Department of Archaeology and Natural History, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
Center for Archaeology, Southern Institute for Social Sciences, Ho Chi Minh City 700000, Vietnam.
Sci Adv. 2023 Jul 21;9(29):eadh5517. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adh5517.
The global spice trade has played an essential role in world history. However, because of poor preservation conditions, archaeobotanical remains of spices have been limited in archaeological contexts until now. This study reports evidence for spice processing from the archaeological site of Oc Eo in southern Vietnam, an entrepôt of the state of Funan that was occupied during the early centuries CE. Analysis of plant microremains recovered from the surfaces of Oc Eo grinding stone tools thought to be of South Asian origin has identified culinary spices that include turmeric, ginger, fingerroot, sand ginger, galangal, clove, nutmeg, and cinnamon. These spices are indispensable ingredients used in the making of curry in South Asia today. We suggest that South Asian migrants or visitors introduced this culinary tradition into Southeast Asia during the period of early trade contact via the Indian Ocean, commencing about 2000 years ago.
全球香料贸易在世界历史中发挥了重要作用。然而,由于保存条件较差,考古学背景下的香料植物考古遗存至今仍十分有限。本研究报道了越南南部 Oc Eo 考古遗址的香料加工证据,该遗址是公元 1 世纪占婆王国的贸易中心。对从被认为来自南亚的 Oc Eo 磨石工具表面采集的植物微体遗存的分析,鉴定出了姜黄、生姜、莪术、砂姜、高良姜、丁香、肉豆蔻和肉桂等烹饪香料。这些香料是当今南亚咖喱制作中不可或缺的食材。我们认为,大约 2000 年前,南亚移民或访客通过印度洋开始了早期的贸易往来,将这种烹饪传统引入了东南亚。