Suvarnabhumi land of gold is commonly thought to refer to the Southeast Asian Peninsula including lower Burma and the Malay Peninsula However there is another gold referring term Suvarnadvipa the Golden Island or Peninsula where dvipa may refer to either a peninsula or an island 41 which may correspond to the Indonesian Archipelago especially Sumatra 42 Both terms might refer to a powerful coastal or island kingdom in present day Indonesia possibly centered on Sumatra or Java This corresponds to the gold production areas traditionally known in Minangkabau Highlands in Barisan Mountains Sumatra and interior Borneo 42 An eighth century Indian text known as the Samaraiccakaha describes a sea voyage to Suvarnadvipa and the making of bricks from the gold rich sands which they inscribed with the name dharana and then baked 43 These pointing out to the direction of western part of insular Southeast Asia especially Sumatra the Malay Peninsula Borneo and Java Benefitting from its strategic location on the narrow Strait of Malacca the insular theory argued that other than actually producing gold it might also be based on such a kingdom s potential for power and wealth hence Land of Gold as a hub for sea trade also known from vague descriptions of contemporary Chinese pilgrims to India The kingdom referred to as the center of maritime trade between China and India was Srivijaya Due to the Chinese writing system however the interpretations of Chinese historical sources are based on supposed correspondences of ideograms and their possible phonetic equivalents with known toponyms in the ancient Southeast Asian civilizations Hendrik Kern concluded that Sumatra was the Suvarnadvipa mentioned in ancient Hindu texts and the island of Chryse mentioned in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea and by Rufius Festus Avienius 44 The Chinese pilgrim and Buddhist scholar Yijing 義淨 visited the kingdom of Srivijaya on Sumatra in 672 and identified it with Suvarnadvipa the Island of Gold 金洲 jin zhou 45 The interpretation of early travel records is not always easy The Javanese embassies to China in 860 and 873 CE refer to Java as rich in gold although it was in fact devoid of any deposits The Javanese would have had to import gold possibly from neighbouring Sumatra Malay Peninsula or Borneo where gold was still being mined in the 19th century and where ancient mining sites were located 46 Even though Java did not have its own gold deposits the texts make frequent references to the existence of goldsmiths and it is clear from the archaeological evidence such as Wonoboyo Hoard that this culture had developed a sophisticated gold working technology which relied on the import of substantial quantities of the metal 47 nbsp Padang Roco Inscription dated 1286 from Sumatra mentioned the statue of Amoghapasa Lokesvara taken from Bhumi Jawa to Svarnnabhumi Sumatra in order to be erected at Dharmasraya The Padang Roco Inscription of 1286 CE states that an image of Buddha Amoghapasa Lokeshvara was brought to Dharmasraya on the Upper Batang Hari the river of Jambi was transported from Bhumi Java Java to Suvarnabhumi Sumatra and erected by order of the Javanese ruler Kertanegara the inscription clearly identifies Sumatra as Suvarnabhumi 48 Butuan was so rich in treasures that a museum curator Florina H Capistrano Baker stated that it was even richer than the more well known western maritime kingdom of Srivijaya The astonishing quantities and impressive quality of gold treasures recovered in Butuan suggest that its flourishing port settlement played an until recently little recognized role in early Southeast Asian trade Surprisingly the amount of gold discovered in Butuan far exceeds that found in Sumatra where the much better known flourishing kingdom of Srivijaya is said to have been located This despite that most of the gold of Butuan were already looted by invaders 49 Bangladesh edit A popular interpretation of Rabindranath Tagore s poem Amar Shonar Bangla serves as the basis for the claim that Suvarnabhumi was actually situated in central Bengal at Sonargaon 50 In some Jain texts it is mentioned that merchants of Anga in present day Bihar a state of India that borders with Bengal regularly sailed to Suvarnabhumi and ancient Bengal was in fact situated very close to Anga connected by rivers of the Ganges Brahmaputra Delta Bengal has also been described in ancient Indian and Southeast Asian chronicles as a seafaring country enjoying trade relations with Dravidian kingdoms Sri Lanka Java and Sumatra Sinhalese tradition holds that the first king