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Book Cover
Book
Author Higham, Charles, author

Title The bronze age of Southeast Asia / Charles Higham
Published Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1996
©1996

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  930.150959 Hig/Bao  AVAILABLE
Description xvi, 381 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Series Cambridge world archaeology
Cambridge world archaeology.
Contents 1. Introduction -- 2. The discovery of the Bronze Age -- 3. The neolithic of South-east Asia and China -- 4. Central Thailand -- 5. The Mekong Valley -- 6. The Red and Zijang River valleys and coastal Vietnam -- 7. The Yunnan Plateau -- 8. External relationships of the South-east Asian Bronze Age: China, India and Island South-east Asia -- 9. Discussion and conclusions
Summary "The Bronze Age of Southeast Asia has been described as an enigma and a challenge. Some specialists have claimed that the earliest bronze working in the world occurred here, suggesting a cultural sequence that fails to fit a world-wide pattern. Others see it as distinct from parallel developments in other parts of the world. This book is the first comprehensive study of the period, placed within its broader regional context."--BOOK JACKET. "Charles Higham suggests that the adoption of metallurgy followed a period of agricultural expansion into Southeast Asia, originating in the rice growing cultures of the Yangzi Valley. The first acquaintance with copper and tin smelting may have taken place as a result of growing exchange between the late neolithic inhabitants of Southeast Asia and the Shang and Zhou states of the Central Plains of China. The latter provided exotic bronzes, the former adopted the new technology and adapted it to their own needs. However, the chronology remains unclear, and local origins remain a viable alternative hypothesis. When set in a broader comparative framework, the early development of Bronze Age societies in Southeast Asia is found to have more similarities than differences with those in Iberia, the Aegean, the near East and Chinese nuclear area."--BOOK JACKET. "The author traces the development of Bronze Age cultures into the Iron Age, identifying regionality and innovation. Along the northern borders of Southeast Asia, chiefdoms developed within the context of Chinese Imperial expansion. To the south, societies entered into a growing exchange network which incorporated India and the Roman Empire. Higham shows how these distinct regional developments contributed to the emergence of Southeast Asian states."--BOOK JACKET. "The Bronze Age of Southeast Asia provides a systematic and regional presentation of the current evidence. Using a thematic approach, Charles Higham provides an up-to-date account of the Southeast Asian and Chinese Bronze Ages, documenting evidence site by site. This is the first time these regions have been integrated in research to provide an understanding of how and why their distinct cultures developed."--BOOK JACKET
Analysis Antiquities
South-East Asia
Notes Errata slip inderted
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 343-364) and index
Subject Archaeology -- Southeast Asia.
Bronze age -- Southeast Asia.
SUBJECT Asia, Southeastern -- Antiquities. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2001005465
LC no. 95039223
ISBN 0521496608
0521565057 (paperback)