Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Philippine confluence : Iberian, Chinese and Islamic currents, c. 1500-1800 / edited by Jos Gommans and Ariel Lopez.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Leiden : Leiden University Press, (c)2020.Description: 1 online resource (393 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9400603665
  • 9789400603660
Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • DS674 .P455 2020
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Isaac Donoso, Jos Gommans, and Ariel Lopez -- Accidental crossings, world orders and the "Iberian archive" in the seventeenth-century China Sea / Jorge Flores -- Occult cosmopolitanism : Convivencia and ethno-religious exclusion in Manila, 1590-1650 / Ryan Dominic Crewe -- Binukot and recogimiento : enduring and changing meanings of the seclusion of women in the Philippines / Marya Svetlana T. Camacho -- Beyond the galleons : China Trade, colonial agenda and regional integration in the eighteenth-century Philippines / Ander Permanyer-Ugartemendia -- Asian manufactured goods in the Spanish Pacific : late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries / Teresa Canepa -- Vittorio Riccio : an entangled voice in the 1662 Chinese uprising in Manila / Anna Busquets -- The global and the local in early modern Manila's communication spaces / Birgit Tremml-Werner -- Of men, gods and beasts : the Boxer Codex and the view of the world from sixteenth-century Manila / Neilabh Sinha -- Polarized enemies : the Christian-Muslim dichotomy in the early modern Philippines / Eberhard Crailsheim -- Slaving and the global reach of the Moro Wars in the seventeenth century / Tatiana Seijas -- In between many worlds of one law : Arab, Malay and Philippine legal intermixtures of Shāfi.Aīsm / Mahmood Kooria.
Subject: Situated at the crossroads of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, the Spanish Philippines offer historians an intriguing middle ground of connected histories that raises fundamental new questions about conventional ethnic, regional and religious identities. This volume adds a new global perspective to the history of the Philippines by juxtaposing Iberian, Chinese and Islamic perspectives. By navigating various underexplored archival resources, senior and junior scholars from Asia, Europe and the Americas explore the diverse cultural, religious, and economic flows that shaped the early modern Philippine milieu. By zooming in from the global to the local, this book offers eleven fascinating Philippine case studies of early modern globalization.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)

Includes bibliographies and index.

Introduction / Isaac Donoso, Jos Gommans, and Ariel Lopez -- Accidental crossings, world orders and the "Iberian archive" in the seventeenth-century China Sea / Jorge Flores -- Occult cosmopolitanism : Convivencia and ethno-religious exclusion in Manila, 1590-1650 / Ryan Dominic Crewe -- Binukot and recogimiento : enduring and changing meanings of the seclusion of women in the Philippines / Marya Svetlana T. Camacho -- Beyond the galleons : China Trade, colonial agenda and regional integration in the eighteenth-century Philippines / Ander Permanyer-Ugartemendia -- Asian manufactured goods in the Spanish Pacific : late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries / Teresa Canepa -- Vittorio Riccio : an entangled voice in the 1662 Chinese uprising in Manila / Anna Busquets -- The global and the local in early modern Manila's communication spaces / Birgit Tremml-Werner -- Of men, gods and beasts : the Boxer Codex and the view of the world from sixteenth-century Manila / Neilabh Sinha -- Polarized enemies : the Christian-Muslim dichotomy in the early modern Philippines / Eberhard Crailsheim -- Slaving and the global reach of the Moro Wars in the seventeenth century / Tatiana Seijas -- In between many worlds of one law : Arab, Malay and Philippine legal intermixtures of Shāfi.Aīsm / Mahmood Kooria.

Situated at the crossroads of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, the Spanish Philippines offer historians an intriguing middle ground of connected histories that raises fundamental new questions about conventional ethnic, regional and religious identities. This volume adds a new global perspective to the history of the Philippines by juxtaposing Iberian, Chinese and Islamic perspectives. By navigating various underexplored archival resources, senior and junior scholars from Asia, Europe and the Americas explore the diverse cultural, religious, and economic flows that shaped the early modern Philippine milieu. By zooming in from the global to the local, this book offers eleven fascinating Philippine case studies of early modern globalization.

COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:

https://lib.ciu.edu/copyright-request-form

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.