The importance of India in the economy of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman during the Sassanid period

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Titre
The importance of India in the economy of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman during the Sassanid period
Créateur
Chamankar, Mohammadjafar
Résumé
During the Sassanid period, commercial activities with the Indian subcontinent, especially its coastal areas, were developed through the Persian Gulf . By capturing the key areas, the connection between the Persian Gulf with the islands and ports of India was facilitated. The Sassanids built camps in the coastal areas of India and gradually Zoroastrian and Nestorian Christian immigrant merchants settled there. The sailors used to travel between the ports and islands of the Persian Gulf with India, loading and unloading goods. The purpose of this research is to examine the commercial relationship between the northern and southern shores of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman with the Indian subcontinent in the Sassanid period.In the end, it is concluded that a set of positive factors, including the policy of port city in the Persian Gulf, the formation of a powerful commercial and military fleet, the knowledge of sea routes and the land and sea occupation of the shores of the Indian Ocean by the Sassanids, led to the expansion of the mutual prosperity of commercial centers. The Persian Gulf and the Indian subcontinent.
Est une partie de
Journal of Subcontinent Researches
Date
2024
Langue
eng
doi
10.22111/jsr.2024.47390.2400
issn
2008-5710

Chamankar, Mohammadjafar, “The importance of India in the economy of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman during the Sassanid period”, 2024, bibliographie, consulté le 7 septembre 2024, https://ibadica.org/s/bibliographie/item/24769

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