Farther India, Further India, or Ultraindia, is an old term, now rarely used, for Southeast Asia, seen in colonial days from Europe as the part of the Far East beyond the Indian subcontinent, but south of China.[1][2]: 190 

Farther India in Mitchell Map

It refers to Indochina (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar (aka Burma), Peninsular Malaysia, Thailand (former Siam), and Vietnam) and the Malay states (Brunei, East Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore), but usually not including East Timor or the Philippines; these neighbouring predominantly Malay states usually belong to the wider East Indies (which includes all of the above as well as the Indian subcontinent).

Other uses

edit

Farther India is also a title of a book written by Sir Hugh Clifford.[3]

See also

edit

Sources and references

edit
  1. ^ Coedès, George (1968). Walter F. Vella (ed.). The Indianized States of Southeast Asia. trans.Susan Brown Cowing. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-0368-1.
  2. ^ Rajan, Balachandra (2004), Rajan, Balachandra; Sauer, Elizabeth (eds.), "A Note on "Further India"", Imperialisms: Historical and Literary Investigations, 1500–1900, New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 177–184, doi:10.1057/9781403980465_11, ISBN 978-1-4039-8046-5, retrieved 2024-01-06
  3. ^ Clifford, Sir Hugh Charles (1904). Further India: Being the Story of Exploration from the Earliest Times in Burma, Malaya, Siam and Indo-China. Lawrence and Bullen.
edit

14°13′12″N 101°51′36″E / 14.22000°N 101.86000°E / 14.22000; 101.86000