Project - Shoan
Project - Shoan
Project - Shoan
MASTER OF HISTORY
Submitted By,
SHOAN K MANESH
Register No: P192306
Under the Supervision
of
Dr.K.THANGAPANDIAN
Designation
Department of History
Department of History
guidance and that the thesis has not formed the basis for the award of any
before.
Place: Thiruvarur
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Above all, I am greatly thankful to the grace of God Almighty for the
successful completion of my dissertation.
SHOAN K MANESH
Table of Contents
i. Introduction 7
iv. methodology 13
v. Calicut society 14
5
x. Calicut a centripetal force 25
xix.
Conclusion 51
xx.
Illustration 53
xxi. Bibliography 54
6
Introduction
The Indian Ocean was a complex region with extensive inter-regional economies
and cultural exchanges. It was a place of communication between the four major
had deep and inherent cultural and material similarities in areas such as food,
agriculture, clothing, and a plethora of other themes. Cultures that seemed widely
different from each other were in fact in constant contact and exchange with each
other. . During the first millennium BC, pioneers were Greeks, Arabs, Persians,
and South Asians, and began to integrate trade economies across the Middle East,
South, South, and Southeast Asia by land and sea. The vast trade network that
stretches across the Pacific border extends from one end to the Mediterranean,
forming the basis of the Oriental global economy east and west. As Ashin
Dasgupta points out, “The Arabian and Persian in the west, the Chinese and the
Malays in the east formed the ocean, and the Swahili coast and islands contributed
to its prosperity.
Calicut or Calicut, formerly known by the Arabs and the colonial era, was once
one of the most important ports on the Malabar coast of southern India. Due to the
favourable policies of the Zamorins (Kozhikode Rajas) from the 12th century
onwards, people, ideas, goods, and cultures around the world, Persia and Europe
7
Like other Indian Ocean port cities, Kozhikode was a commercial and trading
center between these regions. Trade mainly in pepper and other spices, exposure
to the sea and the development of scholarly traditions at the Zamorin Tali Temple
in terms of language and literature were also factors that shaped the city. Calicut
and the Malabar coast have been mentioned and described in many Arab,
European and Chinese travelogues over the centuries. The most famous of these is
the detailed account of Ibn Battuta, the great traveler and scholar from Morocco
who visited Malabar between 1342 and 1347.He describes Calicut, where it took
three months for a ship to set sail for China, one of the largest ports in the world,
where people from China, Java, Ceylon, the Maldives, Yemen and Persia arrived,
and traders from all over the world met. He meets Zamor, who is also the chief
merchant and port master of Calicut, a native of Bahrain, and mentions the Khasi
center at Calicut exposed the West Coast community to the latest trends in the
world economy and society. An intelligent religious policy with an open secular
mindset open to all races, religions and languages made Calicut the abode of a
ships. Along with him, "Moors" began a long and bloody struggle to control the
pepper trade from Egypt and to the Arabian Peninsula. His form marked the
8
beginning of the city's long and turbulent history with Europeans (Portuguese,
Dutch and British) that lasted until Indian independence in 1947. Kozhikode
ceased to be “one of the greatest ports of the world”, as Ibn Battuta had put it.
changed, the traded goods changed, the trading routes and networks changed. For
instance, Kozhikode became a major export centre for timber and for tiles from
9
Review of Literature
As secondary sources I majorly depended upon the books, articles and journals.
All in which it shows how international trade had influenced the Calicut society
and how it helped the traders to take part in the growth of the state and changes
gorgiously about calicut from the orgin to present, remarking every incident and
the changes that happened to the city. From this we could get a glimpse of idea
it describes mainly about the political structure of Calicut. In this book it clearly
designates the political history of Calicut and the influence of various foreign
trades in the administration, especially the Arab’s and Portuguese. Also give
close contact with various kingdoms from rome to china. This helps the research
to get more details on administration and also get to know about the kind of
with survey and structures. He gives the compleate details of the traditions and
culture of the society. He mentions how the society was before the trade and also
the changes happens in the life of people after the international trade floreshed. It
provides a detailed explaination about how the calicut state was, what kind of
progress they were able to brought up in the society and how it helped the people
Due to the epidemic and lockdown I was unable to collect more material for my
study and in which turn couldn’t get more primary sources such as government
documents and interview which would have helped in getting this research work
11
Objectives of the Study
society
Structure
development
To find To what extent the trade relation contributed to the economy and
the culture.
12
Methodology
Historical and empirical data. Both primary and secondary data has
Sources Used:
Primary Sources
also used the books which were written by the Travellers and authors
Secondary Sources
the development of Calicut and which helped the socio- cultural and
13
Calicut Society
A closer look at the documents reveals that the Calicut community of the
sixteenth century was largely organized on the basis of religion and caste. There
were four major religions in Calicut when it came to foreigners. They were
Hinduism, Islam, Christianity and Judaism. In all these religions, different sects
were organized on the basis of varna and caste. Although there were many other
sections of society at this time, they were not considered for two reasons - the lack
of adequate resources and the lack of many contacts as some of these cultural
will discuss the life and culture of the important subculture and cultural practices
The society was organized on the basis of varna and jati, which was the
touchstone of the Hindu community. People were known by the banner of their
were specific activities Occupations and customs for each varna and jati. As
understood from various sources, there was an array of varna and jati, and upward
dynamics in this system was almost impossible. The contact between different
The people is divided into four races. According to the traditional concept of
India, Brahmins are Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and Sudras. It is said that Brahmins
14
originated from the head of Brahman. Kshatriyas include kings from the right side
of Brahma, Vaishyas from the belly of Brahma, and Sudras from the feet of
Brahma. The Brahmins of Calicut were considered the highest caste in the range.
