Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Did Romans Have Direct Maritime Trade Contacts with Odisha on the Eastern Indian Littoral?


Affiliations
1 CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India
 

Kalinga, Utkal, Odra and Orissa are former names of the present state of Odisha with varied geographical boundaries in different periods of history. The exploration and excavations of Manikapatna, Palur, Radhanagar, Sisupalgarh, Talapada of Odisha have brought to light terracotta Roman bullae with Roman portraits, lamps, amphorae shreds and rouletted ware which suggested that these findings belong to the Roman period (early centuries of Christian era) and Roman mariners had maritime contacts with Odisha from the early historical period onwards, if not earlier. However, it is evident that Roman artefacts such as gold coins, amphorae, Terra Sigillata (Arretine ware), etc., are more abundant in peninsular India than in the rest of the country and these findings are limited in Odisha, but the reasons are not comprehensible. However, archaeological findings from the port and trade centres delineate maritime contacts of Odisha with Southeast Asian countries. Here we discuss the archaeological findings from the port sites of Odisha to understand the maritime contacts with Southeast Asian countries and the Roman Empire and examine why the Roman findings are comparatively less in Odisha than in peninsular and other parts of India.

Keywords

Odisha, Maritime Trade, Ports, Romans, Southeast Asia.
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • Behera, K. S. (ed.), Kalinga–Indonesian Cultural Relations, OIMSEAS, Bhubaneswar, 2007.
  • Behera, K. S. (ed.), Maritime Heritage of India, Aryan Books International, New Delhi, 1999.
  • Patra, B., Maritime Trade and Overseas Activities of Early India Odishan Perspective, Aryan Books International, New Delhi, 2013.
  • Tripati, S., Maritime Archaeology: Historical Descriptions of the Seafarings of the Kalingas, Kaveri Books, New Delhi, 2000.
  • Tripati, S., Early maritime activities of Orissa on the east coast of India: Linkages in trade and cultural developments. Man Environ., 2002, 27, 117–126.
  • Ghosh, A. (ed.), An Encyclopaedia of Indian Archaeology, Munshiram Manoharlal, New Delhi, 1989, vol. 1, pp. 251–255.
  • Roy, T. N., A Study of Northern Black Polished Ware Culture, Ramanand Vidya Bhawan, New Delhi, 1986.
  • Roy, T. N., The Ganges Civilization, Ramanand Vidya Bhawan, New Delhi, 1983.
  • Verma, G. and Yadav, R., Dating of Northern black polished ware culture in the light of recent excavations. In Pura-Jagat, Indian Archaeology, History and Culture in Honour of Shri Late J. P. Joshi (eds Margabandhu, C. et al.), Bharatiya Kala Prakashan, Delhi, 2012, pp. 178–181.
  • Coningham, R., Manuel, M. and Shoebridge, J., Reconstructing networks of trade and exchange in the Indian Ocean during the early historic period: Case studies from Anuradhapura (Sri Lanka). In Imperial Rome, Indian Ocean Regions and Muziris (ed. Mathew, K. S.), Manohar Publishers, New Delhi, 2015, pp. 31–52.
  • Sarma, I. K., Indian seafaring traditions: archaeological perspectives. In An Integrated Approach to Marine Archaeology (ed. Rao, S. R.), Society for Marine Archaeology, NIO, Goa, 1997, pp. 95–101.
  • Sarma, I. K., Ceramics and maritime routes of India: new evidence. Puratattava, 1990–91, 21, 37–42.
  • Coningham, R., Beyond and before the Imperial Frontiers: Early historic Sri Lanka and the origins of Indian Ocean trade. Man Environ., 2002, 27, 99–108.
  • Manatunga, A., The first urbanisation of Sri Lanka: an investigation into nagara sites referred to in the early Brahmi inscriptions. Bull. Indo-Pacific Prehistory, 1997, 16, 49–55.
  • Parker, H., Ancient Ceylon, Asian Educational Services, New Delhi, 1984.
  • Jahan, S. H., Archaeology of Wari-Bateshwar. Ancient Asia, 2010, 2, 135–146.
  • Jahan, S. H., Early maritime trade network of Bengal. Man Environ., 2002, 27, 127–138.
  • Ardika, I. W., Ancient trade relation between India and Indonesia. In Maritime Heritage of India (ed. Behera, K. S.), Aryan Books International, New Delhi, 1999, pp. 80–89.
  • Bouvet, P., Preliminary study of Indian and Indian style wares from Khao Sam Kaeo (Chumphon, Peninsular Thailand), FourthSecond Centuries BCE. In Early Interactions between South and Southeast Asia: Reflections on Cross-Cultural Exchange (eds Manguin, P. Y., Mani, A. and Wade, G.), ISEAS, Singapore, 2011, pp. 47–82.
  • Avanzini, A. (ed.), Along the Aroma and Spice Routes. The Harbour of Sumhuram, its Territory and the Trade between the Mediterranean, Arabia and India, Pontedera, Pisa, 2011.
  • Avanzini, A., The port of Sumhuram (KhorRori): New data on its history. In Imperial Rome, Indian Ocean Regions and Muziris (ed. Mathew, K. S.), Manohar Publishers, New Delhi, 2015, pp. 179–205.
  • Pavan, A., Trade and commercial routes along the Indian Ocean from the early centuries BC to the beginning of Christian era: new lights from the Indian pottery discovered at Sumhuram (Sultanate of Oman). In South Arabia and its Neighbours: Phenomena of Intercultural Contacts (ed. Gerlach, I.), Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 2015, pp. 121–134.
  • Pavan, A. and Schenk, H., Crossing the Indian Ocean before the Periplus: a comparison of pottery assemblages at the sites of Sumhuram (Oman) and Tissamaharama (Sri Lanka). Arabian Archa. Epigra., 2012, 23, 191–202.
  • Schenk, H., Role of ceramics in the Indian Ocean maritime trade during the Early Historical Period. In Maritime Contacts of the Past Deciphering Connections amongst Communities (ed. Tripati, S.), Delta Book World, New Delhi, 2015, pp. 143–181.
  • Schenk, H., The dating and historical value of rouletted ware. Zeitschrift fur Archaologie Au Bereuropaischer Kulturen, 2006, 1, 123–152.