of Sri Lanka Vijaya Singha came from Bengal 51 Moreover the region is commonly associated with golden color the soil of Bengal is known for its golden color Gangetic alluvial golden harvest rice golden fruits mangoes golden minerals gold and clay and yellow brown skinned people Bengal is described in ancient Sanskrit texts as Gaud Desh Golden Radiant land During the reign of the Bengal Sultans and the Mughal Empire central Bengal was home to a prosperous trading town called Sonargaon Golden village which was connected to North India by the Grand Trunk Road and was frequented by Arab Persian and Chinese travelers including Ibn Battuta and Zheng He Even today Bengalis often refer to their land as Shonar Bangla Golden Bengal and the national anthem of Bangladesh Amar Shonar Bangla My Bengal of Gold from the omonym Tagore s poem is a reference to this theory 52 European Age of Discovery editThe thirst for gold formed the most powerful incentive to explorers at the beginning of modern times but although more and more extensive regions were brought to light by them they sought in vain in the East Indian Archipelago for the Gold and Silver Islands where according to the legends the precious metals were to be gathered from the ground and did not need to be laboriously extracted from the interior of the earth In spite of their failure they found it difficult to give up the alluring picture When they did not find what they sought in the regions which were indicated by the old legends and by the maps based thereon they hoped for better success in still unexplored regions and clutched with avidity at every hint that they were here to attain their object 53 The history of geography thus shows us how the Gold and Silver Islands were constantly so to speak wandering towards the East Marco Polo spoke in the most exaggerated language of the wealth of gold in Zipangu situated at the extremity of this part of the world and had thus pointed out where the precious metals should preferably be sought Martin Behaim on his globe of 1492 revived the Argyre and Chryse of antiquity in these regions 53 In 1519 Cristovao de Mendonca was given instructions to search for the legendary Isles of Gold said to lie to beyond Sumatra which he was unable to do and in 1587 an expedition under the command of Pedro de Unamunu was sent to find them in the vicinity of Zipangu Japan 54 According to Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas in 1528 Alvaro de Saavedra Ceron in the ship Florida on a voyage from the Moluccas to Mexico reached a large island which he took for the Isla del Oro This island has not been identified although it seems likely that it is Biak Manus or one of the Schouten Islands on the north coast of New Guinea 55 Notes edit Spelled in various local languages as Malay Suwarna Bumi Burmese သ ဝဏ ဏဘ မ 8ṵwʊ ɰ na bumḭ Khmer ស វណ ណភ ម Sovannaphoum and Thai suwrrnphumi RTGS Suwannaphum Citations edit Sailendra Nath Sen 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Age International ISBN 9788122411980 Retrieved November 30 2018 To Suvarnabhumi he Moggaliputta sent Sona and Uttara Mahanama The Mahavaṃsa or The Great Chronicle of Ceylon translated into English by Wilhelm Geiger assisted by Mabel Haynes Bode with an addendum by G C Mendis London Luzac amp Co for the Pali Text Society 1964 Chapter XII The Converting of Different Countries p 86 Sussondi Jataka Sankha Jataka Mahajanaka Jataka in Edward B Cowell ed The Jataka or Stories of the Buddha s Former Births London Cambridge University Press 1897 reprinted Pali Text Society dist by Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1969 Vol III p 124 Vol IV p 10 Vol VI p 22 J S Speyer The Jatakamala or Garland of Birth Stories of Aryasura Sacred Books of the Buddhists Vol I London Henry Frowde 1895 reprint Delhi Motilal Banarsidass 1982 No XIV Suparagajataka pp 453 462 R K Dube Southeast Asia as the Indian El Dorado in Chattopadhyaya D P and Project of History of Indian Science Philosophy and Culture eds History of Science Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization New Delhi Oxford University Press 1999 Vol 1 Pt 3 C G Pande ed India s Interaction with Southeast Asia Chapter 6 pp 87 109 Anna T N Bennett 31 December 2009 Gold in early Southeast Asia paragraph no 6 Archeosciences Revue d Archeometrie 33 Open Edition 99 107 doi 10 4000 archeosciences 2072 Retrieved November 30 2018 Schafer Edward H 1963 The Golden Peaches of Samarkand A Study of Tang Exotics University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05462 2 Ian Glover Suvarnabhumi Myth or Reality