Kansikuva näyttelystä The Srivijaya Empire: Southeast Asia's Forgotten Maritime Superpower — Fexingo History

The Srivijaya Empire: Southeast Asia's Forgotten Maritime Superpower — Fexingo History

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Lisää The Srivijaya Empire: Southeast Asia's Forgotten Maritime Superpower — Fexingo History

Long before Malacca or Singapore ruled the straits, the Srivijaya Empire dominated maritime Southeast Asia from the 7th to the 13th centuries. Based in present-day Palembang on Sumatra, this Buddhist thalassocracy controlled the choke points of the Indian Ocean and South China Sea trade routes. Lucas and Luna guide listeners through the rise of Srivijaya under the Sailendra dynasty, its patronage of Mahayana Buddhism that made it a pilgrimage destination for monks like the Chinese traveler Yijing, and the construction of monumental temples such as Borobudur. The show explores Srivijaya's complex relationship with the Tang and Song dynasties, its rivalry with the Javanese Mataram kingdom, and the mysterious Chola raid of 1025 CE that crippled its power. We also delve into daily life in a Malay port city, the influence of Indian political and religious ideas, and the eventual decline as trade shifted and Islam spread. Why does Srivijaya matter? It reveals how Southeast Asia was not a passive recipient of Indian or Chinese influence but an active creator of a unique maritime civilization. Join us as we navigate the currents of a forgotten superpower that shaped the region's linguistic, religious, and economic foundations. #SrivijayaEmpire #SoutheastAsianHistory #MaritimeHistory #BuddhistEmpire #SailendraDynasty #Palembang #Borobudur #Yijing #CholaRaid #TangDynasty #SongDynasty #IndianOceanTrade #Thalassocracy #MalayWorld #AncientEmpires #History #WorldHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

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jakson Srivijaya's Buddhist Monks: The Scholars Who Shaped Southeast Asia kansikuva

Srivijaya's Buddhist Monks: The Scholars Who Shaped Southeast Asia

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the intellectual and spiritual heart of the Srivijaya Empire: its Buddhist monastic universities. While earlier episodes covered trade, inscriptions, and the Orang Laut, here we focus on the monks and scholars who made Srivijaya a global center of Buddhist learning. We discuss the Chinese pilgrim Yijing, who studied in Palembang and Muaro Jambi in the 7th century, and the Indian monk Atisha, who traveled to Srivijaya to study under the guru Dharmakirti. We examine the curriculum at Srivijaya's monasteries—Sanskrit grammar, logic, Abhidharma philosophy—and how these institutions attracted students from China, India, and Tibet. The episode also covers the Nalanda Charter, which records a Srivijayan king's endowment of a monastery at Nalanda, and the later decline of these monastic networks as Theravada Buddhism rose. Specific terms include: Yijing, Atisha, Dharmakirti, Nalanda, Muaro Jambi, Palembang, Suvarnadvipa, and Abhidharma. #Srivijaya #Buddhism #Yijing #Atisha #Dharmakirti #Nalanda #MuaroJambi #Palembang #Suvarnadvipa #Abhidharma #Sanskrit #Mahayana #Vajrayana #BuddhistMonks #SoutheastAsianHistory #MaritimeHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

7. kesä 2026 - 6 min
jakson Srivijaya's Maharaja Dharmasetu and the Kedukan Bukit Inscription kansikuva

Srivijaya's Maharaja Dharmasetu and the Kedukan Bukit Inscription

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the reign of Maharaja Dharmasetu, the 7th-century ruler who transformed Srivijaya from a coastal settlement into a maritime empire. They examine the Kedukan Bukit inscription, the oldest surviving Malay text, which records a siddhayatra — a sacred journey — that seems to describe a military campaign or a ritual voyage. The inscription mentions 20,000 troops and names places like Minanga Tamwan, sparking debate: was this the conquest of the Batang Hari River region, or something else entirely? They also discuss Dharmasetu's patronage of Buddhism, the role of the Orang Laut as naval scouts, and how the inscription reveals the blend of indigenous and Indian concepts that defined early Srivijaya. Finally, they consider the mystery of why such a pivotal figure left so few other records, and what that silence tells us about the nature of power in a mandala-state. #Srivijaya #MaharajaDharmasetu #KedukanBukit #Siddhayatra #OldMalay #MinangaTamwan #OrangLaut #Buddhism #Sumatra #Palembang #Mandala #7thCentury #Inscription #MaritimeEmpire #SoutheastAsia #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

7. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Srivijaya's Orang Laut: The Sea People Who Built an Empire kansikuva

Srivijaya's Orang Laut: The Sea People Who Built an Empire

Long before the Chola invasion or the rise of Majapahit, the Srivijaya Empire dominated Southeast Asian waters—not with a massive army, but with the loyalty of a seafaring people known as the Orang Laut, or 'Sea People.' In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how these nomadic maritime communities formed the backbone of Srivijaya's naval power, intelligence network, and trade monopoly. From their mastery of the Strait of Malacca to their role as the empire's eyes and ears, the Orang Laut were indispensable. Lucas explains their unique social structure, their symbiotic relationship with Srivijayan maharajas, and how their loyalty was ensured through rituals like the Telaga Batu curse inscription. The conversation also touches on the Orang Laut's decline after Srivijaya's fall and their legacy among modern sea nomads like the Bajau. A fascinating look at the unsung heroes of Southeast Asian maritime history. #OrangLaut #Srivijaya #SeaPeople #MaritimeHistory #SoutheastAsia #StraitOfMalacca #TelagaBatu #Palembang #Bajau #TradeMonopoly #NavalPower #Mandala #Maharaja #AncientEmpires #History #FexingoHistory #NomadicPeople #IndonesianHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen - 7 min
jakson Srivijaya's Sailendra Dynasty: Buddhist Kings of Java and Sumatra kansikuva

Srivijaya's Sailendra Dynasty: Buddhist Kings of Java and Sumatra

This episode explores the Sailendra dynasty, the Buddhist kings who ruled both Java and Srivijaya's Sumatra, building monuments like Borobudur. We trace their origins from Javanese inscriptions to their takeover of Srivijaya around 775 CE, blending Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism with maritime trade. Learn about King Dharmasetu's expansion, the construction of Borobudur under King Samaratungga, and the fall of the Sailendra line on Java after the Sanjaya dynasty's rise. We then follow Balaputradewa's flight to Sumatra, where he became Srivijaya's ruler and secured the Nalanda charter from the Pala king Devapala. The episode examines how the Sailendra legacy shaped Southeast Asian Buddhism and Srivijaya's golden age. #Sailendra #Borobudur #Srivijaya #Dharmasetu #Samaratungga #Balaputradewa #NalandaCharter #Kalasan #Sanjaya #Pala #Devapala #Mahayana #Vajrayana #KeduPlain #RakaiPikatan #SoutheastAsia #MaritimeHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen - 7 min
jakson Srivijaya's Tin Trade: The Metal That Powered an Empire kansikuva

Srivijaya's Tin Trade: The Metal That Powered an Empire

Tin was the unsung backbone of the Srivijayan economy, funding its Buddhist monasteries, naval power, and diplomatic gifts to Tang and Song China. This episode traces the tin trade from the mines of the Malay Peninsula—especially the Kinta Valley and the island of Bangka—to the bustling port of Palembang. Lucas explains how Srivijaya controlled the tin supply chain through a network of tributary mining settlements and Orang Laut patrols, and how Chinese records like the Zhufan Zhi and Songshu document the empire's tin exports. Luna asks about the archaeology of tin smelting, the link between tin and the sandalwood flower coin, and the rivalry with the Chola empire over tin routes. The episode also touches on the environmental impact of ancient mining and the persistence of tin as a strategic resource into the modern era. #Srivijaya #TinTrade #MalayPeninsula #Bangka #KintaValley #ZhufanZhi #SongDynasty #Palembang #OrangLaut #SandalwoodFlowerCoin #SouthEastAsiaHistory #MaritimeHistory #MiningHistory #CholaEmpire #StraitOfMalacca #EnvironmentalHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. kesä 2026 - 6 min
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