- Origins of the Mappilas, arrival and growth
- Overview of the society they landed into
- Stages of Mappila history and conditions that distinguish them
- Reasons behind acceptance of Islam into the society
- Demographics over the ages and reasons for regional variations
- Growth of superstitions into the community
- Relations with other communities over the ages
- Contribution to resistance against foreign invasions
- Cultural contributions to arts and literature
- Contribution to economic growth of the land
- Setbacks over the ages and reasons behind them
- Importance of the community at a national and international level
Ancient Kerala had very strong trade relations with Rome and Alexandria.According to Strabo, by the time of Augustus, up to 120 ships were setting sail every year from Myos Hormos ( A Red Sea port in Egypt) to India:[2] I learned that as many as one hundred and twenty vessels were sailing from Myos Hormos to India.The destinations of these ships can be assumed to be Kerala and Gujarat as described in Periplus [3]:Then come Naura and Tyndis .. and then Muziris and Nelcynda.(Naura is believed to be Kannur, Muziris somewhere near Kodungalloor ,Tyndis - Ponnani/Thondi and Nelcynda-Kollam).
The trade was mostly in spices like pepper and ginger. So valuable were the spices from Kerala, that in AD 408,when the Goth Alaric invaded Italy, the ransom for Rome was negotiated to 3000 pounds of pepper alongside 5000 pounds of gold and a couple of other items.[4] In the Middle Ages, there was a French saying, 'As dear as pepper' and the spice used to be an accepted currency in Medieval Europe. Aramco World has an interesting article about the story of pepper. The importance of this in Mappila history is very significant, because after all, it was for trade monopoly in pepper that the Portuguese came to Calicut and destroyed a beautiful way of life built over the centuries in Kerala.
Part two of this series can be found in Story of Islam in Kerala - Part 2.
References:
- Pg 2 "A Survey of Kerala History" - A Sreedhara Menon,S Vishwanathan Publishers, 2006 Ed
- “The Geography of Strabo published in Vol. I of the Loeb Classical Library edition, 1917”.
- The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, 53-54
- Pg 177, History of the later Roman Empire from the death of Theodosius I to the death of Justinian, Volume 1 - J. B. Bury - Courier Dover Publications, 1958
- Pg 52, 92 - Tuhfat Al Mujahideen (Nainar 2006)- narrates an incident related to the Emperor Akbar's ships being captured by the Portuguese, but does not talk anywhere about a direct appeal or at least hope that he would come to the aid of Malabar. The author only prays that may Akbar drive them out of Gujarat.
- Pg 63, Handbuch der Orientalistik(Handbook of Oriental Studies.), Volume 4, Issue 1 By Annemarie Schimmel, Jan Gonda, BRILL, 1980 (NB:The assumption of Ma'bar to be Malabar by the author looks like a typo or a misunderstanding, since Ma'bar was another kingdom near Madura. The analysis of the distance though stays relevant to our context)