It is interesting that we do not see Kshatriyas and Vaishyas in Malabar. Nair was
any varna or jati, from the queen to the last. As for others, if anyone joins any
women of the lower caste, if it is a man he is killed, and if she is a woman he sells
her.
In the palace of the Zamorin was a Bruhminmor (Chief Brahmin). In all matters
the king sought the advice of an old Bruhminmor . As soon as he entered the royal
palace or palace, the king got up and fell at his feet. He lifted him up very
seriously and calmly and put his hand on his head. The king sits after the
Bruhminmor chair. Some Brahmins served in the royal courts. They served the
kings as cooks. For example, the cook of the zamorin in Calicut was a Brahmin.
The Brahmins took the food for the king to the idol and after some rituals they
took it to the king. After the king's meal. The rest were taken to the backyard by
the Brahmins. There he clapped three times. At that sound many crows came and
fed them. There is another reason for the respect they receive; It is none other than
the knowledge they possess. they had a lot of books with them.
After the Brahmins comes the Nair caste. They were a powerful military caste of
the kings of calicut. Although they were indigenous military castes, they did not
15
belong to the Kshatriya caste, but instead were Sudras as they were converted to
Hinduism. But they were considered superior to all other Jats in calicut except the
Brahmins belonging to the caste system. Nairs were always ready to die for their
masters instead of their parents or relatives. But their enmity towards rivals was
purely professional. Even on battle days, the enemy slept on the battlefield
without any fear. But during the day they fought like real enemies. They had been
well trained for war since childhood. From an early age their bodies were
anointed with oil and made them great warriors. They were well trained in
handling weapons. There is a group of them called Amox. They were deadly and
very dangerous.
Tiya was also known as Ezavas, who used to grow palm groves. Collect coconuts,
collect palm wine, carry supplies, and fight battles. They were a kind of slaves
attached to the land of the Nairs, and there was polygamy among the Tiya. Hirava
or Vettuvan was another caste in Calicut. The meaning of the word is hunter.
They planted and collected. Mukuvas were seafarers and fishermen. The
fishermen of Calicut were the lowest caste. They were not allowed to appear in
public, and violating this would result in severe punishment. Pulas are considered
the lowest of all classes in Calicut. 'Pulam' in Malayalam means wide field. Pulas
There have been Christians in India since the first century AD. They were called
Christians or St. Thomas Christians. There are two groups of Christians, namely
16
Vadukkumbagukur and Trinkumbhukur. Vadukumbagukur is a member of the
to Malabar in the 4th century AD. By the fifteenth century another group of
Christians had joined the Nazarenes but were now Latinized. St. Thomas
Christians followed the customs of the Brahmins of calicut. The customs and
and Rituals Brahmins and Christians of St. Thomas We can see common elements
in Calicut.
The ashes of the dung were used for purification. They were put on overhead,
hand and chest. They cleaned their roads and as well as houses with cow dung. It
was also applied to the floor. It was practiced every day on the way between the
In Calicut, the oath was placed on a cow or on the head of a son. There were
various ways to prove crimes. The first way was to dip the suspect's hands in
17
boiling oil or butter. The first way was to dip the suspect's hands in boiling oil or
butter. Then cover the hand for three days. On the third day after it was unveiled,
he was convicted and sentenced if his hand was in bad condition and acquitted if
his hand was clean. . If the accused is not found guilty, the accused must be paid a
fixed amount. Another mode was to put the defendant's hands in a clay pot filled
with snakes. The person took a ring or lemon and put it inside the bowl to provoke
the snakes. He was guilty if they bit him, otherwise he was released. This was a
For Hindus, fasting was on different days. One of the fasts was called Egadexi.
(Ekadesi) during the first ten days of every lunar month. Another was Giwarseri.
(Shivratri) was usually in February. During this Lent, they did not eat, drink or
sleep around the temple for 24 hours. In addition, there was the 22-day
Thiruvadira in the lunar month. It was for women. On such days they ate only a
few, and after the death of a close relative one they had to avoid eating meat, fish,
wine, eggs and betel leaf for a year. Moreover, there was a monthly fast. Those
who have done this should wash themselves on the last day of October, wear
clean clothes, and visit the temple of Vishnu on the morning of 1st November and
the first ten days of December. They ate only milk and plantains , and these days
they never looked at women or remembered anything but names and things
related to Vishnu. He had to start it from the first of December to the 10th of
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January next year. He had to do this for 12 years. After 12 years of fasting for 40
The thali tied around a woman's neck was a sign of protection and ownership.
There was a woman in Calicut who took off her thali to attract more men because
Some believed that they had been polluted by the touch of someone from a lower
caste. After bathing, they were cleaned. Some people ate banana leaves to keep
the plates from getting dirty. Some people cooked themselves to avoid
contamination.
There were Palanquins used by kings and nobles. Vasco da Gama was taken to the
Zamorin in a Palanquin. The lower castes carried it. There was a facility to sit or
lie on the couch. On some serious occasions, kings and nobles often rode on
elephants. Another mode of transport used by the people of Calicut was the
'Chengadam', which brought together two boats, long and narrow. There were
many ships in Calicut. There was mention of Very giant ships. Can carry up to
seven elephants.