  • Tomber, R., Indian fine wares from the Red Sea coast of Egypt. Man Environ., 2002, 27, 25–31.
  • Sidebotham, S. E., Berenike and the Ancient Maritime Spice Route, University of California Press, California, 2011.
  • Rajan, K., Early Writing System – A Journey from Graffiti to Brahmi, Pandya Nadu Centre for Historical Research, Madurai, 2015.
  • Lal, B. B., Sisupalgarh 1948: an early historical fort in Eastern India. Ancient India, 1949, 5, 62–105.
  • IAR, Indian Archaeology: A Review, Archaeological Survey of India, New Delhi, 1956–57, pp. 30–31.
  • Ghosh, A. (ed.), An Encyclopaedia of Indian Archaeology, Munshiram Manoharlal, New Delhi, 1989, vol. 2, pp. 412–414.
  • Mohanty, R. K., Smith, M. L. and Matney, T., Excavations and Geophysical survey at the Early Historic town Talapada, Odisha (2013). Man Environ., 2014, 39, 53–63.
  • Patnaik, S. K., Excavations at Radhanagar (Kanika), An Early Historical Buddhist Site, Odishan Institute of Maritime and Southeast Asian Studies, Bhubaneswar, 2015.
  • Mishra, B., Theoretical aspects of early historic urbanism vis-à-vis the early urban centres of Orissa. In Settlement and Urbanization in Ancient Orissa (eds Mishra, B. and Dandasena, P. K.), Indological Book Seller, Kolkata, 2010, pp. 51–76.
  • Glover, I. C., The role of India in the late Prehistory of Southeast Asia. J. Southeast Asian Arch., 1998, 18, 21–49.
  • Glover, I. C., Early trade between India and Southeast Asia: a link in the development of a world trading system. Occasional Paper No. 16, The University of Hull, London, 1990, pp. 1–45.
  • Srinivasan, S., High tin bronze working in India, the bowl makers of Kerala. In Archaeometallurgy in India (ed. Tripathi, V.), Sharada Publishing House, New Delhi, 1998, pp. 241–250.
  • Glover, I. C. and Bellina, B., Ban Don Ta Phet and Khao Sam Kaeo: The earliest Indian contacts re-assessed. In Early Interactions between South and Southeast Asia: Reflections on CrossCultural Exchange (eds Manguin, P. Y., Mani, A. and Wade, G.), ISEAS, Singapore, 2011, pp. 17–46.
  • Glover, I. C. and Bennett, A., The high-tin in bronzes of Thailand. In Scientific Research into Ancient Asian Metallurgy, Proceedings of the Fifth Forbes Symposium, Freer Gallery of Art at the Freer Gallery (eds Paul, J., McCarthy, B. and Douglas, J. G.), Archetype Books, London, 2012, pp. 101–114.
  • Begley, V., Arikamedu reconsidered. Am. J. Archa., 1983, 87, 461–481.
  • Wheeler, R. E. M., Ghosh, A. and Deva, K., Arikamedu: An IndoRoman trading station on the East coast of India. Ancient India, 1946, 2, 17–124.
  • Rao, K. P., Early trade and contacts between South India and Southeast Asia (300 BC–AD 200). East West, 2001, 51, 386–394.
  • Reddy, P. K. M., Maritime trade of early South India new archaeological evidences from Motupalli, Andhra Pradesh. East West, 2001, 51, 143–156.
  • Rao, K. P., Kottapatnam – a South Indian Port trading with Eastern lands. In Search of Chinese Ceramic Sherds in South India and Sri Lanka (ed. Karashima, N.), Taisho University Press, Tokyo, 2004, pp. 11–15.
  • Tomber, R., Beyond western India: The evidence from imported amphorae. In Migration, Trade and Peoples, Part I: Indian Ocean Commerce and the Archaeology of Western India (eds Tomber, R., Blue, L. and Abraham, S.), The British Association for South Asian Studies, London, 2010, pp. 42–57.
  • Tomber, R. and Williams, D. F., Egyptian amphorae in Britain and the western provinces. Britannia, 2000, 31, 41–54.
  • Tomber, R., Indo-Roman Trade from Pots to Pepper, Duckworth, London, 2008.
  • Tomber, R., Indo-Roman trade: the ceramic evidence from Egypt. Antiquity, 2000, 74, 624–631.
  • Gurumurthy, S., Ceramic Traditions in South India, Madras University Press, Madras, 1981.
  • Turner, P. J., Roman Coins from India, Special Publication No. 22, Royal Numismatic Society, London, 1989.
  • Sridhar, T. S., Suresh, S. and Sundararajan, N., Roman Coins in the Government Museum, Chennai, 2011.
  • Pradhan, D., Manikapatna Excavations (1989–1993): Cultural affinities of Southeast Asia through archaeological evidences. In Kalinga–Indonesian Cultural Relations (ed. Behera, K. S.), OIMSEAS, Bhubaneswar, 2007, pp. 71–95.
  • Acharya, P., Studies in Orissan History, Archaeology and Archives, Student’s Store, Cuttack, 1969.
  • Warmington, E. H., The Commerce between the Roman Empire and India, Vikas Publishing House, New Delhi, 1974.
  • Harinarayana, N., The Treasure Trove Act and the Government Museum, Madras. In Museum and Museology: New Horizons (Essays in honour of Dr Grace Morley on her 80th Birthday (eds Dwivedi, V. P. and Pant, G. N.), Agam Kala Prakashan, New Delhi, 1980, pp. 275–280.
  • Pradhan, D., Mohanty, P. and Mishra, J., Manikapatna: an ancient and medieval port on the coast of Orissa. In Archaeology of Orissa (eds Basa, K. K. and Mohanty, P.), Pratibha Prakashan, New Delhi, 2000, pp. 473–494.
  • Tripati, S., Mani Murali, R., Jaya Kumar, S., Pradhan, A. K., Behera, R. P. and Choudhury, R., Khalkattapatna port: the lost archaeological heritage of Odisha, east coast of India. Curr. Sci., 2015, 109, 372–377.
  • Sengupta, G., Archaeology of coastal Bengal. In Tradition and Archaeology Early Maritime Contacts in the Indian Ocean (eds Ray, H. P. and Salles, J. F.), Manohar, New Delhi, 1996, pp. 115–127.
  • Gangopadhyay, K., Selvakumar, V. and Maiti, A., A short note on an unique Early Medieval Aqaba Amphora from coastal East Medinipur District, West Bengal. J. Asiatic Soc., 2017, 59, 109–124.
  • Casson, L., The Periplus Maris Erythraei, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1989.
  • Schoff, W. H., Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, Oriental Books, New Delhi, 1974.
  • McCrindle, J. W., Ancient India as Described in Classical Literature, Eastern Book House, Patna, 1987.

