Document Type : Research Paper

Authors

1 PhD student, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Literature and Human Sciences, University of Tehran,Tehran, Iran.

2 Professor, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Literature and Human Sciences, University of Tehran,Tehran, Iran (Corresponding Author).

3 Graduate Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Literature and Human Sciences, University of Tehran,Tehran, Iran.

Abstract

Abstract
Evidence has shown that the history of communication between the people of Iran and China, to the formation of powerful empires of two lands, goes back long before the rise of Islam. Attested by textual sources and archeological documents, the experience of successful communication between the two countries continued even after the fall of the Sassanid dynasty. Historical reports of the 7th to the 16th century AD provide important information about the ups and downs of relations between the two countries. The recovery of their communication processes has shown that a mutual or double-sided history has resulted in a two-sided outcome. According to these reports, the process of communication contains four stages (Fig. 3). However, this has been put aside by several archeological researchers, who directly find evidence of early communication from the discovered documents, which is far from their actual understanding. and archaeology having Cultural findings examined with a question-oriented behavior, we are looking for this concept, so that by relying on pottery findings, can the question of “To what extent do the chronology of pottery findings emphasize the process of dealings and its turbulence?” can be answered? To answer this question, the results and conclusions of investigation and studies of pottery findings in the ancient sites of this region have been used. The findings of the research showed that although the historical reports explicitly in some cases emphasize the complete cancellation of relations or its indirectness, but the chronology of the study of pottery finds in the Persian Gulf region shows a continuous trend in their import. And the result emphasizes the integrity of the information, especially the accuracy in the chronology of pottery findings and their quantitative study.
Keywords: Archeology, Persian Gulf, Maritime Trade, Siraf, Celadon Pottery.
 
1. Introduction
Although Chinese sources have mentioned a political relationship between from 649 to 745 CE (Park, 2012:6-7), the opportunity of restoration of land trade between the Umayyads and the Tang government did not arise. At the same time, because of the Battle of Talas, the history of the two societies entered a new phase and the sea route inevitably replaced the land route. In Fig. 6, the beginning and end of these periods can be seen according to the dynasties that came to power in Iran and China, as well as the period of prosperity of each of the commercial centers in the Persian Gulf region and imported ceramics into these centers. According to Table 3, which shows the classification and chronology of the potteries, six types of porcelains have been identified as imported pottery at the same time (649 to 745 CE), considering that the number of these porcelains is limited and their distribution is not widespread in the entire region, determining their real date is unclear and cannot be mentioned as the official beginning of the pottery trade. 
 