19
Foreign Travellers Mentions About Calicut
ibin batuta has given extensive comments about calicut in which zamorins
wielded till 19th century and he states that "At the distance of every half mile
there is a house made of wood in which there are chambers fitted up for the
reception of comers and goers, whether they may be Muslims or infidels”. The
mentions that there is a well to provide drinks and that Hindus have been
commissioned to provide drinks. They serve it to the Hindus on vessels and the
Muslims on hand as they are not allowed to touch their vessels or enter their
merchants were welcomed in all districts and were greatly respected. Any Muslim
traveller, rich or poor could stay in any Muslim houses and if there were no
Muslims, the Hindu served food for the traveller on banana leaves. "Everybody
has a garden and his house is placed in the middle of it, and round the whole of
this there is a fence of wood up to which the ground of each inhabitant comes",
He commented that by the middle of the fourteenth century the city was extremely
prosperous and the country had become peaceful and defensive . He strives to
highlight the communal peace and unity between Hindus and Muslims, both of
20
which are interdependent as manufacturers and merchants, the majority of
Muslims being good merchants, who contributed richly to the nations, and they
worked well in naval knowledge, He also mentions the culture of the community,
they are good at welcoming guests, even though he is a foreigner, it is said that
Next, we have the account of a Persian ambassador Abdul Razak who sends by
the Persian emperor Sha-rohk to Calicut in 1442. He mentions that “Calicut is the
perfectly secured harbour, which likes that of omurz, brings together merchants
articles brought from maritime countries and especially from Abyssinia, Zazibar,
Zairbad. From time to time ships arrive from the shore of the house of god and
other parts of Hedjaz and abide at will, for grater or longer peace in harbour.
Security and justice are so firmly established in the city,that the most wealthy
merchants bring thither from maritimr countries considerable cargoes, which they
unload and unhesitatingly send into the markets and bazaars, without thinking in
the meantime of any necessity of checking the account or of the custom house
taken upon themselves the charge of looking after the merchandise over which
they keep watch day and night .When a sale is effected, they levy a duty on the
goods of one-fortieth part; if they are not sold they make no charges on them’’ .
coins are mainly made of silver and gold. Calicut, the gold coin of the palm, the
21
star was popular. King used 60% of the gold in the mint coins. The coin was 1.17
cm in diameter and weighed 37 grams. Historians suggest that the coin had the
same weight.
“In other ports, a strange things practice is adopted. When a vessel sects sail for a
certain point, and suddenly is driven by a degree of divine providence into another
roadstead, the inhabitants, under the pretext that the wind has driven it there,
plunder the ship. But in Calicut every ship, whatever place it might come from, or
wherever it may be bonded , when it puts into the port, is treated like other vessels
and has trouble of any kind to put up with” he too describe about the common
people “the blacks of this country have the body nearly naked; they bear only
bandages round the middle called lankoutah, which descend from the navel to
above the knee. In one hand they hold an Indian poignard, which has the
brilliance of drop of water and in other hand a buckler of ox-hide, which might be
taken for a piece of mist. This costume is common to king and to the beggar”. His
main focus was on the security provided at the port for cargo and ships. This is the
main feature that has attracted foreign traders and merchants, and it has attracted
many new traders due to its free and diplomatic approach by the rule of Calicut.
22
Starting Of Trade
Early the Arabian Sea was considered to be part of the Indian Ocean, and later it
was called the Arabian Sea in the period because of their expansion and the
supremacy of their trade. The main benefit of the traders was the monsoon wind
which provided a free and annual transport system for sailing vessels especially
the great Romans, Persians, and Syrians etc. and after the rise of Islam in Arabia
they also joined, in fact, Kozhikode became the melting pot of religion, culture
and races"
in the time of the roman empire, the main traded goods were pepper, ivory,
sandalwood, scent, and spices. The Malabar had the monopoly of pepper, after the
downfall of the roman empire the Arabs took their position in trade they
by the middle of the 14th century, most of the natural old harbours had become
unsuited for crowded trade, or to hold more vessels, also due to great flood the
sandbanks had choked the movement harbours mainly in the kodugallour regions.
Thus the Arabs were in search of a new opening and so found Calicut and at the
23
beginning of 12 the century the famous long term friendship of Hindu and Muslim
Agriculture Of Calicut
John Kieenwicks views (12th to 1st - 8th century) Calicut society as "an open,
a caste system, the division of a caste society, and joint ownership of land and
foreign trade with Arabs, Chinese, Jews, and Christians led to the expansion of
Purayidam Sampad Vyavastha , that is, the plot-based economy and the plot
crops and subsistence crops. The origin of this arrangement can be traced back to
Between the twelfth and eighth centuries the importance of the series increased
with the inclusion of forests, shady areas and fields. Non-cultivated trees (teak,
ebony, etc.), fruit trees (mango, jackfruit, tamarind, gooseberry) and harvested
trees (coconut, lobster, pepper) were grown in the range and in the Puraidam.
24
These included fruits, grains, legumes, root crops, and vegetables, while other
crops, such as ginger, tamarind, and pepper, were traded. The Portuguese traded
in coconut oil, copra, rope and arca nuts which were products extracted from the
crops grown in the Parambu and Purayidam. As the foreign demand for certain
The rise of Calicut is one of the causes and consequences of the rise of the
Zamorins in Kerala. Its trade filled their coffers and enabled them to extend their
power. The development of the country increased its trade. The barren strip of
barren forest was turned into a strong seaport by humanitarian efforts, and the
Arabs and Chinese exchanged Western products with the eastern nations. From
the west came the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Phoenicians, the Jews, the
Romans, the Arabs, the East Africans, the Chinese from the East, and others from
Calicut more popular than any other port on the west coast. Calicut has the highest
concentration of Muslims. The main part of Zamor's income comes from trade . .
