The expansion of wet-rice agriculture by the …

Years: 388 - 531

The expansion of wet-rice agriculture by the middle of the first millennium BCE and, apparently more importantly, certain requirements of trade such as the control of local commodities, suggest new social and political possibilities, which are seized by some communities in Indonesia.

For reasons not well understood, most—and all of those that endured—are located in the western archipelago.

Already acquainted with a wider world, these Indonesians are open to, and indeed actively seek out, new ideas of political legitimation, social control, and religious and artistic expression.

Their principal sources lie not in China, with which ancient Indonesians are certainly acquainted, but in South Asia, in present-day India and Sri Lanka, whose outlooks appear to have more nearly reflected their own.

This process of adoption and adaptation, which scholars have somewhat misleadingly referred to as a rather singular "Hinduization" or "Indianization," is perhaps better understood as one of localization or "Indonesianization" of multiple South Asian traditions.

It involves much local selection and accommodation (there are no Indian colonizations), and it undoubtedly began many centuries before its first fruits are clearly visible through the archaeological record.

Early Indonesia does not become a mini-India.

Artistic and religious borrowings are never exact replications, and many key Indian concepts, such as those of caste and the subordinate social position of women, are not accepted.

Selected ideas fill particular needs or appeal to particular sensibilities, yet at the same time they are anything but superficial; the remnants of their further elaboration are still very much in evidence today.

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