Description
Johns Hopkins University Press Port Cities and Intruders The Swahili Coast India and Portugal in the early Modern Era by Michael N Pearson
Over many centuries, the Swahili coast of East Africa had intricate connections with India, with the Islamic world and with the peoples of the the interior. There was major economic, social and religious interchange. The intrusion of the Portuguese in the 16th century was merely the latest of many foreign influences. This study in world history examines a particular time and place to show the diversity and complexity of cultural and economic contacts. The author begins with a discussion of the uses and abuses of history in the region. He then sets the stage by establishing the geographic and historical relevance of the position of the Swahili coast in the Indian Ocean. He explores the role of port cities and their orientation, relations between the coast and the interior, the place of the coast in the world economy and the impact of the Portuguese in the early modern era.show more