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The position of engraved gems of India in the Indian Ocean networks

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dc.contributor.author Bondada, G.
dc.date.accessioned 2016-02-02T07:26:29Z
dc.date.available 2016-02-02T07:26:29Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.citation Bondada, Gautam 2015. The position of engraved gems of India in the Indian Ocean networks. 3rd Biennial Conference of the International Association for Asian Heritage, 27th - 28th December 2015, Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya & International Association for Asian Heritage (IAAH). p. 06. en_US
dc.identifier.isbn 978-955-4563-62-9
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/11517
dc.description.abstract The proposed paper aims at looking into the evidence of engraved gems in the Indian subcontinent belonging to the early centuries of the Common-era, when commercial ties with the Roman Empire were active. A long indigenous tradition of mining and processing gemstones prior to these cross-cultural connections is well established and also acknowledged in the western classical accounts on India. Whereas, this ancient industry, primarily engaged in the manufacture of beads, interaction with the Hellenistic world followed by connections with the Roman Empire, prompted new artefact forms and attributes to be gradually incorporated into the native repertoire as witnessed in the archaeological record. In the studies on Indo-Mediterranean commerce, however, engraved gemstones have received little attention. This is perhaps due to the small scale of tangible evidence as well as their local material and stylistic composition. Previous studies have tended to explain similarities in type and style among artefacts found in the Mediterranean region and South Asia, including engraved gems, in terms of waves of acculturation i.e. Roman influence upon India and likewise the Indianisation of Southeast Asia. These simplistic models of cultural change have been rightly contested as insufficient and often biased accounts of cross-cultural interaction, encouraging instead a review of recipient cultures as producers of new meanings of the same objects and therefore active agents in shaping culture. In understanding the nature of Indo-Mediterranean contact, a shift is also warranted from a primarily economic approach to incorporating the role of non-economic factors. The present paper, therefore, seeks to explore the variability in type and spatial distribution of the available evidence of engraved gems in the Indian subcontinent with reference to other markers of interaction with the Roman Empire to understand the cultural background which facilitated and sustained ancient Indo-Mediterranean interaction. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya en_US
dc.subject Indo-Roman trade en_US
dc.subject engraved gemstones en_US
dc.subject Indianisation en_US
dc.subject Maritime trade en_US
dc.subject Cultural Change en_US
dc.title The position of engraved gems of India in the Indian Ocean networks en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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