![]() ![]() The trading routes were well established and the commodities – such as pepper, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg and mace – were managed via a familiar set of tariffs and customs. ![]() Muslim traders from the ‘Swahili Coast’ of Africa traded up the coast to the Red Sea and across land to Cairo, heart of the Muslim world, while other traders crossed the ocean eastwards to the coast of India, where Hindu rajas ran a number of seaports offering hospitality to communities of Muslims and Jews in a complex multi-ethnic web. In 1500 the Indian Ocean was the scene of sophisticated trading networks which had been centuries in the making. (Afonso de Albuquerque describing the Portuguese capture of Goa on 25 November 1510, p.286) We have herded them into the mosques and set them on fire… We have estimated the number of dead Muslim men and women at six thousand. For four days without any pause our men have slaughtered… wherever we have been able to get into we haven’t spared the life of a single Muslim. Our Lord has done great things for us, because he wanted us to accomplish a deed so magnificent that it surpasses even what we have prayed for… I have burned the town and killed everyone. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |