The Indian merchant community of Masqaṭ
Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
- Allen, Jr, Calvin H. (Auteur)
Titre
The Indian merchant community of Masqaṭ
Résumé
In 1836 the Arabian traveller J. R. Wellsted described the Hindu community of Masqaṭ, 'Umān, as constituting ‘a body of the principal merchants’ of that port. By the 1870s the Indian merchants dominated the commercial life of Masqaṭ and had replaced the Āl Bū Sa'īd rulers of the town as the paramount economic power in 'Umān. While this community has much wider significance than their pivotal role in the commerce of Masqaṭ and 'Umān (the Indian merchants in Masqaṭ were a component of the great Indian Ocean trading network, and as Hindus and Shī'īs in a Sunnī, more properly Khārijī, country they offer potential insights into the status of minority groups in Muslim states) the focus of this study is the more specific problem of their origins, development and social and economic activities in Masqaṭ to the end of the nineteenth century.
Publication
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies
Maison d’édition
University of London
Lieu
London
Date
1981
Volume
44
Numéro
1
Pages
39-53
Clé de citation
allenjrIndianMerchantCommunity1981
ISSN
0041-977X, 1474-0699
Archive
Fonds Martin Custers
Langue
eng
Catalogue de bibl.
Ibadica
Référence
Allen, Jr, Calvin H. 1981. « The Indian Merchant Community of Masqaṭ ». Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (London) 44 (1): 39‑53. Fonds Martin Custers. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0041977X00104392.
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