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India-Africa: Rediscovering Trade Relations through Cultural Assimilation
Author(s) -
Manish Karmwar
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
veethika: an international interdisciplinary research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2454-342X
DOI - 10.48001/veethika.2020.06.04.002
Subject(s) - diaspora , indian ocean , human settlement , ancient history , geography , portuguese , fifteenth , history , archaeology , sociology , gender studies , linguistics , oceanography , philosophy , geology
Indo-African trade relations are one of the imperative segments to understand African settlements in different parts of Indian sub-continent. Several Africans rose to positions of authority as generals and governors, in the Janjira and Sachin kingdoms they rose from king-makers to Emperors. The evidence of African trade in India has a significant history. From ancient times, three valuable export commodities which were prized in Africa: pepper, silk and cotton. The migration from the African sub-continent into India went up only in the sixth century A.D. but we have had an incredible trade-relation from time immemorial. From the Sixth century through the fifteenth century the history of the East African coast is somewhat illuminated by Arabs, Persians and Europeans. During the course of the sixteenth century the Portuguese dominated the Indian Ocean and its shoreline. Portugal was determined to remove Muslim merchants, especially Arabs, in the Indian Ocean system. This paper tries to explore India Africa relation especially with east Africa from earliest times to nineteenth century A.D. The paper recognizes the fact that trade and natural resources have been the principal reason   behind the age-old links between Africa and India. The paper identifies the Cultural assimilation and African diaspora through the ages which has a vital facet to further strengthen the Trade Relations.

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