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📖 Core Concepts Southeast Asia (SEA) – Region south of East Asia, east of India, northwest of Australia; split into Mainland (Indochinese Peninsula) and Maritime (Malay Archipelago). ASEAN – Association of Southeast Asian Nations; 11 member states cooperate on economics, politics, security, culture. Subregional Divisions – Mainland (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Peninsular Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam) vs. Maritime (Brunei, East Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Timor‑Leste). Population – 676 million people (≈ 8.5 % of world), third‑most‑populous Asian region; Indonesia holds 40 % of SEA’s total. Geology – Mostly on Sunda Plate; Philippines, Indonesia, Timor‑Leste sit on the Pacific Ring of Fire → many earthquakes/volcanoes. Religious Landscape – Islam (majority in Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei), Buddhism (Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam), Christianity (Philippines, Timor‑Leste). Linguistic Diversity – ≈ 800 native languages; major families: Austronesian, Austro‑Asiatic, Tai‑Kadai, Sino‑Tibetan. 📌 Must Remember 11 ASEAN members: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Timor‑Leste, Vietnam. Area: 4.5 million km² (8 % of Eurasia, 3 % of Earth’s land). Population: > 675 million; Indonesia ≈ 274 million, Java ≈ 143 million. Highest mountains: Hkakabo Razi (5,967 m, Myanmar) – highest in SEA; Puncak Jaya (5,030 m, Indonesia) – only glacier‑bearing peak. Key historic empires: Srivijaya (7th‑13th c.), Khmer Empire (11th‑13th c.), Majapahit (13th‑15th c.). Colonial timeline: By 19th c., all SEA except Thailand under European rule. Major religions (approx. share of regional pop): Islam 40 %, Buddhism 30 %, Christianity 23 %, Hinduism & others 7 %. Economic leader: Indonesia – largest GDP, G20 member. 🔄 Key Processes Austronesian Expansion Originated in Taiwan → migrated to northern Philippines (7,000–2,200 BC) → spread throughout Maritime SEA, Pacific, Indian Ocean. Indianisation (≈ 400 BC onward) Trade contacts → introduction of Hinduism, Buddhism, Sanskrit, Indian political ideas → formation of early Indian‑influenced kingdoms (e.g., Funan, Pyu). Islamic Diffusion (8th c.–15th c.) Muslim traders settle → elite conversion (Kedah 1136, Samudera Pasai 1267, Malacca 15th c.) → Islam becomes dominant in archipelago. Colonial Takeover (16th–19th c.) Portuguese → Dutch → British → French → Spanish/US → establishment of trade colonies, plantations, missionary activity. Japanese Occupation (1941‑1945) Rapid military conquest → forced labour, atrocities → post‑war nationalist movements → independence. 🔍 Key Comparisons Mainland vs. Maritime SEA Mainland: Mostly continental, larger land‑locked interiors, dominant Buddhist cultures. Maritime: Archipelagic, high volcanic activity, Islam dominates in many islands. Colonial Powers Dutch: Indonesia (Dutch East Indies). British: Malaya, Borneo, Singapore. French: Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia). Spanish/US: Philippines. Religion by Country Islam: Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei. Buddhism: Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Singapore (plurality). Christianity: Philippines, Timor‑Leste. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Southeast Asia = Indonesia” – Indonesia is the largest member but SEA includes ten other sovereign states. All SEA languages are related – The region hosts many unrelated families (Austronesian vs. Sino‑Tibetan, etc.). ASEAN = political union – ASEAN is a cooperative organization, not a supranational government. All islands are tropical – Northern Vietnam has a subtropical climate; highlands can be cool. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition Geography ↔ Culture: Mainland = “Indo‑Chinese” cultural blend; Maritime = “Island‑Islamic‑Austronesian” blend. Trade Routes = Cultural Diffusion: Early Indian, later Arab, then European traders → each wave leaves linguistic, religious, and architectural fingerprints. Plate Tectonics = Hazard Zones: Sunda Plate + Ring of Fire = predictable volcanic & earthquake hotspots (e.g., Indonesia). 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Myanmar, northern Thailand/Laos/Vietnam sit on the Alpide belt, not the Sunda Plate. Timor‑Leste & southern Indonesia lie south of the equator (most of SEA is north). Singapore: Official languages include English, Mandarin, Malay, Tamil – multilingual rarity. Vietnam’s climate: Subtropical north vs. tropical south, unlike most of SEA’s uniform monsoon pattern. 📍 When to Use Which Identify a country’s subregion → check if it’s on the Indochinese Peninsula (Mainland) or part of the Malay Archipelago (Maritime). Determine dominant religion → use the “majority‑by‑country” list; if unsure, default to Islam for Indonesia/Malaysia/Brunei, Buddhism for Thailand/Myanmar/Cambodia/Laos/Vietnam, Christianity for Philippines/Timor‑Leste. Select language family → look at the country’s primary ethnic group (e.g., Austronesian for Indonesia/Philippines, Tai‑Kadai for Thailand/Lao). 👀 Patterns to Recognize Island‑centric trade → presence of Islamic sultanates and spice commodities (e.g., Malacca, Srivijaya). Monumental architecture → Hindu (Angkor Wat) → Buddhist (Bagan) → Islamic (Mosques of Malacca). Colonial legacies → rubber (Malaysia), tin (Malaya), rice terraces (Vietnam/Thailand) → correlate with former colonizer. 🗂️ Exam Traps “Which country is not a member of ASEAN?” – All eleven listed states are members; a trap might list Papua New Guinea (not a member). “Highest peak in SEA?” – Some choose Puncak Jaya; correct answer is Hkakabo Razi (Myanmar). “Main language of Indonesia?” – Correct: Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia), not a regional dialect. “Primary cause of the 1997 haze?” – Not volcanic; it’s slash‑and‑burn agriculture in Sumatra/Borneo. “Which empire lasted longest?” – Srivijaya (≈ 5 centuries) vs. Khmer (≈ 3 centuries) vs. Majapahit (≈ 2 centuries). --- Use this guide to review core facts, visualise regional patterns, and avoid common pitfalls before your exam.
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