RESOURCE: MALAY WORLD
16 NOVEMBER 2023
The kingdom of Langkasuka was an ancient Buddhist polity founded in the early 2nd century CE in the Malay Peninsula.β½ΒΉβΎ It was an entrepΓ΄t civilisation that arise from the settlements of ancient Malayic peoples along the coastal regions of Malay Peninsula.β½Β²βΎ The increase in sea traffic between the east and the west from the early Christian era, gave rise to a number of entrepΓ΄t ports in the coastal areas of Malay Peninsula, that ultimately flourished into kingdoms.β½Β³βΎ The ascendancy of Langkasuka as a trading centre was largely attributed to the strategic position of the peninsula that located in the middle of ancient maritime trading route that required circumpeninsular navigation along its coast, allowing almost unlimited possibilities for receiving foreign vessels.β½β΄βΎ The ease of charting a course from the tip of Indo-China and the inexhaustible source of rare goods and gold, described by the ancient Chinese as "the strange and the precious",β½β΅βΎ had contributed to the growth of Langkasuka.β½βΆβΎ
References to Langkasuka consistently appeared in various Chinese records from the early 6th century until the 17th century.β½β·βΎ Unlike other ancient Malay polities, particularly Srivijaya, which only re-appeared in the early 20th century after the reconstruction of its history by George CΕdΓ¨s (before CΕdΓ¨s, nobody in Sumatra ever heard of a kingdom called 'Srivijaya'),β½βΈβΎ there is however a continuous memory of Langkasuka passed down into Malay folklore and literature until modern times.β½βΉβΎ
The kingdom, along with the Old Kedah, both were twin entrepΓ΄t ports almost facing each other on the opposite coasts of the narrow middle section of Malay peninsula that were linked by ancient inland trans peninsular route, and both yielded significant archeological discoveries, are regarded as the earliest kingdoms of the Malay Peninsula.β½ΒΉβ°βΎ Several Chinese accounts provide valuable information on the location of Langkasukaβs capital. Among the most important are the passages in the π»ππ π‘πππ¦ ππ π‘βπ ππππ‘βπππ π·π¦πππ π‘πππ (π·ππ-ππππ) and π΅πππ ππ ππ’π (πΊππ-πΊππ), both written in the 7th century that placed the centre of 'πΏπ’ππ¨-π π-π»π΄π’' in the vicinity of Pattani.β½ΒΉΒΉβΎ Another important piece of evidence is provided by the Mao Kun's map also known as Zheng Heβs Navigation Map, published in the Ming Dynasty military treatise ππ’πππ πβπ in 1628, which firmly places 'πΏπππ-βπ π-πβππ' to the south of Singgora (modern Songkhla), up to the Patani River.β½ΒΉΒ²βΎ
Archaeological discoveries at Jering (modern Yarang) located fifteen kilometre south of Pattani, confirmed the descriptions of the Chinese accounts. This site boasts dense concentrations of artefacts, canals, and the remains of moats and ramparts.β½ΒΉΒ³βΎ The vestiges of canals can be seen connecting the ancient city to the coast, suggesting the capital of Langkasuka as located inland.β½ΒΉβ΄βΎ
Many bronze coins from China and the Arab world have been recovered at the site, proving the site as a thriving centre of international trade.β½ΒΉβ΅βΎ Excavations have revealed a brick structure near the site. One appears to have been a Buddhist sanctuary in the Indian style. Votive tablets with inscriptions indicate an occupation from the late 6th to 8th century.β½ΒΉβΆβΎ The votive tablets also indicate a shift in Buddhist beliefs from Hinayana to Mahayana.β½ΒΉβ·βΎ There is also an abundance of small votive stupas around the site, suggesting local production. Other religious relics include bronze statues of Buddha, a stone Nandi and two lingas.β½ΒΉβΈβΎ
The most detailed description of Langkasuka is found under the orthography 'πΏπ’ππ¨-πΊπ-π₯πͺπ’', first in the π΅πππ ππ πΏππππ (π³ππππ πΊππ), a Chinese history written in the early 6th century, then in the 8th century encyclopaedia known as π»ππππ
πππ, later in the π»ππππππ π―πππππ π±π, a 10th century geographical treatise by Chinese scholar Yue Shi, and finally in the πΎππππππ π»ππππππ compiled by Ma Duanlin in 1317.β½ΒΉβΉβΎ π³πππππππ recorded that Langkasuka was founded over 400 years earlier, which made its founding likely some time in the late 1st or early 2nd century.β½Β²β°βΎ According to π³πππππππ, 'πΏπ’ππ¨-πΊπ-π₯πͺπ’' was 30 days' journey from east to west, and 20 from north to south, 24,000 ππ in distance from Guangzhou.β½Β²ΒΉβΎ It mentions that aloeswood and camphor were abundant in the kingdom, and its capital was walled and protected by towers. The city was entered through double gates, behind which were grand pavilions.β½Β²Β²βΎ There are archaeological remains at Jerang (Yarang) that may represent those described by π³ππππ πΊππ.β½Β²Β³βΎ Both men and women in Langkasuka wore sarongs with their torsos bare and their hair loose, although the king and senior officials covered their shoulders with cloth and wore gold earrings and belts of gold cord. Women of high status wrapped themselves in cloth and wore jeweled girdles.β½Β²β΄βΎ
In the 3rd century CE, there supervened a period of eclipse, which can be correlated with the imperialist activities of Funan under Fan Shih Man.β½Β²β΅βΎ In the second half of the 5th century, after a dynastic schism apparently fostered by Indian influence, the fortunes of Langkasuka were restored and, as political manifestations of independence, during the 6th century four embassies were despatched to the Chinese court.β½Β²βΆβΎ The resurgence in the 6th century was concurrent with the decline of Funan. At this time its territory was reputedly thirty days march from east to west and twenty from north to south. covering the modern greater Patani region, Singgora (modern Songkhla), Mardelong (modern Phatthalung), Kelantan and Terengganu.β½Β²β·βΎ
