378 Part V: Southeast Asia
sequence connecting prehistory and historical periods (Hutterer 1982). This is
a critical gap, because just how the early civilizations of Southeast Asia
emerged, and what kinds of societies provided their platform, is of enormous
interest, yet little can yet be said with certainty about this transition.
Early scholars assumed that prehistoric Southeast Asia was a syncretic
place, fashioned out of influences borrowed from or imposed by China and
India, thus accounting for names like “Indochina,” “East Indies,” and “Fur-
ther India.” However, there is growing evidence that in prehistoric times South-
east Asia was far from a recipient of higher cultures to west and north but was
Map 10.1 Mainland and insular Southeast Asia.
JAVAJJAVAAVA
LLUZONUZON
IND
ONESIA
Manila
Hue
Hanoi
Ho Chi Minh
(Saigon)
Phnom
Penh
Ayutthaya
Pagan Vientiane
Bangkok
Sukhothai
Borodudur
South
China
Sea
LEGEND
Sunda Shelf
Sunda Shelf
City
MMINDANAOINDANAO
WAL
LAC
E’S
LINE
BRUNEI
CHINA
THAILAND
(BURMA)
CAMBODIA
LAOS
BORNEO
MALAYSIA
BALI
SUMATRA
PHILIPPINES
MYANMAR
SULAWESI
NATION
ISLAND
SINGAPORE
VIETNAM
Rangoon