25
He controlled and regulated Calicut's internal and external trade. Gradually, the
port city of Calicut developed into a major center for foreign trade. The Zamorins
devised a special market strategy for trade. The commissioner of the Calicut port
will have to collect from the broker at the rate of the fans all the ships that dock at
Calicut, and levy the voting tax on the fans of Pandharkada and the fans of
Beypore. He was assisted by Menon, Menoki and Chettis. Menon checked the
goods and kept the accounts. Menoki worked as a broker. Valankai Chetty was
one of the business operations supervisors. Mahuvan gives details about various
Secondly, it commanded waterways, and thirdly, the Muslims chose this port to
carry their cargo more than any other country on the west coast. With the support
of the Muslims, the Zamorin enjoyed the prosperity of Calicut. Calicut owes its
importance to the ability of its ruler, but often to the help they received from
maritime trading center. Rich climate and winter terrain are one of the most
structure. The availability of minerals such as clay, iron or gold contributed to the
26
Calicut. The availability of mineral resources such as clay, iron or gold
contributed to the growth of Karaka production shala production and the stability
and security in Calicut. ‘Calicut’, a perfectly safe port, brings together traders
from all cities and all countries like Ormus. The last but most important of the
Historically, trade and commerce were the most important economic activities in
Muslims actively participated. Trade and commerce is also relevant to the local
Muslims, who clearly link these activities with the subsequent renewal of the
descendant of Syed traders who settled throughout the northern coastal state of
27
Kerala. Many others see themselves as the successors of marriages between local
aristocratic women and Arab Muslims. These claims give a discourse on the
Throughout its history, Kozhikode has been steeped in the spread of people,
ideas and goods across the Indian Ocean. It was rich in maritime trade from the
tenth to the fifteenth century, and in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries it
developed rapidly as a trading center between West Asia, Southeast Asia and
South Asia. . Like other Indian Ocean port cities, pre-colonial Kozhikode had a
large number of visitors or resident traders from the East (China, Java, Ceylon)
and the West (Egypt, Yemen and Persia). During Ibn Battuta's visit in 1342, the
chief merchant and port master was an Ibrahim from Bahrain, who suggested a
strong Arab presence and confirmed the presence of a Qazi (Muslim judge) of
Arab origin in both mosques. Nearly a century later, the Chinese Muslim traveler
Ma Huan reported that many of the King's subjects in Kozhikode were Muslims
and that there were twenty or thirty mosques in the country, and the king
"In the fourteenth century, a Hindu ruler hosted four thousand foreign Muslim
long and bloody struggle to deregulate the pepper trade. Moores, “Muslim traders
from Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula The presence and activities of a significant
28
known, however, is that the resistance against the Portuguese invasion revolved
around the Malayalee Muslim seafarers led by the famous Marakars. The
Portuguese ship was never able to control trade off the Malabar Coast: Arab dows
and Malayalee boats, mainly operated by Muslim workers - constantly defied the
siege and obstructed European trade by piracy whenever the opportunity. In the
early nineteenth century, maritime trade was in British hands, and inter-coastal
trade (in Bombay and Surat / Kach) was Gujarati-owned and man-made boats. As
Kozhikode Muslims and their Arab partners continued to move goods between
economic importance.
By the end of the nineteenth century, Malayalee Muslims lived mainly in towns
and villages along the Malabar or river banks, all places where they could trade.
From the nineteenth century to the mid-1980s, the colonial and post-colonial
economies gave a major impetus to local trade: Kozhikode became a global hub
for timber exports and later a commercial hub for copra. Emerging as a major rice
market in the region, the city also saw a revival of trade from the Arabian
Peninsula. But when the Muslims of Kozhikode speak of the rise of trade and
commerce in the city, they constantly refer to the relatively recent period from
29
The end of the colonial period saw the emergence of a small, affluent, local
Muslim middle class - mostly timber merchants and Gulf merchants - mainly
reform initiatives. For example, the introduction of modern and rational methods
in education, business and family life .Colonial trade rules were removed after
were also fined, Trade in Kozhikode bazaars increased. Luckily, the city the
economy is booming
The trade relationship between China and India dates back to the last century BC.
This early trade in raw silk, silk thread, and silk fabrics grew from the Chinese
and Central Asian regions to a land route to the eastern part of the Roman Empire.
By the middle of the first century, a portion of Chinese silk was exported through
India. China received many articles from the cultures where silk was obtained.
Various texts from the middle of the first millennium give a long list of articles
brought to China by the Persians. In the past, pepper was one of the various spices
widely known as the products of the hilly regions of Kerala. It is said that during
30
the reign of the Tang Dynasty (618-907) the kings paid special attention to
improving the facilities for maritime trade. Large ships were also built for sea
voyages. During the ninth and tenth centuries, Chinese ships were common on the
coast of Kerala, especially at Kollam and Calicut, in search of spices and articles.
This marks the beginning of a logically long period of Sino-Indian contact for six
centuries. Many aspects of Chinese trade and commerce are described in medieval
travellers and sailors of the 13th to 15th centuries. According to Chinese scholars,
Calicut was known to the Chinese as early as the twelfth century. According to
Ling Deida, the Chinese used to call Calicut Nanpiraj. During this period, Arabian
traders like Haji in Siang may have imported pepper to China from Calicut.
1225. It contains valuable information about Chinese relations with Ceylon and
In 1292, Marco Polo recorded that the Chinese dominated trade in Malabar.
