'Tomé Piers' (1465?-1540?) was an
apothecary from
Lisbon who spent 1512 to 1515 in
Malacca immediately after the
Portuguese conquest at a time when Europeans were only first arriving in
South East Asia. He avidly collected and documented information from the
Malay-
Indonesia area, and personally visited
Java,
Sumatra (the two dominant islands of modern-day Indonesia) and
Maluku. His resulting book ''Suma Oriental'' shows him to be a discriminating observer and far superior to other
Portuguese writers of the time.
''Suma Oriental'' is regarded as one of the best resources for the study of the region at this time, including one of the most important resources for the study of
Islam in Indonesia at that time. It also includes the first written account of the '
Spice Islands' of
Banda in
Maluku,
[1] the islands that first drew Europeans to Indonesia. Although it cannot be regarded as completely free of inaccuracies in its detail, it is remarkably consistent other evidence of the time and makes no fundamentally erroneous statements about the area.
See also
★
The spread of Islam in Indonesia (1200 to 1600)
★
History of Indonesia
★
Malacca
References
A History of Modern Indonesia since c.1300, 2nd Edition, , M.C., Ricklefs, MacMillan, , ISBN 0-333-57689-6