Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history

Archaeological evidence shows that a predecessor of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami devastated nine distinct communities along a 40-km section of the northern coast of Sumatra in about 1394 CE. Our evidence is the spatial and temporal distribution of tens of thousands of medieval ceramic sherds and ov...

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Main Authors: Daly, Patrick, Sieh, Kerry, Seng, Tai Yew, McKinnon, Edmund Edwards, Parnell, Andrew C., Ardiansyah, Feener, R. Michael, Nazli Ismail, Nizamuddin, Majewski, Jedrzej
Other Authors: Earth Observatory of Singapore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137353
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1373532020-09-26T21:25:17Z Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history Daly, Patrick Sieh, Kerry Seng, Tai Yew McKinnon, Edmund Edwards Parnell, Andrew C. Ardiansyah Feener, R. Michael Nazli Ismail Nizamuddin Majewski, Jedrzej Earth Observatory of Singapore Science::Geology Tsunami Sumatra Archaeological evidence shows that a predecessor of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami devastated nine distinct communities along a 40-km section of the northern coast of Sumatra in about 1394 CE. Our evidence is the spatial and temporal distribution of tens of thousands of medieval ceramic sherds and over 5,000 carved gravestones, collected and recorded during a systematic landscape archaeology survey near the modern city of Banda Aceh. Only the trading settlement of Lamri, perched on a headland above the reach of the tsunami, survived into and through the subsequent 15th century. It is of historical and political interest that by the 16th century, however, Lamri was abandoned, while low-lying coastal sites destroyed by the 1394 tsunami were resettled as the population center of the new economically and politically ascendant Aceh Sultanate. Our evidence implies that the 1394 tsunami was large enough to impact severely many of the areas inundated by the 2004 tsunami and to provoke a significant reconfiguration of the region’s political and economic landscape that shaped the history of the region in subsequent centuries. NRF (Natl Research Foundation, S’pore) MOE (Min. of Education, S’pore) Published version 2020-03-18T06:28:09Z 2020-03-18T06:28:09Z 2019 Journal Article Daly, P., Sieh, K., Seng, T. Y., McKinnon, E. E., Parnell, A. C., Ardiansyah, ... Majewski, J. (2019). Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(24), 11679-11686. doi:10.1073/pnas.1902241116 0027-8424 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137353 10.1073/pnas.1902241116 2-s2.0-85067102406 24 116 11679 11686 en Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America © 2019 The Author(s). Published by PNAS. This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology
Tsunami
Sumatra
spellingShingle Science::Geology
Tsunami
Sumatra
Daly, Patrick
Sieh, Kerry
Seng, Tai Yew
McKinnon, Edmund Edwards
Parnell, Andrew C.
Ardiansyah
Feener, R. Michael
Nazli Ismail
Nizamuddin
Majewski, Jedrzej
Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history
description Archaeological evidence shows that a predecessor of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami devastated nine distinct communities along a 40-km section of the northern coast of Sumatra in about 1394 CE. Our evidence is the spatial and temporal distribution of tens of thousands of medieval ceramic sherds and over 5,000 carved gravestones, collected and recorded during a systematic landscape archaeology survey near the modern city of Banda Aceh. Only the trading settlement of Lamri, perched on a headland above the reach of the tsunami, survived into and through the subsequent 15th century. It is of historical and political interest that by the 16th century, however, Lamri was abandoned, while low-lying coastal sites destroyed by the 1394 tsunami were resettled as the population center of the new economically and politically ascendant Aceh Sultanate. Our evidence implies that the 1394 tsunami was large enough to impact severely many of the areas inundated by the 2004 tsunami and to provoke a significant reconfiguration of the region’s political and economic landscape that shaped the history of the region in subsequent centuries.
author2 Earth Observatory of Singapore
author_facet Earth Observatory of Singapore
Daly, Patrick
Sieh, Kerry
Seng, Tai Yew
McKinnon, Edmund Edwards
Parnell, Andrew C.
Ardiansyah
Feener, R. Michael
Nazli Ismail
Nizamuddin
Majewski, Jedrzej
format Article
author Daly, Patrick
Sieh, Kerry
Seng, Tai Yew
McKinnon, Edmund Edwards
Parnell, Andrew C.
Ardiansyah
Feener, R. Michael
Nazli Ismail
Nizamuddin
Majewski, Jedrzej
author_sort Daly, Patrick
title Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history
title_short Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history
title_full Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history
title_fullStr Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history
title_full_unstemmed Archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern Sumatra and redirected history
title_sort archaeological evidence that a late 14th-century tsunami devastated the coast of northern sumatra and redirected history
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137353
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