Harbors and Hinterlands: Maritime Trade Networks of Madras
MTA
Ports, ships, and merchants that connected Madras to the Indian Ocean world
2nd Edition
*Harbors and Hinterlands: Maritime Trade Networks of Madras* provides a comprehensive historical analysis of how Chennai transformed from a treacherous, open roadstead into a premier modern industrial port. The book traces this evolution from the 17th-century arrival of the East India Company, detailing the unique indigenous technologies—such as the sewn-plank *masula* boats—required to navigate the Coromandel’s violent surf. It examines the "company state" era, where maritime commerce became inextricably linked with imperial fortification, naval warfare, and the sophisticated mediation of *dubashes* and *banians* who bridged European capital with Indian markets.
The narrative extends deep into the "upcountry" hinterland, illustrating how the port’s demand for textiles, grain, and cash crops fundamentally reordered agrarian life and land use. The book highlights the critical role of diverse merchant diasporas, including Chettiars, Armenians, Parsis, and Muslim houses, whose transoceanic credit networks provided the financial sinews for trade. This human history is balanced against technical milestones, such as the transition from sail to steam, the 19th-century engineering feat of constructing artificial granite breakwaters, and the eventual 20th-century shift toward containerization.
Beyond economics, the text explores the social and cultural "worlds of the beach," documenting the lives of Lascar sailors and dockworkers, the emergence of labor unions, and the spiritual geography of the temples, churches, and mosques that anchored maritime communities. It also addresses the impact of global conflicts and natural disasters, portraying the port as a resilient entity that survived world wars and devastating cyclones.
In its concluding chapters, the book reflects on the post-1947 reorientation of the port toward Indian national priorities. It assesses the legacy of colonial infrastructure as it transitioned into a vital gateway for South India’s industrial boom. Ultimately, the work situates Chennai Port not merely as a site of logistics, but as a living archive of human adaptation, documenting the enduring interplay between global maritime flows and the localized transformations of the Indian subcontinent.
This book will appeal to scholars and students of maritime history, Indian Ocean studies, colonial and postcolonial South Asian history, and urban studies, as well as professionals in heritage conservation, port management, and economic development who seek a deep, interdisciplinary understanding of how a challenging coastline became a pivotal hub of global trade and how its social, technological, and environmental dimensions evolved over four centuries.
March 27, 2026
55,909 words
3 hours 55 minutes
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