2. Discussion
According to the evidence of the eighth century CE, sea travel in the Indian Ocean became the dominant method of direct and indirect communication between China and the Islamic World (Fig. 1). This alternation occurred simultaneously with the transfer of the capital to Baghdad, which was connected to Basra and the Persian Gulf through the Euphrates River. At this time (745 to 867 CE), the Abbasid government improved its relationship with the Tang government. But with Huang Chao’s rebellion, there was a long-term gap in direct long-distance maritime trade from 878 to 961 CE (Vosoughi,2017) causing trade to shift to Malay ports (Schottenhammer & 蕭婦, 2016: 137). In the Persian Gulf Region, Basra became less important due to a lack of proper management in development, population increase, and numerous unrests. The coins found at Siraf are a reminder of the increase in trade in the ninth century CE. At the same time, the Tang government started trading porcelains as goods (Guy,1990:9). The Belitung shipwreck is a clear example of the volume of Changsha pottery shipments at this period of time (Schottenhammer & 蕭婦, 2016: 151). Although the rebellion in China brought about instability and a decrease in direct relations, considerable volumes of imported ceramics have also been discovered at Siraf from this time period. The classification and chronology of the potteries of this site and the samples collected from the south of Iran show sixteen types of potteries (Table 3).
The third period (961 to about 1253 CE) happened after a recession. From the beginning of the fourth century and following the division of the Islamic World, the Fatimid caliphate in Egypt and Iranian governments in Iran began to rule. The people of Siraf were still playing a role in trade during this period. After a successful experience, this port went into decline and Kish quickly assumed the role of Siraf. Sohar and the port of Aden were under the control and rule of the Fatimids to obtain profits from trade (Vosoughi, 2017). At the same time, due to the Sriwijaya’s rule in the Strait of Malacca, direct communication with Chinese ports was disconnected. This process improved with the establishment of the Song Dynasty, and the kings of this dynasty made many facilities to encourage maritime trade (Medley, 1975:32). At this time, the Chinese government increased production for export and determined the flow of trade (Harrisson, 2003:99), encouraging the pottery trade to create balance in the trading business specially after 1111 CE (Guy, 1990:9). The classification and chronology of pottery types in the site of the Persian Gulf region (Table 3) shows sixteen types of imported pottery, which is a reminder of the encouragement of pottery trade during this era.
The process of dealings underwent major changes in the beginning of the thirteenth century AD with the formation of Mongol power and the occupation of China and Iran by Genghis and his successors. At this time, local governments played a special role in the process. Unlike Kish, Hormuz became a regional power and unlike Siraf, it became an independent base. In China, the Ming government replaced the Yuan Dynasty. Nevertheless, it still brought about the expansion of trade. These trans-regional connections changed with the arrival of the raiding Portuguese in the sixteenth century CE. Archeological studies show strong evidence of the volume of pottery imports in this period. The collection collected from Hormuz provides important information about the pottery trade in the second half of the seventh century later, between China and this region presented (Williamson, 1973: 56, m3, Morgan,1991:67). This date coincides with Zheng He’s trips to Hormuz (Meicun & Zhang, 2015:417), where coins were given as gifts by him. The samples obtained from Bahrain and Al-Qatif are reminders of this subject (Cribb and Potts, 1996:109). However, after his travels, there was a break until the presence of the Portuguese (Zhang, 2018:74). During this period, Chinese participation in the maritime trade of the Indian Ocean declined or did not exist at all (Lo, 1958:337-340). This decline may be due to the sea ban policy of the early Ming Dynasty, which was accompanied by great stagnation after 1407 AD. By the end of this century, China’s manufacturing industries were in severe decline, this is when the porcelain trade changed from celadon to blue and white potteries (Zhang, 2018:74).
 
3. Conclusion
Evidence suggests that historical accounts at times emphasize either a complete reversal or an indirect nature of commercial transactions. These shifts have had a direct impact on ceramic production in China, on patterns of export, the volume and variety of monetary exchanges, and even on the distribution of goods across the Persian Gulf region because of changing trade centers. Archaeological investigations have demonstrated that, although the demand for ceramics in this reciprocal exchange was largely unidirectional, ceramics remain the most reliable material evidence for reconstructing the processes of maritime trade. The data derived from ceramic finds can serve to confirm, challenge, or refine certain historical narratives, depending on their textual character. The chronological sequence of ceramic types rarely shows a clear break in importation, suggesting the need for further integrated and systematic research across the region particularly in light of the information presented in Figure 6.

