Skip to main content
Log in

The Southeast Asian water frontier: coastal trade and mid-fifteenth c. CE “hill tribe” burials, southeastern Cambodia

  • Original Paper
  • Published:
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

In mainland Southeast Asia, the so-called water frontier unified an otherwise geographically broad and culturally disparate economic network of long-, medium-, and short-distance trade of the 14th–17th century CE “Age of Commerce.” Focus on the rise of the larger port towns supporting this burgeoning maritime trade (e.g., Ayutthaya, Melaka, Hoi An) has overshadowed smaller maritime operations that must have serviced less regulated coastlines. In this paper, we evaluate the evidence of likely supply lines for relatively remote sites in the Southern Cardamom Ranges of southwestern Cambodia. We present the results of a geochemical analysis of ceramics from two contemporary and short-lived assemblages: comprehensively dated mid-15th c. to mid-17th c. CE burial complexes in the Cardamom Mountains, and a dated shipwreck (KohS’dech) recovered from waters off the adjacent coastline. We compare the shipwreck assemblage with other wreck assemblages to contextualize it within larger maritime exchange patterns. The KohS’dech wreck assemblage appears typical of a Southeast Asian short-haul coastal trader of this period, with a cargo consisting of a range of utilitarian household ceramics: large, medium, and small glazed stoneware storage jars, earthenware cooking pots, stoves and mortars, and “tableware” bowls. Comparison of burial, shipwreck, and reference ceramic compositional data confirms the jars and fine wares predominantly came from multiple production centers in Central and Northern Thailand. The few Angkorian jars identified in the burials were evidently heirlooms from what was, by the mid-15th c. CE, a likely defunct Khmer production complex east of Angkor. The results of this provenience analysis highlight (a) the Cardamom burials as an example of previously undocumented unregulated coastal interaction and (b) the relatively sophisticated and coordinated market-oriented strategies of inland ceramic producers at this time. For mainland Southeast Asia, the water frontier integrated not only ethnically diverse maritime port communities, but also those in more remote inland regions.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 4
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
Fig. 7

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Baker C (2003) Ayutthaya rising: from land or sea. J Southeast Asian Stud 34(1):41–62

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Barbetti M, Hein D (1989) Palaeomagnetism and high-resolution dating of ceramic kilns in Thailand: a progress report. World Archaeol 21(1):51–70

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Beavan N, Halcrow S, McFadgen B, Hamilton D, Buckley B, Sokha T, Shewan L, Sokha O, Fallon S, Miksic J, Armstrong R, O’Reilly DJW, Domett K, Chhem KR (2012a) Radiocarbon dates from jar and coffin burials of the Cardamom Mountains reveal a previously unrecorded mortuary ritual in Cambodia’s late-to post-Angkor period (15th–17th centuries AD). Radiocarbon 54:1–22

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Beavan N, Sokha T, Zoppi U, McCarthy B, Schilling M, Cort L, Sylvia Fraser L (2012b) Field note: a radiocarbon date for the Koh S’dech shipwreck, Koh Kong Province, Kingdom of Cambodia. In: Freer Sackler Gallery, SEA Ceramics Library. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC

    Google Scholar 

  • Beavan N, Hamilton D, Sokha T, Sayle K (2015) Radiocarbon dates from the highland jar and coffin burial site of Phnom Khnang Peung, Cardamom Mountains, Cambodia. Radiocarbon 57(1):15–31

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bronk Ramsey C (2009) Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. Radiocarbon 51(1):337–360

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bronk Ramsey C (2017) Methods for summarizing radiocarbon datasets. Radiocarbon 59(2):1809–1833

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bronson B (1977) Exchange at the upstream and downstream ends: notes toward a functional model of the coastal state in Southeast Asia. In: Hutterer C (ed) Economic exchange and social interaction in Southeast Asia: perspectives from prehistory, history, and ethnography, vol 13. Michigan Papers on South and Southeast Asia, Ann Arbor, Michigan, pp 39–52