Articles such as pepper, ginger, and nutmeg were the main commodities. Marco
Polo saw many ships (Chinese ships for Indian trade) in the ports of Saitun. These
ships traded with Malabar, especially at Calicut, with a crew of 200-300 each.
These ships took home 5000-6000 baskets of pepper. Along with peppers,
Chinese traders also bought ginger, indigo and turmeric from the quilon. There
was a good demand outside for the best fabrics available in Bakran and Calicut.
31
These Chinese ships delivered silk, gold, silver, copper, porcelain, cloves and
spikenard to Calicut.
At present near to the Arabian Sea in the Calicut town, we can see a street named
silk street which reminds us of the ancient maritime spice route between Calicut
and china that flourished between the 2nd-century BC and 15th century AD
uniting traders from India to China, Southeast Asia, Arabian Peninsula, Egypt and
Europe.
Calicut has been a great melting pot of genres and we can detect people in this
town has all kinds of complexion and features. This can be attributed to the social
and commercial intercourse of sea traders from far and wide mingling with the
locals. Four centuries between 1125, after the decline of the Perumals and 1498,
trading port. The Arabs received goods from the West to exchange goods brought
by the Chinese from the Far East. There is a reference in the history of Kerala to
this trade between Kerala and China.Historical accounts go far beyond navigators
He), a prominent Admiral and explorer of the early Ming Dynasty in China in the
32
Historical records state that he visited Calicut seven times with more than 20,000
men in 1403 AD and was tagged in 60 treasure ships, ten times larger than his
contemporaries. It is said that he fell ill and was buried at sea off the coast of
Calicut during a naval expedition in the Indian Ocean. Ma Huan, the Chinese
sailor of this Imperial Chinese ship, praises Calicut as a great trading emporium of
trade between Kerala and China, which is regularly visited by traders from all
over the world. "He mentions in Calicut much pepper is grown on the hills.
having a plantation of three hundred are looked upon as wealthy proprietors. The
king belongs to the Nayar class his overseer, being a Mahomedan, does not eat
pork. Thus led it is said in times past, to a compact being made between the king
and hid overseer to the fact that if the king would give up eating pork, the
overseer will give up eating beef. This compact has most scrupulously observed
by the successors of both parties up to the present day.many of the kings subjects
are mahomedans, and there are twenty or thirty mosques in the kingdom, to which
the people resort every seventh day for worship. On this day, during the morning,
the people being at the mosques, no business is transacted; and the after part of
We can easily trace Chinese influence in Calicut society for that should not be an
the Chinese fishing net called Cheena vala which is widely seen on the beaches,
33
we all must have seen its gorgeous photo which exhibits the beauty of Calicut, its
heritage. The net was first introduced in the 14th century. They also contribute
some of the culinary deities that are integral to Kerala cuisine, such as Chinese
pots (cheena chatti) a deep, thick and round cooking utensils. Chinese influence
area. they also left some culinary cult, the cheena chatti , its the deep thick and
Jars) etc.The Chinese influence on the dishes found in the Malayalee cuisine, the
kozhikatta a dumplings that are similar to dim sum , nool puttu is another which is
similar to nodules and even porridge is similar to the cantonese congee etc
Cheenam Palli – a mosque in Panthalayani, Calicut all this shows how much the
Chinese had influenced the life of Calicut .At Kappad, 20 km from the city and a
former Trading Mart has a large joint venture called Chinnacheri which means
Chinese Settlement
34
Relation With Arab
The rise of the Zamorins and the growth of Calicut as a major trading center It
took place around 1200-150. From the ninth century, the Arabs began to play a
major role in trade between the East and the West. The first Muslim occupation of
India was carried out by Sindh in 711 under the leadership of Qasim from Basra. .
With the advent of Islam came great inspiration for travel, trade, and adventure,
which lasted until the fourteenth century, when the Muslims retreated into the
In the 10th and 11th centuries, trade from India to the west was controlled by
the Arabs of Tunisia, Morocco and Tripoli. Their main trading center in the
Middle East was Ayidhab on the shores of the Red Sea. From there the Arabs
established trade relations with Kerala, especially with Calicut. They established
their own settlement in Calicut. After the fall of the Abbasid Caliphate, which
35
overthrew Halagu in 1258, the Mamluk Sultans of Egypt assumed political
control. Thus the Arab merchants of Cairo, known as the Kareem merchants,
began to board a new ship from the revived port of Aden to the newly established
Calicut. The Arabs made Calicut their home, and they helped Zamorin’s for
expansion of his territory helped support the expansion of trade. The rise and
prosperity of Calicut was due to the support of Muslim traders. Under Zamorin's
patronage they settled largely under his domination, increasing wealth and power
through trade.
Calicut has become one of the major ports in Malabar and one of the largest
ports in the world. It was visited by people from China, Sumatra, Ceylon,
Maldives, Yemen and the Fars and gathered traders from all over. The prosperity
of Calicut meant many other things, including the victory of the Cairo traders over
their rivals from southern China, and the eruption of trade animosity between
China and the Arabs. The Zamorins sympathize with the Arabs more than the
Chinese. Pepper, ginger, cardamom, spices, some balm, achilles and sandalwood
were exported to Arab ships. Of these, pepper has gained prominence in the world
market. Arab traders shipped with spices, incense, ivory, sandal and cotton and
silk, which were in great demand in the Western world. Chinese silk and ceramics
were taken to the Western and Arab worlds through Calicut and Pantalayani
Kollam. Until the expulsion of the Portuguese in the 1st century, all sea barns
between the East and the West were monopolized by the Arabs.
