Share and Strife - The Strait of Melaka and the Portuguese (16th and 17th centuries)


Autoria(s): Pinto, Paulo Jorge de Sousa
Data(s)

04/01/2016

04/01/2016

2015

Resumo

The Strait of Melaka is the longest strait in the world, stretching for about 800 km from the northern tip of Sumatra to Singapore. It exhibits a dual character like no other, being simultaneously a privileged linking passage of two seas and two knots of human civilization – India and China – and a »bottleneck« that constrains the maritime connections between them. Today, the latter aspect is globally dominant. The strait is considered and analysed mostly as an obstacle rather than a linking point: how to reach China from the West or elsewhere is no longer an issue, but securing the vital flows that pass into the strait on a daily basis undoubtedly is. Accidents, natural catastrophes, political local crises or terrorist attacks are permanent dangers that could cut this umbilical cord of world trade and jeopardize a particularly sensitive and vulnerable area; piracy and pollution are the most common local threats and vulnerabilities.

Identificador

Orientierungen - Zeitschrift zur Kultur Asiens, Themenheft 2013, 2015, pp. 64-85.

978-3-922667-18-6

0936-4099

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/16136

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Edition Global

Direitos

openAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #Malaca #Estreito de Malaca #Sueste Asiático #Expansão portuguesa na Ásia
Tipo

article