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown RM (1988) The ceramics of Southeast Asia, their dating and identification, 2nd edn Oxford in Asia studies in ceramics. Oxford University Press, Singapore

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown R (1996) The Dvaravati Wheels of the Law and the Indianization of South East Asia. E.J. Brill, Leiden

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown RM (2004) The Ming Gap and shipwreck: ceramics in Southeast Asia. University of California, Los Angeles

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown RM, Sjostrand S (2002) Maritime archaeology and shipwreck ceramics in Malaysia. Published on the occasion of the exhibition Malaysian Maritime Archaeology by Dept. of Museums & Antiquities in collaboration with Nanhai Marine Archaeology Sdn. Bhd

  • Carter A (2013) Trade, exchange, and sociopolitical development in iron age (500 BC – AD 500) mainland Southeast Asia: an examination of stone and glass beads from Cambodia and Thailand Anthropology. University of Wisconsin, Madison

    Google Scholar 

  • Carter AK (2015) Beads, exchange networks and emerging complexity: a case study from Cambodia and Thailand (500 bce–ce 500). Camb Archaeol J 25(04):733–757

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Carter A, Beavan N (2014) Glass beads from jar burials of the 15th–17th centuries in the Cardamom Mountains of Cambodia. BEADS: J Socf Bead Researchers 26(1):9–21

    Google Scholar 

  • Carter AK, Dussubieux L, Beavan N (2016) Glass beads from 15th–17th century CE jar burial sites in Cambodia’s Cardamom Mountains. Archaeometry 58(3):401–412

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cartier M (1988) Le commerce de l'Ocean Indien vu de Chine. In: Lombard D, Aubin J (eds) Marchands et hommes d’affaires asiatiques dans l'Ocean Indien et la Mer de Chine 13e-20e siecles. Edit.de l'Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Soc., Paris, pp 125–127

    Google Scholar 

  • Cort L (2017) Ceramics in mainland Southeast Asia: Maenam Noi (Singburi) kilns. vol. 2017. Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C

    Google Scholar 

  • Diem AI (1998) The significance of Pandanan shipwreck ceramics as evidence of fifteenth century trading relations within Southeast Asia. Bull Orient Ceram Soc Hong Kong 2001(12):28–26

  • Dunbar E, Cook GT, Naysmith P, Tripney BG, Xu S (2016) AMS 14 C dating at the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre (SUERC) radiocarbon dating laboratory. Radiocarbon 58(1):9–23

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Evers H-D (1988) Traditional trading networks in Southeast Asia. Archipel 35:89–100

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Flecker M (2001) A ninth-century AD Arab or Indian shipwreck in Indonesia: first evidence for direct trade with China. World Archaeol 32(3):335–354

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Grave P (1995) Beyond the Mandala: Buddhist landscapes and upland-lowland interaction in Northwest Thailand AD 1200-1650. World Archaeol 27(2):243–365

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Grave P, Maccheroni M (2009) Characterizing Asian stoneware jar production at the transition to the Early Modern Period (1550–1650 C.E.). Proceedings of the Scientific Research on Historic Asian Ceramics. Proceedings of the Fourth Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art:186–204. Washington D.C., USA

  • Grave P, Stark M, Ea D, Kealhofer L, Tan BS, Tin T (2015) Differentiating Khmer stoneware production: an NAA pilot study from Siem Reap Province, Cambodia. Archaeometry:n/a-n/a

  • Green J, Harper R (1987) The maritime archaeology of shipwrecks and ceramics in Southeast Asia. In: Green J, Harper R (eds) Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology, vol 4. Victorian Archaeology Survey, pp 1–38

  • Groslier BP (2006) Angkor and Cambodia in the sixteenth century: according to Portuguese and Spanish sources. . Translated by M. Smithies. Orchid Press, Bangkok

  • Halcrow SE, Harris NJ, Beavan N, Buckley HR (2014) First bioarchaeological evidence of probable scurvy in Southeast Asia: multifactorial etiologies of vitamin C deficiency in a tropical environment. Int J Paleopathol 5:63–71

