from Part III - From the Globalization of the Afro-Eurasian Area to the Dawn of European Expansion (Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Centuries)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2019
To attempt a reconstruction of over 5,000 years of Ancient World history has obviously meant “putting on seven-league boots,” to use Braudel’s metaphor. It was necessary, however, to take into account networks and statebuilding on the scale of oceans and continents and over the longue durée in order to come to grips with the formation and evolution of immense areas that would become unified and hierarchized, due to commercial, religious, and political exchanges. The Indian Ocean was key to this history. Like the Mediterranean Sea as described by F. Braudel (1949), very early on, the Indian Ocean was traversed by ships, loaded with ponderous and/or precious goods.
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