Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T23:17:17.236Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Revisiting Indian Rouletted Ware and the impact of Indian Ocean trade in Early Historic south Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2010

Peter Magee*
Affiliation:
*Department of Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College, 101 North Merion Avenue, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010, USA (Email: [email protected])

Abstract

Indian Rouletted Ware pottery is the iconic marker of the overseas reach of the subcontinent at the turn of the first millennium AD. In the mid twentieth century this was naturally seen as prompted by the contemporary Roman Empire, while the later post-colonial discourse has emphasised the independence and long life of Indian initiatives. In this new analysis the author demonstrates a more complex socio-economic situation. While Greyware is distributed long term over south India, Rouletted ware is made in at least two regional centres for coastal communities using a new ceramic language, one appropriate to an emerging international merchant class.

Type
Research articles
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ardika, I.W. & Bellwood, P.S.. 1991. Sembiran: the beginnings of Indian contact with Bali. Antiquity 65: 221–32.Google Scholar
Begley, V. 1983. Arikamedu reconsidered. American Journal of Archaeology 87: 461–81.Google Scholar
Begley, V. 1988. Rouletted ware at Arikamedu: a new approach. American Journal of Archaeology 92: 427–40.Google Scholar
Costin, C.L. 1991. Craft specialization: issues in defining, documenting and explaining the organization of production. Archaeological Method and Theory 3: 157.Google Scholar
Dias, M.I. & Prudêncio, M.I.. 2008. On the importance of using scandium to normalize geochemical data preceding multivariate analyses applied to archaeometric pottery studies. Microchemical Journal 88: 1341.Google Scholar
Ford, L.A. & Coningham, R.A.E. 2005. Early Historic specialisation and standardisation: the technology of Rouletted ware and associated wares at Anuradhapura, in Franke-Vogt, U. & Weishaar, H.J. (ed.) South Asian archaeology, 2003: proceedings of the seventeenth international conference of the European association of south Asian archaeologists (Forschungen zur Archäologie Auβereuropäischer Kulturen 1): 393–8. Aachen: Linden Soft.Google Scholar
Ford, L.A., Pollard, A.M., Coningham, R.A.E. & Stern, B.. 2005. A geochemical investigation of the origin of Rouletted and other related south Asian fine wares. Antiquity 79: 909920, with online supplement available at: http://www.antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/ford306/ (accessed 24 May 2010).Google Scholar
Gogte, V.D. 1997. The Chandraketugahr-Tamluk region of Bengal: source of the Early Historic Rouletted ware from India and Southeast Asia. Man and Environment 22(1): 6985.Google Scholar
Krishnan, K. & Coningham, R.A.E.. 1997. Microstructural analysis of samples of Rouletted ware and associated pottery from Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka, in Allchin, F.R. & Allchin, B. (ed.) South Asian archaeology, 1995: proceedings of the thirteenth international conference of the European association of south Asian archaeologists, Cambridge, 5-9 July, 1995. Volume 2: 925-37. New Delhi: Oxford and IBH.Google Scholar
Morrison, K. 1997. Commerce and culture in south Asia: perspectives from archaeology and history. Annual Review of Anthropology 3: 215–37.Google Scholar
Prudêncio, M.I., Dias, M.I., Gouveia, M.A., Marques, R., Franco, D. & Trindade, M.J.. Geochemical signatures of Roman amphorae produced in the Sado River estuary, Lusitania (western Portugal). Journal of Archaeological Science 36: 873–83.Google Scholar
Ray, H.P. 1994. The winds of change, Buddhism and the early maritime links of south Asia. NewDelhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ray, H.P. 2003. The archaeology of seafaring in ancient south Asia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Schenk, H. 2006. The dating and historical value of Rouletted ware. Zeitschrift f¨ur Archäologie Außereuropäischer Kulturen 1: 123–53.Google Scholar
Tomber, R. 2000. Indo-Roman trade: the ceramic evidence from Egypt. Antiquity 74: 624–31.Google Scholar
Wheeler, R.E.M., Ghosh, A. & Deva, K.. 1946. Arikamedu: an Indo-Roman trading station on the east coast of India. Ancient India 2: 17124.Google Scholar
Will, E.L. 1996. Mediterranean shipping amphoras from the 1941-1950 excavations, in Belgley, V. (ed.) The ancient port of Arikamedu: new excavations and researches 1989 to 1992 (Mémoires Archéologiques 22): 317–49. Pondichéry: Centre d'Histoire et d'Archéologie, Ecole Franc¸aise d'Extreme-Orient.Google Scholar