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hall KR (2016) Commodity flows, diaspora networking, and contested agency in the Eastern Indian Ocean c. 1000–1500. TRaNS: Trans -Reg -Natl Stud SE Asia 4(2):387–417

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hall KR (2018) The Coming of the West: European Cambodian Marketplace Connectivity 1500–1800. In: Smith TO (ed) Cambodia and the West, 1500–2000. Palgrave Macmillan Limited, Basingstoke, pp 7–36

    Google Scholar 

  • Hendrickson M (2010) Historic routes to Angkor: development of the Khmer road system (ninth to Thirteenth centuries AD) in mainland Southeast Asia.(Research)(Report). Antiquity 84(324):480 (417)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hendrickson M (2011) A transport geographic perspective on travel and communication in Angkorian Southeast Asia (ninth to fifteenth centuries ad). World Archaeol 43(3):444–457

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hogg AG, Hua Q, Blackwell PG, Niu M, Buck CE, Guilderson TP, Heaton TJ, Palmer JG, Reimer PJ, Reimer RW (2013) SHCal13 southern hemisphere calibration, 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55(4):1889–1903

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hotchkis MAC, Fink D, Jacobsen GE, Lawson EM, Shying M, Smith AM, Tuniz C, Barbetti M, Grave P, Quan H, Head J (1994) 14C analysis at the ANTARES AMS Centre: dating the log coffins of northwestern Thailand. Nucl Inst Methods Phys Res B 92(92):27–30

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hua Q, Barbetti M, Zoppi U, Fink D, Watanasak M, Jacobsen GE (2004) Radiocarbon in tropical tree rings during the Little Ice Age. Nucl Instrum Methods Phys Res B 223(224):489–494

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Junker LL (1993) Craft goods specialization and prestige goods exchange in Philippine chiefdoms of the 15th and 16th centuries. Asian Perspect 32(1):1–36

    Google Scholar 

  • Junker LL (1998) Integrating history and archaeology in the study of contact period Philippine chiefdoms. Int J Hist Archaeol 2(4):291–320

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Lape PV (2002) Historic maps and archaeology as a means of understanding late precolonial settlement in the Banda Islands, Indonesia. Asian Perspect 41(1):43–70

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Lape P (2003) A highway and a crossroads: island Southeast Asia and culture contact archaeology. Archaeol Oceania 38:102–109

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Li T (2004) The late-eighteenth-and early-nineteenth-century Mekong Delta in the regional trade system. In: Cooke N, Li T (eds) Water frontier: commerce and the Chinese in the lower Mekong region, 1750–1880. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc., Singapore, pp 71–84

    Google Scholar 

  • Li T (2005) The eighteenth century Mekong Delta and its World of Water Frontier. In: Tran NT, Reid AR (eds) Viet Nam: Borderless Histories (New Perspectives in Se Asian Studies). University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, pp 147–162

    Google Scholar 

  • Lockard CA (2010) The sea common to all: maritime frontiers, port cities, and Chinese traders in the southeast Asian age of commerce, ca. 1400-1750. J World Hist 21:219–247

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Manguin P-Y (1993) The vanishing Jong: insular Southeast Asian fleets in trade and war (fifteenth to seventeenth centuries). In: Reid A (ed) Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era: trade, power, and belief. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York, pp 197–213

    Google Scholar 

  • Manguin P-Y (2000) City-states and city-state cultures in pre-15th century Southeast Asia. A comparative study of thirty city-state cultures:409–416

  • Manguin P-Y (2004) The archaeology of early maritime polities of Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia: From Prehistory to History:282–313

  • Manguin P-Y (2014) Early coastal states of Southeast Asia: Funan and Śrīvijaya. Lost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia:111

  • Marriner GP, Grave P, Kealhofer L, Stark MT, Ea D, Chhay R, Kaseka P, Suy TB (2018) New dates for old kilns: a revised radiocarbon chronology of stoneware production for Angkorian Cambodia. Radiocarbon 60(3):901–924

