Driven by the Monsoons: Through the Indian Ocean and the Seas of China
The Silk Road may be one origin of globalization, but the Indian Ocean is another. Barry Cunliffe examines the beginning of maritime trade using the evidence of archaeology and the tales of great travelers such as Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, and the Chinese Admiral, Zheng He. This story complements that of the land routes, showing how humans have been driven across thousands of years to create and maintain networks whatever the difficulties.



Driven by the Monsoons illuminates maritime connections between the Indian Ocean and its surrounding water routes: the Arabian Gulf and the Red and China Seas. It begins with the movement of humans into South-East Asia and ends about 1600 CE when European companies emerge to takeover. It is tale of exotic goods, material needs, adventure, and desire.



While conditions at sea and the abilities of the maritime communities provided a degree of stability, the direction and intensity of trade and the types of commodities on the move was determined by the fortunes and aspirations of distant empires, those of China in the east and South-West Asia and the Mediterranean in the west. This ever-changing pressure provided the dynamic situation in which society and economies in East Africa, India, and South-East Asia flourished. Driven by the Monsoons explores the birth of the modern, connected, world.
1145058139
Driven by the Monsoons: Through the Indian Ocean and the Seas of China
The Silk Road may be one origin of globalization, but the Indian Ocean is another. Barry Cunliffe examines the beginning of maritime trade using the evidence of archaeology and the tales of great travelers such as Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, and the Chinese Admiral, Zheng He. This story complements that of the land routes, showing how humans have been driven across thousands of years to create and maintain networks whatever the difficulties.



Driven by the Monsoons illuminates maritime connections between the Indian Ocean and its surrounding water routes: the Arabian Gulf and the Red and China Seas. It begins with the movement of humans into South-East Asia and ends about 1600 CE when European companies emerge to takeover. It is tale of exotic goods, material needs, adventure, and desire.



While conditions at sea and the abilities of the maritime communities provided a degree of stability, the direction and intensity of trade and the types of commodities on the move was determined by the fortunes and aspirations of distant empires, those of China in the east and South-West Asia and the Mediterranean in the west. This ever-changing pressure provided the dynamic situation in which society and economies in East Africa, India, and South-East Asia flourished. Driven by the Monsoons explores the birth of the modern, connected, world.
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Driven by the Monsoons: Through the Indian Ocean and the Seas of China

Driven by the Monsoons: Through the Indian Ocean and the Seas of China

by Barry Cunliffe

Narrated by Keval Shah

Unabridged — 13 hours, 8 minutes

Driven by the Monsoons: Through the Indian Ocean and the Seas of China

Driven by the Monsoons: Through the Indian Ocean and the Seas of China

by Barry Cunliffe

Narrated by Keval Shah

Unabridged — 13 hours, 8 minutes

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Overview

The Silk Road may be one origin of globalization, but the Indian Ocean is another. Barry Cunliffe examines the beginning of maritime trade using the evidence of archaeology and the tales of great travelers such as Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, and the Chinese Admiral, Zheng He. This story complements that of the land routes, showing how humans have been driven across thousands of years to create and maintain networks whatever the difficulties.



Driven by the Monsoons illuminates maritime connections between the Indian Ocean and its surrounding water routes: the Arabian Gulf and the Red and China Seas. It begins with the movement of humans into South-East Asia and ends about 1600 CE when European companies emerge to takeover. It is tale of exotic goods, material needs, adventure, and desire.



While conditions at sea and the abilities of the maritime communities provided a degree of stability, the direction and intensity of trade and the types of commodities on the move was determined by the fortunes and aspirations of distant empires, those of China in the east and South-West Asia and the Mediterranean in the west. This ever-changing pressure provided the dynamic situation in which society and economies in East Africa, India, and South-East Asia flourished. Driven by the Monsoons explores the birth of the modern, connected, world.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"Once again Barry Cunliffe brings his archaeological and historical expertise to bear on maritime spaces, the Indian Ocean and the seas off China, that have been sailed intensively for thousands of years. The story of these seas is the story of how Asia, Africa, and then Europe became connected, first through trade and migration, and then through conquest. It is also the story of cultural interactions, as religious ideas moved east and as silk and spices moved west." — David Abulafia, Professor Emeritus of Mediterranean History in the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Gonville and Caius College

"This is a lovely book, well-illustrated and joining up lots of dynasties and different forces playing out across time, both physically and geopolitically." — Simon Cocking, Irish Tech News

"Barry Cunliffe is one of the most distinguished archaeologists of his generation. ... Turning these pages is in itself almost an entire education given the vast range of material and insights that Cunliffe utilises. The essential point is that history, whether the actors wish it or not, is driven by the forces of geography far more than by social matters. The brute facts of the natural world are more formative than many allow." — Peter Costello, The Irish Catholic

"Cunliffe is not just the doyen of British archaeology; he is the discipline personified.... [Driven by the Monsoons] is a triumph of multum in parvo. Cunliffe manages to cover almost everything: the nature of the winds and currents, the experiences of sailors, the designs of ships, the methods of navigation, the tug of trade and the omnipresence of politics." — Felipe Fernandez Armesto, Literary Review

"Veteran archaeologist Barry Cunliffe's book embraces an exceptionally complex and often speculative subject: the lucrative connections, mostly by sea, between cultures around China and the Indian Ocean, from prehistoric times to the emergence of European trading companies in around 1600. He recounts vivid details, such as how black peppercorns from India's Malabar coast were found up the nose of the mummified Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses II (1303–1213 bc)." — Andrew Robinson, Nature

Product Details

BN ID: 2940194295920
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 09/16/2025
Edition description: Unabridged
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