Keywords

Main Subjects

- آیتی، عبدالمحمد، (1383). تحریر تاریخ وصاف. تهران: پژوهشگاه علوم‌انسانی و مطالعات فرهنگی.
- ابن اثیر، علی ابن محمد، (1385). الکامل فی التاریخ. جلد 5، بیروت، دارصادر.
- ابن‌بطوطه، محمد بن عبدالله، (1376). سفرنامۀ ابن بطوطه. جلد اول و جلد دوم، ترجمۀ محمد علی موحد، چاپ ششم، تهران: سپهر نقش.
- ابن‌فقیه، احمد بن محمد، (1379). البلدان ابن فقیه. ترجمۀ محمد رضا حکیمی، تهران: بنیاد فرهنگ ایران.
- اسمعیلی‌جلودار، محمداسماعیل، (1399). پژوهش‌های باستان‌شناختی خلیج‌فارس بندر باستانی سیراف. چاپ دوم، تهران: پژوهشگاه میراث‌فرهنگی و گردشگری.
- امیدی، کاظم، (1400). «گزارش کاوش فصل اول محوطۀ لشتان در بندر کنگ». پژوهشکدۀ باستان‌شناسی (منتشر نشده).
- قاسم‌بگلو، مرتضی، (1385). سکه‌های سیراف. تهران: مؤسسه مطالعات تاریخ معاصر.
- قزوینی، زکریا بن محمد، (1373). آثار البلاد و اخبار العباد. ترجمۀ میرزا محمد جهانگیر قاجار، تهران: امیرکبیر.
- توفیقیان، حسین، (1401). «پژوهشی در تاریخ تجارت دریایی ایران و چین، نمونه مطالعاتی: بندر تاریخی نجیرم». پژوهش‌های باستان‌شناسی ایران، 11 (31): 218-191. https://doi.org/10.22084/nb.2021.21925.2156
- حورانی، جورج، ف، (1338). دریانوردی عرب در دریای هند در روزگار باستان و در نخستین سده‌های میانه. ترجمۀ محمد مقدم، تهران: ابن‌سینا.
- خیراندیش، عبدالرسول؛ و زارعی، سیده زهرا، (1396). «بررسی روند شکل‌گیری و علل رقابت‌های تجاری در خلیج‌فارس و بازتاب آن در بندر کانتون چین (قرون یکم تا سوم هجری‌قمری/ هفتم تا نهم میلادی)». فصلنامه تاریخ اسلام و ایران دانشگاه الزهرا (س)، 27 (33: 123): 116-89.  https://doi.org/10.22051/hii.2017.11376.1191
- دارک، کن، آر، (1394). مبانی نظری باستان‌شناسی. ترجمۀ کامیار عبدی،‌ تهران: مرکز نشر دانشگاهی.
- سیرافی، سلیمان، (1381). سلسله التواریخ یا اخبار الصین و الهند. ترجمۀ حسین قره چانلو، تهران: اساطیر.
- عبدالرزاق سمرقندی، عبدالرزاق بن اسحاق، (۱۳۷۲). مطلع سعدین و مجمع بحرین. گردآورنده: عبدالحسین نوایی و محمد شفیع، جلد اول دفتر دوم، تهران: پژوهشگاه علوم‌انسانی و مطالعات فرهنگى‏.
- مسعودی، علی بن حسین، (1382). مروج الذهب. مترجم: ابولقاسم پاینده، قم: مؤسسۀ دار الهجرۀ.
- مظاهری، علی‌اکبر، (1374). جادۀ ابریشم. جلد 2، ترجمۀ ملک ناصر نوبان، تهران: شرکت انتشارات علمی فرهنگی.
- مقدسی، ابوعبدالله محمد بن احمد، (1361). احسن التقاسیم فی معرفة الاقالیم. ترجمۀ علی‌نقی منزوی، جلد اول، تهران: کومش.
- موسوی، محمود، (1376). «کاوش باستان‌شناسی در شهر تاریخی حریره، جزیرۀ کیش». گزارش‌های باستان‌شناسی، پژوهشکدۀ باستان‌شناسی، (1): 235-205.
- وثوقی، محمدباقر، (1389). علل و عوامل جابه‌جایی کانون‌های تجاری خلیج‌فارس. تهران: پژوهشکده تاریخ اسلام.
- وثوقی، محمدباقر، (1396). میراث دریانوردان ایرانی در بنادر چین «بنادر گوانجو، چوانجو و خانجو». تهران: پژوهشگاه میراث‌فرهنگی.
- وثوقی، محمدباقر؛ کریمیان، حسن؛ اسمعیلی‌جلودار، محمداسماعیل؛ محمدپور، حسن؛ امیدی، کاظم؛ و رحیمی، طیبه، (1400). در جستجوی کجاران، پژوهشی در اسطوره، تاریخ و باستان‌شناسی قلعه لشتان. تهران: پژوهشگاه میراث‌فرهنگی.
- ویلیامسون، اندرو، (1351). «تجارت در خلیج‌فارس در دورۀ ساسانیان و در قرون اول و دوم هجری‌قمری». باستان‌شناسی و هنر ایران، 9 و 10: 152-142.
- الجاحظ، ابو عثمان عمر بن بحرالکنانی البصری، (1935). التبصر بالتجاره. تحقیق: عبدالوهاب التونسی، مصر، قاهره.
- طبری، محمد بن جریر، (1967). تاریخ الامم و الملوک. تحقیق: محمد ابوالفضل ابراهیم، المجلد السابع، بیروت: دارالتراث.
- هادی، حسن، (1976). تاریخ دریانوردی ایرانیان. تهران: چاپ کتیبه.
- یعقوبی، احمد بن اسحاق، (۱۴۲۲). البلدان الیعقوبی. جلد 1، مصحح: محمدامین ضناوی، بیروت: دارالکتب العلمیه.
- Abd al-Razzaq Samarqandi, Abd al-R.q bin-I. (1993). Matla Sadin va Majma Bahrain. compiled by Abdul Hossein Navaii and Mohammad Shafi, Volume 1 of the second book, Tehran: Research Institute of Cultural Heritage. [In Persian].
