Southern South Asia Explained

Bodyclass:geography
Above:Southern South Asia
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Label1:Area
Label2:Population
Label3:Population density
Label4:GDP (PPP)
Label5:GDP (nominal)
Label6:GDP per capita
Label7:HDI
Label8:religions
Religions Year:2011
Label9:Demonym
Data9:Southern South Asian
Label10:Countries
Data10: India (South India)
Maldives
Sri Lanka
Label15:Largest city
Label11:Languages
Data11:Most common first languages
Label12:Time zones
Data12:
;
Label13:Internet TLD
Data13:.in
Label14:Calling code
Data14:Zone 9
Label16:Religions
Data16:Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, Buddhism, Irreligion, Tribal, Jainism
Label17:Ethnic groups
Data17:Aryan, Dravidian

Southern South Asia is a geographical area in South Asia, and is the southern region of the subcontinent. Depending on definition, it includes the countries of India (particularly South India), the Maldives, and Sri Lanka.[1] [2] It is predominantly Dravidian.[3] [4]

Southern South Asia is noted for being the most culturally distinct region of South Asia from Northern South Asia,[5] with greater gender equality.[6] [7] There is significant competition between India and China for influence over the island nations of the region.

History

Southern South Asia was a hub of global trade in ancient times because of its position in the important Indian Ocean corridor.[8] For example, a significant number of Roman products have been discovered in the region.[9] [10]

Governments throughout Southern South Asia adopted Sanskrit for public political expression beginning around 300 CE and ending around 1300, resulting in greater integration into the broader South Asian cultural sphere.[11] This significantly influenced the languages of the region, making all of the major Dravidian languages except for Tamil highly Sanskritised.[12] [13]

Artisanal production of handicraft articles, metal-working (see Wootz steel) and cloth production were historically important features of the economy in Southern South Asia.[14]

Tamil influence in the region is quite significant, with prominent empires such as the Chola dynasty taking Tamil culture to Sri Lanka and beyond South Asia, and Sri Lanka having an ancient Tamil minority and a Dravidian-influenced majority language of Sinhala.[15] [16] [17] Chola innovations include various techniques for water resource management,[18] some of which are used today to restore lakes throughout India.[19] During British rule, Madras (now Chennai) became the center of the region, and a stability was created that benefitted Tamils throughout the region; Tamils were also favoured by the British in Sri Lanka over the Sinhalese people of the island. This laid the foundation for resentment and later ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka which lasted for decades.[20]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Cardoso . Hugo . The synchrony and diachrony of an Asian-Portuguese causal morpheme . Academia.
  2. https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/balances-and-benefits-in-the-southern-south-asia/ Balances and benefits in Southern South Asia: The Maldives and Sri Lanka in 2021
  3. https://www.asianz.org.nz/assets/Uploads/Future-Potential-and-the-Invisible-Diaspora-New-Zealand-and-South-Asia-diaspora.pdf Future potential and the invisible diaspora: New Zealand and South Asia diasporas
  4. Web site: Eurasian Literature through the Eighteenth Century . 5 October 2023 . academic.oup.com. 2017 . 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198732679.001.0001 . Cohen . Walter . 978-0-19-873267-9 .
  5. Web site: Pillalamarri . Akhilesh . The Geopolitics of South Asian Political Stability . 5 October 2023 . thediplomat.com . en-US.
  6. http://www.sabrizain.org/malaya/library/asiavol4.pdf Encyclopedia of Modern Asia
  7. Agarwal . Bina . 2003. Women's Land Rights and the Trap of Neo-Conservatism: A Response to Jackson . Journal of Agrarian Change . en . 3 . 4 . 571–585 . 10.1111/1471-0366.00067 . 2003JAgrC...3..571A . 1471-0358. subscription .
  8. Web site: Patrick Roberts Made National Geographic 'Explorer' . 5 October 2023 . www.shh.mpg.de . en.
  9. Hoppál . Krisztina . Bellina . Bérénice . Dussubieux . Laure . 7 September 2023 . Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean World at the Turn of the First Millennium ce: Networks, Commodities and Cultural Reception . Cambridge Archaeological Journal . en . 1–24 . 10.1017/S0959774323000264 . 0959-7743. free .
  10. News: Dalrymple . William . Garum Masala William Dalrymple . en . 5 October 2023 . 0028-7504.
  11. http://buddhism.lib.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-BJ001/bj001564378.pdf Comparing East Asian and Southeast Asian Buddhism: Looking at Traditional China from the Margins
  12. News: Setting the record straight . The Economist . 5 October 2023 . 0013-0613.
  13. News: Bureau . The Hindu . 7 January 2023 . Sanskrit is the mother of all Indian languages: Bhyrappa . en-IN . The Hindu . 5 October 2023 . 0971-751X.
  14. Book: Mielants, Eric H. . The Origins of Capitalism and the "Rise of the West" . 2007 . Temple University Press . j.ctt14bt31n . 978-1-59213-575-2.
  15. Web site: 31 August 2020 . The Sri Lankan Civil War and Its History, Revisited in 2020 . 5 October 2023 . Harvard International Review . en.
  16. Book: Perera . Sasanka . Against the Nation: Thinking Like South Asians . Pathak . Dev Nath . Kumar . Ravi . 30 December 2021 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-93-89812-33-6 . en.
  17. Web site: Kamalakaran . Ajay . 23 March 2022 . How a unique Tamil dialect survived among a fishing community in Sri Lanka . 5 October 2023 . Scroll.in . en-US.
  18. Angelakis . Andreas N. . 2014 . Evolution of Sanitation and Wastewater Technologies through the Centuries . Water Intelligence Online . 13 . 10.2166/9781780404851 . 1476-1777.
  19. News: 25 September 2023 . 'Lake Man' relies on ancient methods to ease water crisis . The Times of India . 5 October 2023 . 0971-8257.
  20. Book: Williams, Victoria R. . Indigenous Peoples: An Encyclopedia of Culture, History, and Threats to Survival, Volumes 1-4 . 24 February 2020 . Bloomsbury Publishing USA . 979-8-216-10219-9 . en.