Handbook of East and Southeast Asian Archaeology 2017
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-6521-2_37
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Cultural Interactions in Mainland and Island Southeast Asia and Beyond, 2000 BC-AD 200

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Bellina, 2017;Boyd et al, 1999;Kim, 2013;O'Reilly and Scott, 2015), the second half of the 1 st millennium BC saw the intensification of pre-existing long-range social interaction networks, linking MSEA with South Asia, East Asia and Island Southeast Asia ('ISEA') (e.g. Bellina, 2007;Bellwood, 2007;Hung, 2017). Given MSEA's massive ecological and cultural diversity, the presence and intensity of these Iron Age changes varied considerably, between populations occupying mountains and plains, inland and coastal zones, but the most extreme differences were, as might be expected, to be found on the extremities of the MSEA Peninsula.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bellina, 2017;Boyd et al, 1999;Kim, 2013;O'Reilly and Scott, 2015), the second half of the 1 st millennium BC saw the intensification of pre-existing long-range social interaction networks, linking MSEA with South Asia, East Asia and Island Southeast Asia ('ISEA') (e.g. Bellina, 2007;Bellwood, 2007;Hung, 2017). Given MSEA's massive ecological and cultural diversity, the presence and intensity of these Iron Age changes varied considerably, between populations occupying mountains and plains, inland and coastal zones, but the most extreme differences were, as might be expected, to be found on the extremities of the MSEA Peninsula.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This far‐reaching coastal connectivity is well attested in the archeological record during the between 500 and 300 BC (Hung et al, 2013), including Iron Age materials from the e Sa‐Huynh‐Kalanay Culture (Solheim, 1964) and other objects that indicate a unified material culture including types of nephrite jade earrings, Indo‐Pacific glass beads, siliceous stone beads, iron and other metal objects, and casting molds for small metal items (Hung, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…This became intensified in the Bronze Age (1100–500 BC), as evidenced in the transmission of metal technology from the North and regional exchange of copper and tin (Pryce, 2016; Pryce et al, 2018). In the Iron Age (500 BC to AD 500), Southeast Asia was well connected through extensive exchange networks that were later expanded to involve China, India and as far as the Mediterranean (Hung, 2017 and the references therein). Mountain passes, rivers and seas are likely to have provided natural means for such networks across the region.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%