Abstract Views: 241

PDF Views: 72




  • Did Romans Have Direct Maritime Trade Contacts with Odisha on the Eastern Indian Littoral?

Abstract Views: 241  |  PDF Views: 72

Authors

Sila Tripati
CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India
Rudra Prasad Behera
CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India

Abstract


Kalinga, Utkal, Odra and Orissa are former names of the present state of Odisha with varied geographical boundaries in different periods of history. The exploration and excavations of Manikapatna, Palur, Radhanagar, Sisupalgarh, Talapada of Odisha have brought to light terracotta Roman bullae with Roman portraits, lamps, amphorae shreds and rouletted ware which suggested that these findings belong to the Roman period (early centuries of Christian era) and Roman mariners had maritime contacts with Odisha from the early historical period onwards, if not earlier. However, it is evident that Roman artefacts such as gold coins, amphorae, Terra Sigillata (Arretine ware), etc., are more abundant in peninsular India than in the rest of the country and these findings are limited in Odisha, but the reasons are not comprehensible. However, archaeological findings from the port and trade centres delineate maritime contacts of Odisha with Southeast Asian countries. Here we discuss the archaeological findings from the port sites of Odisha to understand the maritime contacts with Southeast Asian countries and the Roman Empire and examine why the Roman findings are comparatively less in Odisha than in peninsular and other parts of India.

Keywords


Odisha, Maritime Trade, Ports, Romans, Southeast Asia.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv116%2Fi8%2F1391-1397