During the 7th century Langkasuka was a regular port of call on the sea-route to India but, judging by the Tang histories which omit it from their record, its early importance waned during the 9th and 10th centuries. At about this time, too, it came to form a unit in the Srivijayan thalassocracy, and in the 11th century shared in the reverses inflicted on the loose confederation by Rajendra Chola I.β½Β²βΈβΎ
In the 13th century, the kingdom appeared in the account of Marco Polo who emphasized its sovereignty, but Prapanca's claim some half century later that Langkasuka owed allegiance to Javanese Majapahit is most likely the license of a poet eulogizing his patron.β½Β²βΉβΎ
Reference to Langkasuka can still be found in Sulaiman al-Mahri's sailing directions of 1511, but it seems to have been unknown to the Portuguese of the 16th century,β½Β³β°βΎ suggesting that it already succeeded by the Islamic Pattani Sultanate. Pattani appeared in the account of Manuel Godinho de Eredia as a great 'kingdom of the Malayos of the Peninsula.β½Β³ΒΉβΎ
References to Langkasuka consistently appeared in various Chinese records from the early 6th century, up to the 17th century.β½Β³Β²βΎ Unlike other ancient Malay polities like Srivijaya, which only re-appeared in the early 20th century after the reconstruction of its history by George CΕdΓ¨s (before CΕdΓ¨s, nobody in Sumatra ever heard of a kingdom called 'Srivijaya'),β½Β³Β³βΎ there is however a continuous memory of Langkasuka passed down into Malay folklore and literature until modern times. The spirit land of πΏππππ€π ππ’ππ still featured in the mythology of Patani Malays, while the Kedah peasantry interpreted the realm of π΄ππππ-ππ-π π’ππ as the domain of fairy princess.β½Β³β΄βΎ
Langkasuka appeared in the passages of Kedah Annals, in reference to firstly, a palace hall, and secondly, as a city.β½Β³β΅βΎ There is, too, a tiny stream flowing into a reach of the Upper Perak Rive which until the beginning of the 20th century was still known as the Langkasuka.β½Β³βΆβΎ The name "Langkasuka" appeared again in modern history when it was mooted by the founding father of Malaya, Tunku Abdul Rahman in the 1950s as a possible name for an independent Malaya.β½Β³β·βΎ
With the advantage of a long period of uninterrupted royal patronage, Malay music, dancing, drama, metal working, weaving and wood carving, all flourished at a level of excellence in Langkasuka-Patani, which could be compared favourably with the arts of other mainland Southeast Asian states.
Today, traces of their past splendour have been preserved, particularly in Pattani, now in Thailand. The former region of Langkasuka including Kelantan and Terengganu, and to a lesser extent its neighbours, Kedah and Perak, as well as Pahang which formed its southern extremity, are also the living traces of this most ancient Malay culture still to be found in Malaysia.β½Β³βΈβΎ Among Malay cutlural heritage that traces its roots from Langkasuka includes, the performing art of Mak Yong, the martial art of Silat, as well as the weaving art of Songket, all already been inscribed on the representative list of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by Unesco.β½Β³βΉβΎ
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β½ΒΉβΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 162
β½Β²βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), pp. 23-30
β½Β³βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 23
β½β΄βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 61
β½β΅βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 64
β½βΆβΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 188
β½β·βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 411-412
β½βΈβΎ Manguin, Pierre-Yves (1993), p. 23
β½βΉβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 406
β½ΒΉβ°βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 48
β½ΒΉΒΉβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 411
β½ΒΉΒ²βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 388
β½ΒΉΒ³βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), pp. 166-167
β½ΒΉβ΄βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 168
β½ΒΉβ΅βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 191
β½ΒΉβΆβΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 179
β½ΒΉβ·βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 157
β½ΒΉβΈβΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), pp. 183-187
β½ΒΉβΉβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), pp. 389-390
β½Β²β°βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 391
β½Β²ΒΉβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 390
β½Β²Β²βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 391
β½Β²Β³βΎ Jacq-Hergoualc'h M. & Hobson V. (2018), p. 166
β½Β²β΄βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 391
β½Β²β΅βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 408
β½Β²βΆβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 408
β½Β²β·βΎ Braddell, R. (1950), p. 31
β½Β²βΈβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), pp. 408-409
β½Β²βΉβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 409
β½Β³β°βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 409
β½Β³ΒΉβΎ Godinho de Eredia, Manuel, 1563-1623 & Mills. J. V. (1997), p. 37
β½Β³Β²βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 411-412
β½Β³Β³βΎ Manguin, Pierre-Yves (1993), p. 23
β½Β³β΄βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 406
β½Β³β΅βΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), pp. 404-405
β½Β³βΆβΎ Wheatley, P. (1956), p. 406
β½Β³β·βΎ Simandjuntak, B. (1969), p. 86
β½Β³βΈβΎ Rasdi, M.T., Ali, K., Ariffin, S.I., Mursib, G., & Mohamad, R. (2005), p. 19
β½Β³βΉβΎ Unesco (2023)
ππ’ππ₯π’π¨π π«ππ©π‘π²
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- https://doi.org/10.1163/9789047400684
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- Rasdi, M.T., Ali, K., Ariffin, S.I., Mursib, G., & Mohamad, R. (2005). The Architectural Heritage of the Malay World β The Traditional Houses. ISBN:9789835203572
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