36
Calicut had an important place in the history of medieval Calicut as a major
center of trade. The port of Calicut was started from Kalai during the reign of the
was a well-built port. Thus the port of Calicut became an important trading center
during the reign of the Zamorins of Calicut. The most important emporia of trade
on the Malabar Coast is the trade between the Arabs and the Chinese in the Indian
Ocean and Calicut. Calicut has a special significance as a center of exports and re-
exports in the middle Ages. The port was open and had a safe environment for
Mappila Muslim culture is a mixture of Indian and Arabian traditions and its
origin can be traced back to pre-Islamic Arabia. It is believed that Arab traders
used to travel to calicut regularly even before the rise of Islam in Arabia. Their
historical significance gave them a unique language, culture, religion and social
Calicut is quite different from the process of expansion of islam in northern and
central india. in Calicut the muslime community did not spring up in the wake of
commercial expansion.
during the 8th century the early settlers of malabar came from the red sea coast
,south Arabia and the gulf region Again in contrast to the Muslims of North India
37
they speak Malayalam, the language everybody speaks in Kerala. They faced a
severe crisis of Arab and Malayalam identities. When they faced a crisis to reach
out to the community and the greater Malabar, Mappila found a new way to
express and share identity. It was the Arabic-Malayalam language that was the
religious need of Mappila.When Islam was introduced on the coast of Kerala, the
people known as Mappila did not change completely, did not accept Arabic as
their mother tongue and did not want to abandon Malayalam. The rich heritage of
this community written language reflects the rich history of cultural interactions
Apart from the language, Mappila Muslims have absorbed elements of the
surrounding Hindu culture in many areas of social life such as dress and food
habits, marriage practices like the tying of the tali and paying dowry to the
bridegroom, but also the stratification of Muslim society. A striking example for
the assimilation of the Mappila Muslims is the architectural style of the ancient
mosques, which resembles very much the style of the typical Malabar Hindu
temples. Parts of the Muslim community also have adapted the matrilineal family
system typical of some Kerala Hindu communities. At the same time Mappila
Muslims have stayed a distinct community of their own, with specific cultural
38
features of their own. Let me just mention some of them: their beliefs, the Arabic
and Urdu fragments in their language, their food, parts of their dress code, their
songs, epics, and dances, their music and their own characteristic varieties of
matriliny.
The history of the Muslims of Calicut is strongly intertwined with the general
history of Malabar and Calicut. Before the Portuguese came, the Muslims were a
the Zamorins, and which made its living mainly by trade across the Indian Ocean,
of the Portuguese, and in the periods which followed, their significance and their
between the Portuguese and the Mappila Muslims was set by mutual
and Muslims since the crusades. This was the starting point of a fierce struggle for
trade dominance in this region which lasted nearly 100 years. In the end, the
Mappila Muslims lost their leading role in trade and society. Cultural assimilation
was one of the most significant aspects of Mappila history. The marriage of Hindu
39
Influence Of Europe
The foreigners not only the trade relationships with Kozhikode but also there were
many factories and warehouse near to the sea of several foreign firms especially
the French, European, and Chinese. The French was having a loge on 6 acres near
to the seashore, as well as many English and Scottish companies. Particularly the
French were having the commercial privilege, there landed property and houses
were untaxed also they extended to exercise fiscal and judicial authority. in the
middle of the 19th, century many Europeans had decided to establish their career
Crossfield, William Goodacre company etc. started there office and warehouse in
Kozhikode. It’s their pioneering efforts and initiative to open up the impassable
forest and set bases for flourishing wealthy tea, coffee, and rubber plantation
which are having a high influence even on today's economy of Kozhikode, they
had played an important part in the history of trade and had influenced the
Vasco da Gama, was a unique event in the history of Portugal and India. For the
Portuguese, it was the culmination of their national effort, which began decades
ago. 'It was the success of a journey in search of Christians and spices.On May 20,
Indian politics. For India, it was the beginning of the Vasco da Gama era in Indian
history. It was the beginning of regular contact with a Western European country
that lasted in Malabar for more than a century and a half. Thus the Calicut Empire,
with its good ruler, honest people, the greatest Mart, Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, Ma
Juan, Abdurazak, and Pirard de Lovell, described very clearly this landing of
Vasco-Dagama on May 20, 1498. Some knew that the 'discovery' of the Good
Hope Cape was a bad day for the Maple, from which they 'recovered wealth and
Portuguese entry into the Indian Ocean was not motivated by the idea of
commercial gain. The Portuguese first came in contact with the Zamorin, the ruler
of Calicut. During his first visit, the Zamorin received Vasco da Gama with
41
Malabar". In fact, his first mission to promote Portuguese trade in Calicut was a
and building a factory in Calicut from Zamorin. But when the Portuguese failed to
stockpile spices in the market, they became hostile to the Arab traders. The
In his second meeting with the Zamorin, Vasco da Gama demanded that Muslims
be deported from the city and that no Muslim be allowed to enter any of his ports
or engage in any form of trade. Zamorin refused and declared; "The port of
Calicut will always be open to the public, and it is impossible to forbid anyone
from trading with Calicut, whether a Muslim or not, as well as expelling and
expelling Muslims from Calicut. . On November 2, 1498, his ship began to attack
the city. It was stopped when the captain pointed out that the ships were being
damaged. Revenge of the Zamorin's guns was not effective, and Barrows
commented that "their shots are like bowls". The attack continued to be "the most
As Vasco da Gama exits Calicut, a float of 24 Calicut boats appears. The boats
were seized along with 800 crew members who behaved very brutally. The
Brahmin messenger of Zamorin, who had his arms and ears cut off, was sent to
the king in a small bowl with a palm leaf letter, instructing him to make curry to
42
eat what his Brahmin had brought. Vasco da Gama's anger was appropriately
brutally tried to compete with the Mappilas and other locals. Sanjay Subramaniam
notes the differences in Vasco-de-Gama's policy in the Atlantic and West India
regarding the Portuguese aggression in the western Indian Ocean. He ignores the
same fact when he says, "The violence before Vasco da Gama was confined to the
land."
