We provide a summary of Chapter 1 (Introduction) of the book "Ocean of Churn" by Sanjeev Sanyal.
An extraordinary event circa 730 AD
- Pallava kingdom spanned Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, S Karnataka; it was very active commercially and culturally
- Pallava king Parmeswara Varman II died without a direct heir
- In capital city Kanchipuram, a grand assembly of scholars and chieftans deliberated for days
- Finally they decided to reach out to a collateral branch of the dynasty that survived in a distant kingdom since five generations
- After a tough & adventurous journey, the delegation reached the court of Hiranya Varman. His youngest son, aged 12, took up the offer.
- The young prince was crowned Nandi Varman II in Kanchipuram
- He defeated internal rivals & external enemies, ruled for 65 years and became one of the greatest monarchs in the history of southern India
Cross-cultural links
- Close link between Pallavas and Cambodians is well known. Eg. Khmer script is derived directly from Pallavas
- Pallava dynasty began with a marriage to a princess from a Naga or Serpent clan from across the seas
- Multi-headed cobra was the symbol of Cambodian royalty from ancient times to present
- Malaysia has Bhujang valley (bhujang = naga = snake)
Importance of Indian Ocean
- Churn of people, goods and ideas along the Indian Ocean and its shores have defined human history from the very beginning
- For example, Nalanda University in Bihar was partly funded by Sri Vijaya kings of Sumatra
- India's geographical location, its cultural might and economic weight made it the pivot of Indian Ocean world
- Between 16th and 18th centuries, Europeans dominated the Indian Ocean
- In 19th century, the Atlantic Ocean began overshadowing the Indian Ocean
- In 20th century, the Pacific rim rose in importance
- In 21st century, the center of gravity is gradually shifting back to Indian Ocean
Ocean-centric perspective
- Most histories of Asia provide a continental or land-centric perspective. Eg. Mauryan, Mughal, Mongol, Tang empires
- History looks very different when viewed from coastlines rather than from an inland point of view. Eg. Chola, Majapahit, Omani kingdoms
- With shift of perspective from land to sea, certain individuals become extraordinary
- Odisha's Kharvela who ended the Mauryan empire
- Marthanda Varma of Travancore who defeated the Dutch and ended their dreams of colonizing India
- Nathaniel Courthope of East India Company who heroically held out against the Dutch at the Indonesian island of Run
Bias in most history books
- Most books on history of Indian Ocean or maritime Spice Route were written from a Western point of view.
- They focused on developments after Europeans entered the scene
- Worse, such histories "ended" when the Europeans left in the mid 20th century
- A systematic bias in existing literature is the preference given to writers and sources from outside the Indian Ocean world
- Local texts, inscriptions and oral histories are discounted as being inferior sources than the testimonies of foreign visitors and travellers who are assumed to have greater credibility !
- Example: Chinese pilgrim-scholar Huien Tsang viewed the world exclusively from a Buddhist perspective
- Writings of European visitors are often systematically biased against the Hindu and Islamic cultures that they encountered in India
- Post 18th century narratives also contain an additional layer of racism
- It is surprising how the Aryan Invasion Theory continues to survive, esp. among the elite in India. This despite the lack of any textual or archaeological support, and a plethora of genetic and other evidence against it
Philosophy of History
- All narratives of history are based on some philosophical framework about the flow of events that allows the historian to make sense of it all
- A popular way to explain history is to focus on heroic (or demonic) individuals whose actions and thoughts disproportionately influenced the course of history
- Most history writing was financed directly or indirectly by "great men" who liked to highlight their own importance
Complex Adaptive System Theory
- According to the author Sanjeev Sanyal, the world (and thus history) is a complex adaptive system (CAS)
- It is a chaotic place where the flow of events is influenced by the constant and often unpredictable interactions between a host of factors and independent agents
- Other examples of a CAS are ecological systems, financial markets, economies, English language, cities, weather, law and Hindu religion
- Per Mark Twain, "History does not repeat itself, but it rhymes."
The Indian Soldier
- A consistent continuity in history is the presence of Indian soldiers and mercenaries serving in faraway lands since ancient times
- Among notable examples, Indian soldiers and mercenaries have
- fought for Persians against Greeks
- driven war elephants for Macedonian general Seleucus
- fought for Sinhalese rulers in Sri Lanka
- protected commercial interests of Tamil guilds in SE Asia
- served British in Opium Wars in China and Boer Wars in S Africa
- served across the globe during World Wars I and II
The Female Line
- Matrilineal customs played a dominant role in the history of Indian Ocean rim
- Matrilineal is different from matriarchal, which refers to societies where women are rulers/leaders as a matter of custom
- Matrilineal societies mark lineage through the mother and female ancestors. Men still run the show, but the status of women tends to be higher than societies that are purely patrilineal/patriarchal. Eg. Queen's nephew can become future king
- Examples of matrilineal societies along the Indian Ocean rim:
- Nairs of Kerala
- Bunts of Karnataka
- Garo, Khasi and Jaintia tribes of Meghalaya
- Karen of Myanmar
- Minangkaban of W Sumatra
- Cham of Vietnam
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