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<p>In this volume André Wink analyzes the beginning of the process of momentous and longterm change that came with the Islamization of the regions that the Arabs called alHind – India and large parts of its Indianized hinterland. In the seventh to eleventh centuries the expansion of Islam had a largely commercial impact on alHind. In the peripheral states of the Indian subcontinent fluid resources intensive raiding and trading activity as well as social and political fluidity and openness produced a dynamic impetus that was absent in the densely settled agricultural heartland. Shifts of power occurred in combination with massive transfers of wealth across multiple centers along the periphery of alHind. These multiple centers mediated between the world of mobile wealth on the IslamicSinoTibetan frontier (which extended into Southeast Asia) and the world of sedentary agriculture epitomized by brahmanical temple Hinduism in and around Kanauj in the heartland. The growth and development of a world economy in and around the Indian Ocean – with India at its center and the Middle East and China as its two dynamic poles – was effected by continued economic social and cultural integration into ever wider and more complex patterns under the aegis of Islam. About the Author André Wink Ph.D. Leiden (1984) is Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin Madison. He is the author of Land and Sovereignty in India (1986) as well as numerous articles.</p>