13
Indian Ocean Basin Link: Portuguese/Spanish Spice Routes: tp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9 h_century_Portuguese_Spanish_trade_routes.png/ 0px-16th_century_Portuguese_Spanish_trade_routes.pn

Indian Ocean Basin

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Indian Ocean Basin. Map Link: Portuguese/Spanish Spice Routes : < http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9c/ 16th_century_Portuguese_Spanish_trade_routes.png/ 1280px-16th_century_Portuguese_Spanish_trade_routes.png >. Horn of Africa and east coast - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 5: Indian Ocean Basin

Themes:

Trade

Conversion

Conflict

Page 9: Indian Ocean Basin

1492 Spanish take Granada, end Muslim statesin Iberia

1498 Vasco de Gama rounds Cape of GoodHope, reaches Malabar Coast

Portuguese/Spanish crusade against Islam

1570 Spanish take Manila. Conquest ofPhilippines follows (Philip II, r. 1556-98)

Page 10: Indian Ocean Basin

Early 17th c. English and Dutch fight fordominance in Southeast Asia (Dutch win)

Monopoly, through force if necessary

Map Link: Southeast Asia in 1648:

<http://www.timemaps.com/store/timemaps/2012/7/seasia_ad1648.jpg>

Page 11: Indian Ocean Basin

Reactions:

16th c. Mappilas respond to Portuguesecrusade with modified jihad

Islam as symbol of resistance

Page 12: Indian Ocean Basin

Decline of Southeast Asian Islam underDutch:

Cutting out the middlemen – decline ofMuslim merchant class

Controlling prices – impoverishment ofcities

Breakdown of communications

Page 13: Indian Ocean Basin

Sidi (Seydi) Ali Reis (1498-1563)

Ottoman admiral commissioned by sultan tofight Portuguese in Indian Ocean

Unintended travels in India and elsewhere in1553-56, incl. meeting Mughal EmperorHumayun (r. 1530-56)

Mir’at al-Memalik (The Mirror of the Countries,1557)