Some historians in Kerala seem to have ignored Populis' national policy, and in
King's letters to the Papal Bulls and neighboring rulers, the Portuguese sought to
reduce the burden of cruelty. K.M. Panicker observes that "the Portuguese king
could not have chosen a bad official to establish peaceful relations and trade with
the Indian rulers." Cabral had no strategy or foresight. He was proud to suspect
humiliation in all innocent movements. If the goal of Portuguese entry into Indian
waters was "economic power, regulation of the spice trade and acquisition of
On the one hand, there was war between Zamor and his Mappila allies, and
between the Portuguese and her allies, the Malabar princes, who were divided.
The Maples also sought outside help. They had the advantage of various foreign
Muslim communities and they became traders in Calicut. . These were Indian
Muslim traders and seafarers from Gujarat, the Coromandel and Bengal. They are
43
converted in the 14th century. Showed an active interest in joining hands with the
Zamorins in Egypt. Among the Muslim rulers, the sultans of Bijapur and the
Pasha of Egypt showed an active interest in joining hands with the Zamorins. The
and Cartas' involvement in the coastal trade affected the economy of Gujarat. In
1508, the Zamorin's naval alliance, the Afro-Asian Front, was formed with Sultan
Kansavul Gouri of Egypt and Sultan Muhammad Begra of Gujarat to fight the
Portuguese and expel them from the Indian Ocean. In January 1508, Egyptian and
Indian ships, led by Amir Hussein, the Kurdish governor of Jeddah, and Malik
Ayas, the governor of Diu, defeated the Portuguese ship under Dom Lorenko at
Chaul. The Portuguese suffered great losses. Capt. Dom Lorenko, the son of
Governor Almeida, himself was killed in Chaul. KS "The first trade war in India
was a heavy blow to the Portuguese," explains Mathew. Almeida himself marched
for revenge, and the two armies met at Du, however, but on February 3, 1509 AD,
the Agro-Asian Front was defeated. This led to the defeat of the Indo-Egyptian
The service of the Marakkar family and their encounter with the Portuguese in
effort of the Kunhali Marakkars along with the Zamorin delayed the ‘European
44
‘Coverpad’ (Suicide Squad) tradition, the Kunchies used ‘hit and run’ tactics.
They used cruisers and small boats to navigate both the deep and the shallow
waters. However, the redefinition of the struggle of the Mappilas under Kunchalis
reveals how the dreams of the Portuguese were established with the constant
The Portuguese were never concerned with the caste or jati distinctions They
Gamma's first voyage, as there was no missionary activity in the original plan of
the Portuguese on their voyage to India. The names of the two priests may have
been included in the ship's roll book to serve as chaplains on the ship are
Recorded. The second ship to reach Malabar under Pedro Alvarez Cabril was
carrying 1300 men and 8 Franciscan monks who arrived in Calicut as Portuguese
under Cabril, a Portuguese flag was hoisted and an altar was erected for the Holy
Mass in the house provided by the Zamorin for the Portuguese to stay. The two
blessings that Cabral requested of zamorin were permission for free trade and the
Christian faith. Zamorin gave permission for this. Moores was against it. .
The first missionary sermon was delivered by commentators, whose idea was the
uniqueness of Christianity and the need for conversion. A few of them converted,
45
and one yogi received the name Miguel Miguel Baptism. In the beginning, people
did not have much interest in converting to Christianity. But later, various needs
arising from their social life forced people to convert. In Quilon, Few people are
Hindu women came for conversion, due to the ongoing wars in India very few
Portuguese women traveled to India, rarely more than a dozen women on a ship,
including six hundred and eighty men. Under such circumstances, Portuguese
men were able to interact freely with Malabar women. During the Viceroyalty of
Almeida, many Portuguese men were found to have befriended indigenous Hindu
and Muslim women. Mothers would go to Portugal with their virgin daughters to
earn money. In such a context, the Viceroy forbade the Portuguese to sleep with
baptism. It was later found that baptism was motivated by financial gain rather
than conviction in matters of faith. The missionaries were asked if the conversion
was motivated by pure faith in Jesus Christ. However, a new mixed community of
Portuguese and natives began to grow around the forts. Since people did not
receive good instruction on the faith before baptism, there were catechism classes
that gave advice related to the Catholic faith and the life of the saints and the
Catholic life. Usually, on Sundays men and on Saturdays women were called to
various places for these religious instructions. Thus slowly the lies of Hinduism
46
People used to live together in Calicut. Sometimes many relatives lived together
on the same roof. People lived together with their relatives after their conversion
strange way of life of the new Christians. He asked the Christians to stay away
from the influence of Hindu elements and live in separate areas. Thus the newly
baptized were separated from the society and culture in which they had lived for
centuries. This shows a definite rift in social relations with the change in the
customs of the land on which they have lived for centuries.Their social customs
The Portuguese demanded legal priests and witnesses for the marriage. When it
After the conversion to Christianity some of the lower castes were able to touch
the Nair and 'walk freely through the streets of the king', a major change which
affected a traditional society like Malabar was the high mobility in the caste
47
At the beginning of the sixteenth century, Portuguese colonial involvement with
Calicut introduced the Portuguese language to the region. The main channels for
the expansion of the Portuguese across the continent were political domination,
trade, and missionary activity. Later, colonial and evangelical agendas had to add
Portuguese (or its derivatives), the first European colonial language to have a
stable presence in the East, gained widespread currency in the region and in some
The above considerations are to illustrate the close relationship between research
on Creole languages and the social history of their loci. For the purposes of this
Calicut (taken here to include the whole of present-day Kerala, i.e. the
Quilon and Anjenko, there are scattered references to the speaking of such creole
it is today. There is no doubt that Portuguese and Malayalam are the most
includes only two languages - is different from the Creole formed in slave-
48
dependent gardens. However, this would simplify the case, given the evidence
enterprise. On the one hand, the Calicut trading ports, first inhabited by the
military service in the service of the Portuguese. For example, it can be gleaned
from information about the structure of ships that sailed for the Portuguese in
sixteenth-century Asia.