Bancha Phongphanit amp Somchet Thinnaphong ed Suvarnabhumi the Golden Land the New Finding for Suvarnabhumi Terra Incognita Bangkok Thailand GISTDA and BIA 2019 pp 11 16 Paul Wheatley March 1 2011 Presidential Address India Beyond the Ganges Desultory Reflections on the Origins of Civilization in Southeast Asia The Journal of Asian Studies 42 1 cambridge org 13 28 doi 10 2307 2055365 JSTOR 2055365 S2CID 161697583 Retrieved November 30 2018 Lionel Casson ed Periplus of the Erythraean Sea Princeton University Press 1989 p 91 Dionysios Oecumenis Periegetes Orbis Descriptio lines 589 90 Dionysii Orbis Terrae Descriptio At navem pelago flectenti Aquilonis ab oris Ad solem calido referentem lumen ab ortu Aurea spectetur tibi pinguibus insula glebis Priscianus Caesariensis Periegesis Prisciani lines 593 594 in Habes candide lector in hoc opere Prisciani volumen maius Venetiis Boneto Locatello 1496 p 281 Rufius Festus Avienius Descriptio orbis terrae III v 750 779 Descriptio orbis terrae Solomon gave this command That they should go along with his own stewards to the land that was of old called Ophir but now the Aurea Chersonesus which belongs to India to fetch him gold Antiquities 8 6 4 a b c d Facts and Fiction The Myth of Suvannabhumi Through the Thai and Burmese Looking Glass Academia July 1 2018 Retrieved November 30 2018 R C Majumdar Ancient Indian Colonies in the Far East Vol II Suvarnadvipa Calcutta Modern Publishing Syndicate 1937 Chapter IV Suvarnadvipa pp 37 47 Suvarnadvipa Saw Mra Aung The Accounts of Suvannabhumi from Various Literary Sources Suvannabhumi Multi Disciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies Busan University of Foreign Studies Korea vol 3 no 1 June 2011 pp 67 86 George Coedes review of Paul Wheatley The Golden Khersonese Kuala Lumpur 1961 in T oung Pao 通報 vol 49 parts 4 5 1962 pp 433 439 Claudius Ptolemy Geography Book I chapter 17 paragraph 4 Louis Malleret L Archeologie du Delta du Mekong Tome Troisieme La culture du Fu nan Paris 1962 chap XXV Oc Eo et Kattigara pp 421 54 Mr Caverhill seems very fairly to have proved that the ancient Cattagara sic is the same with the present Ponteamass Banteaymeas and the modern city Cambodia Phnom Penh the ancient metropolis of Sinae or Thina The Gentleman s Magazine December 1768 Epitome of Philosophical Transactions vol 57 p 578 John Caverhill Some Attempts to ascertain the utmost Extent of the Knowledge of the Ancients in the East Indies Philosophical Transactions vol 57 1767 pp 155 174 Prapod Assavavirulhakarn The Ascendancy of Theravada Buddhism in Southeast Asia Chieng Mai Silkworm Books 2010 p 55 T oung Pao International Journal of Chinese Studies 1958 p 185 Pang Khat Le Bouddhisme au Cambodge Rene de Berval Presence du Bouddhisme Paris Gallimard 1987 pp 535 551 pp 537 538 Amarajiva Lochan India and Thailand Early Trade Routes and Sea Ports S K Maity Upendra Thakur A K Narain eds Studies in Orientology Essays in Memory of Prof A L Basham Agra Y K Publishers 1988 pp 222 235 pp 222 229 230 Prapod Assavavirulhakarn The Ascendancy of Theravada Buddhism in Southeast Asia Chieng Mai Silkworm Books 2010 p 55 Promsak Jermsawatdi Thai Art with Indian Influences New Delhi Abhinav Publications 1979 chapter III Buddhist Art in Thailand pp 16 24 p 17 Rinith Taing Was Cambodia home to Asia s ancient Land of Gold The Phnom Penh Post 5 January 2018 Shorto H L 2002 The 32 Myos in the medieval Mon Kingdom In Vladimir I Braginsky ed Classical civilisations of South East Asia an anthology of articles Routledge p 590 ISBN 9780700714100 Harvey G E 1925 History of Burma From the Earliest Times to 10 March 1824 London Frank Cass amp Co Ltd Suvarnabhumi City Excavation to be Continued After Rainy Season Mon News 5 August 2014 Moore Elizabeth San Win Spring 2007 The Gold Coast Suvannabhumi Lower Myanmar Walled Sites of the First Millennium A D Asian Perspectives 46 1 University of Hawai i Press 202 232 doi 10 1353 asi 2007 0007 JSTOR 42928710 S2CID 49343386 Zhang Yifan July December 2016 A comparative study of Buddhist nationalistic movements in Myanmar and Sri Lanka A case study on the 969 movement in Myanmar and the Bodu Bala Sena in Sri Lanka Liberal Arts Journal 16 2 Thammasat University Damrong Rachanubhab History of Siam in the Period Antecedent to the Founding of Ayuddhya by King Phra Chao U Thong Miscellaneous Articles Written for the Journal of the Siam Society by His late Royal Highness Prince Damrong Bangkok 1962 pp 49 88 p 54 Promsak Jermsawatdi Thai Art with Indian Influences New Delhi Abhinav Publications 1979 pp 16 24 William J Gedney A Possible