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Murphy SA, Stark MT (2016) Introduction: transitions from late prehistory to early historic periods in mainland Southeast Asia, c. early to mid-first millennium CE. J SE Asian Stud 47(3):333–340

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Orillaneda BC (2016) Maritime trade in the Philippines during the 15th century CE. Moussons. Recherche en sciences humaines sur l’Asie du Sud-Est (27):83–100

  • Penny D, Hall T, Evans D, Polkinghorne M (2019) Geoarchaeological evidence from Angkor, Cambodia, reveals a gradual decline rather than a catastrophic 15th-century collapse. In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences:201821460

    Google Scholar 

  • Pham C (2016) European navigation, nautical instructions and charts of the Cochinchinese coast (16th-19th centuries) Moussons. Recherche en sciences humaines sur l’Asie du Sud-Est 27(1):101–129

    Google Scholar 

  • Ptak R (1998) From Quanzhou to the Sulu zone and beyond: questions related to the early fourteenth century. J SE Asian Stud 29(2):269–294

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Reid A (1988) Southeast Asia in the age of commerce 1450–1680: the land below the winds 1. 2 vols. Yale University Press, New Haven

    Google Scholar 

  • Reid A (1993) Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era: trade, power, and belief. Cornell University Press, Ithaca

    Google Scholar 

  • Shaffer LN (2015) Maritime Southeast Asia, 300 BC to AD 1528. Routledge, Abingdon

    Google Scholar 

  • Sokha T (2013) Discovery of ceramics from the Koh Sdach Shipwreck, Koh Kong province, Cambodia

  • Stark MT (2006) Early mainland southeast Asian landscapes in the first millennium A.D. Annu Rev Anthropol 35:407–432

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Stark MT (2010) From Funan to Angkor. After collapse: the regeneration of complex societies:144

  • Stark MT (2014) South and Southeast Asia: historical archaeology. In: Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. Springer, Berlin, pp 6841–6849

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  • Theunissen R, Grave P, Bailey G (2000) Doubts on diffusion: challenging the assumed Indian origin of Iron Age agate and carnelian beads in Southeast Asia. World Archaeol 32(1):84–105

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Vickery M, George C, Davidson JS, Lindsay J, Frost M, Ying TY (2004) Cambodia and its Neighbors in the 15th Century. Asia Research Institute, Working Paper Series No 27. National University of Singapore

  • Wade G (2004) Ming China and Southeast Asia in the 15th century: a reappraisal. Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore

    Google Scholar 

  • Wade G (2009) An early age of commerce in Southeast Asia, 900-1300 CE. J of Southeast Asian Studies (40(2):221–265

  • Wallerstein I (1974) The modern world system: capitalist agriculture and the origins of the European world-economy in the sixteenth century. In: Studies in social discontinuity. Academic Press, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Wheatley P (1959) Geographical notes on some commodities involved in Sung maritime trade. JMBRAS 32 (2, no. 186)

Download references

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr. Blythe McCarthy; Andrew W. Mellon, Senior Scientist; Freer Gallery of Art; and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, for the component analysis of the Koh Sdech resin. Radiocarbon analysis and resin component analysis were funded by the Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund (Beavan NR, Contract no. UOO-1211) in the course of the “Living in the Shadow of Angkor” Project. We thank Cambodia’s Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts for permission to undertake field investigations that collected data used in this project. Analytical research for this project was supported by the Australian Research Council (DP140103194). Our Khmer Production and Exchange Project (www.kpx.org.au/) is a collaboration between APSARA Authority, University of New England, Santa Clara University, and the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. We thank Don and Toni Hein for Thai reference material used in this study.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Peter Grave.

Additional information

Publisher’s note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Grave, P., Kealhofer, L., Beavan, N. et al. The Southeast Asian water frontier: coastal trade and mid-fifteenth c. CE “hill tribe” burials, southeastern Cambodia. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 11, 5023–5036 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-019-00842-3

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-019-00842-3

Keywords

Navigation