Culinary Culture
Culinary culture has always been an important indicator that reflects the history
experienced by an area, and also plays a large role in defining who we are. There
Calicut, their culture, ethnicity and history. Food is an indispensable part of the
49
lifestyle and culture of the calicut Coast. The diversity of the malabar cuisine is
the result of numerous interactions with the cultures that traded and settled in
calicut. Malabar cuisine also gained culinary knowledge from local cuisine, with
major influences from Arabs, Portuguese, Chinese, etc., who lived with the
religion and established their culture. It has so far focused on the political
economy, laws, and traditions. Their contributions to culture and society are
welcome. The location of Calicut is a factor that transcends the rich culinary
history of the region. The region served as a channel connecting the trade routes
of the various empires. It was in Calicut that the Portuguese explorer Vasco da
Gama became the first European to reach India by the Atlantic Ocean. Malabar
hosted all immigrants and their culture without any panic and in the process
adapted and evolved itself, Malabar culinary culture underwent a paradigm shift,
incorporating various dishes and cultures of the world.Rice was the staple food of
the people. But paddy was not cultivated in abundance. There was a shortage of
food in Calicut. Rice was brought from bhatical to Calicut. Calicut had a major
moor called the Marmar, with 70 ships, which carried food to Calicut. Calicut did
not have enough rice as it was full of palm trees and coconut trees all the time.
Although the people had some paddy cultivation, it was not enough for the
family's livelihood. The people of Malabar ate a lot of rice, vegetables and dried
fish. Paddy was widely cultivated in the areas between Mount Eli and Goa .They
served as the source of paddy in Calicut. A lot of rice was imported to Calicut
from the Coromandel Coast. Some of the Hindus ate fish and meat, but they don’t
50
eat beef. There were fruits like jackfruit, Figs (Bananas), Mangoes etc. An
important example of this cultural spread can be seen in the making of pattiri (a
bread made from rice flour) because the Arabs love bread, while the Keralites
(natives of Kerala) have a strong attachment to rice, hence the dish called pathiri.
A variety of pastries and breads are a must in this area for dipping, scooping and
filling. The Arab influence can also be seen in some of the techniques used to
prepare food. For example, ghee is widely used in Malabar cuisine and the rest of
the state is heavily dependent on coconut oil. Ghee made from cattle raised by the
Arabs is also used. Malabar's appetite for stuffed meat comes from the Middle
includes chicken talayana (baked chicken stuffed with boiled eggs from whole
dough), arikaduka (mussels stuffed with fragrant rice and coconut paste), red
Conclusion
In the opening chapter of this research, the question arises as to how permanently
the interaction with foreign society and culture affected calicut. In subsequent
chapters, an attempt was made to show how the intervention of foreign trade
51
response to the intervention of foreign traders varies depending on the attitude of
Calicut society and culture were completely different from the trading countries.
The society of Calicut was divided into different sub-cultures based on religion.
The major religions of Calicut during this period were Hinduism, Christianity,
by the traditions that existed in the society. . The authority of the Zamorin
associated with the legend of Cheraman Perumal and the immense wealth brought
by Muslims and other merchants from all over the world were widely
acknowledged. The Malabar community was culturally integrated and had a way
During the boom in international trade, two new divisions emerged in Calicut. As
a result of mixed marriages and new conversions, they were mixed races, and the
mixed races had a different way of life from the local way of life. Many of them
imitated the Western way of life. The arrival of the Jesuits on the Calicut coast
of schools, hospitals, and charities, many changes took place in the community
and culture in the field of social welfare. according to the needs of the time The
way of life of each culture changed by foreign influence. Thus the culture that
started in Calicut as a result of contact with foreign traders brought about many
52
In this process of integration, the influence of kings, religious and trade ties
served as a means of socio-cultural change. The impact of this change was felt
more in the coastal communities due to the intense intervention of the traders in
The peoples of Calicut were not having any ethnocentrism. . As a result of the
meeting between the two cultures, division and social integration took place. That
society and culture for centuries to come. The socio-cultural changes that have
taken place in Calicut as a result of the intervention of traders show that socio-
cultural changes are taking place in "host cultures" due to the power, and by
“guest cultures".
Illustrations
53
Figure 1: Calicut- City along the Indian Ocean (source: https://artsandculture.google.com/exhibit/the-
indian-spice-trade-in-search-for-knowledge-and-riches%C2%A0/eQLii3aIo8xmKA)
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54
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