Early Thai Route to the Sea Journal of the Siam Society Volume 76 1988 pp 12 16 1 http dasta or th en publicmedia 84 news news org dead link Manit Vallibhotama Muang U Thong Muang Boran Journal Volume 14 no 1 January March 1988 pp 29 44 Sisak Wanliphodom Suwannaphum yu thi ni Bangkok 1998 Warunee Osatharom Muang Suphan Through Changing Periods Bangkok Thammasat University Press 2004 The Siam Society Miscellaneous Articles Written for the JSS by His Late Highness Prince Damrong The Siam Society Bangkok B E 2505 1962 William J Gedney A Possible Early Thai Route to the Sea Journal of the Siam Society Volume 76 1988 pp 12 16 2 Thepthani 1953 p 22 23 a b Thepthani 1953 p 24 a b Thepthani 1953 p 26 Thepthani 1953 p 25 Thepthani 1953 p 27 Thepthani 1953 p 34 35 a b Thepthani 1953 p 30 Thepthani 1953 p 31 Thepthani 1953 p 45 46 Gerini G E 1909 Researches on Ptolemy s geography of Eastern Asia further India and Indo Malay archipelago Asiatic Society Monographs 1 77 111 Paul Wheatley 1961 The Golden Khersonese Studies in the Historical Geography of the Malay Peninsula before A D 1500 Kuala Lumpur University of Malaya Press pp 177 184 OCLC 504030596 a b Bennett Anna T N 2009 Gold in early Southeast Asia Archeosciences 33 99 107 doi 10 4000 archeosciences 2072 Dube 2003 6 H Kern Java en het Goudeiland Volgens de Oudste Berichten Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsch Indie Volume 16 1869 pp 638 648 3 See also Gabriel Ferrand Suvarnadvipa in L empire sumatranais de Crivijaya Paris Imprimerie nationale 1922 p 121 134 Yi tsing designates this country both under the name of Fo che and Che li fo che he twice calls it 金洲 kin tcheou the island of gold 金洲 kin tcheou Jinzhou exactly embraces Suvarna dvipa Gabriel Ferrand Le royaume de Crivijaya Journal Asiatique tome xiv Juillet Aout 1919 p 155 citing Edouard Chavannes Memoire compose a l epoque de la grande dynastie T ang sur les religieux eminents qui allerent chercher la loi dans les pays d Occident par I Tsing Memoire composed in the time of the Great T ang dynasty on the eminent religious who went to seek the Law in the countries of the West by Yijing Paris E Leroux 1894 pp 179 181 186 I ching Chinese Monks in India Biography of Eminent Monks who went to the Western World in search of the Law during the Great T ang Dynasty translated by Latika Lahiri Delhi Motilal Banarsidass 1986 pp 120 137 Colless 1975 Miksic 1999 19 Manning et al 1980 Wahyono Martowikrido 1994 1999 Gabriel Ferrand Suvarnadvipa in L empire sumatranais de Crivijaya Paris Imprimerie nationale 1922 p 123 125 See also George Coedes Les etats hindouises d Indochine et d Indonesie Paris De Boccard 1948 p 337 The Kingdom of Butuan Philippine Gold Treasures of Lost Kingdoms Asia Society New York Retrieved March 8 2019 Chung Tan 2015 03 18 Himalaya Calling World Scientific ISBN 9781938134609 Retrieved November 30 2018 Sailendra Nath Sen 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization Ramayana refers to Yavadvipa New Age International ISBN 9788122411980 Retrieved November 30 2018 Chung Tan 2015 03 18 Himalaya Calling The Origins of China and India World Scientific ISBN 9781938134616 a b E W Dahlgren Were the Hawaiian Islands visited by the Spaniards before their Discovery by Captain Cook in 1778 Kungliga Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens Handlingar Band 57 No 1 1916 1917 pp 1 222 pp 47 48 66 The Travels of Pedro Teixeira tr and annotated by W F Sinclair London Hakluyt Society Series 2 Vol 9 1902 p 10 H R Wagner and Pedro de Unamuno The Voyage of Pedro de Unamuno to California in 1587 California Historical Society Quarterly Vol 2 No 2 Jul 1923 pp 140 160 p 142 4 Alvaro de Saavedra anduvieron 250 Leguas hasta la isla del Oro adonde tomaron Puerto que es grande y de Gente Negra y con los cabellos crespos y desnuda Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas Historia General de los Hechos de los Castellanos en las Islas i Tierra Firme del Mar Oceano Madrid 1601 Decada IV libro III cap iv p 60 June L Whittaker ed Documents and Readings in New Guinea History Pre history to 1889 Milton Jacaranda 1975 pp 183 4 General references editThepthani Phra Borihan 1953 Thai National Chronicles the history of the nation since ancient times in Thai S Thammasamakkhi Archived from the original on 5 November 2023 Retrieved 5 November 2023 See also editGolden Chersonese Greater India Nanyang region Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Suvarnabhumi amp oldid 1218730122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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