- Abu Uthman Amr ibn Baḥr al-Kināni al-Basri, al-J., (1935). Al-Tabasr Bel-Tajarah. researched by: Abd al-Wahhab al-Tunisi, Egypt: Cairo. [In Arabian].
- Adams, R. M., (1965). Land behind Baghdad. Chicago, University of Chicago.
- Aiti, Abdul-M., (2004). Tahrir Tarikh Wasaf. Tehran: Research Institute of Cultural Heritage. [In Persian].
- Al-Tabari, M. ibn-J., (1967). Tarikh Al-Omam va Al-Molok. Mohammad Abolfazl Ebrahim's research, the seventh volume, Beirut, Dar al-Tarath. [In Arabian].
- Averbuch, B. D., (2013). “From Siraf to Sumatra: Seafaring and Spices in the Islamicate Indo-Pacific”. Ninth-Eleventh Centuries C.E. Ph. D Thesis, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Harvard University.
- Bivar, A. D. H., (1970). “Trade between China and the Near East in the Sasanian and Early Islamic period”. In: W. Watson (ed.), Pottery and Metalwork in Tang China, Colloquies on Art and Archaeology in Asia, 1: 1-8.
- Chau Ju-Kua., (1911). Chau Ju-Kua: His Work on the Chinese and Arab Trade in the twelfth and thirteenth Centuries. entitled Chu-fan-chi, Translated from the Chinese and Annotated by Friedrich Hirth and W. W. Rockhill, ST. PETEUSBliRG. St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences.
- Chauduri, K. N., (1985). Trade and Civilisation in the Indian Ocean: An economic history from the rise of Islam to 1750. Cambriclge, University of Cambridge.
- Clark, H. R., (1991). Community, trade, and networks: Southern Fujian Province from the third to the thirteenth century. Cambridge, University of Cambridge.
- Crawford, O. G. S., (1929). “Air Photographs of the Middle East”. Geographical Journal, 73 (6): 497-509.
- Cribb, J. & Potts, D., (1996). “Chese coin finds from Arabia and the Gulf”. Arab. Arch. Epig., 7: 108-118.
- Crick, M., (2010). Chinese Trade Ceramics for South-East Asia from the 1st to the 17th Century. Foundation Baur and 5Continents Editions, Geneva.
- Dark, K. R., (2015). Theoretical Archaeology. Translated by Kamiar Abdi, Tehran: Academic Publishing Center. [In Persian].
- De Cardi, B., Vita-Finzi, C. & Coles, A., (1972). “Archaeological Survey in Northern Oman”. East and West, 25 (1/2): 9-75.
- Esmaeili Jelodar, M. E., (2020). Archaeological Research of the Persian Gulf Ancient Port of Siraf. 2nd ed, Tehran: Research Institute of Cultural Heritage. [In Persian].
- Flecker, M., (2001). “A Ninth-Century AD Arab or Indian Shipwreck in Indonesia: First Evidence for Direct Trade with China”. World Archaeology, 32 (3): 335-354.
- George, A., (2015). “Direct Sea Trade between Early Islamic Iraq and Tang China: from the Exchange of Goods to the Transmission of Ideas”. Journal of the RAS, FirstView Article / July 2015: 1-46.
- Gray, B., (1977). “The export of Chinese porcelain to the Islamic world: Some reflections on its significance for Islamic art before 1400”. Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic Society, 41: 231-262.
- Guy, J., (1990). Oriental Trade Ceramics in South-East Asia, ninth to sixteenth centuries. Oxford: University of Oxford.
- Hadi, H., (1976). History of Iranian Seafaring. Tehran: Katibeh Print. [In Persian].
- Hansman, J., (1985). Julfar, an Arabian Port, Its Settlement and Far Eastern Ceramic Trade from the 14th to the 18th Centuries. Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
- Harrisson, B., (2003). “The Ceramic Trade Across The South China Sea c. AD 1350-1650”. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the RAS, 76 (1): 99-114.
- Hourani, G. F., (1947). “Direct Sailing between the Persian Gulf and China in Pre-Islamic Times”. The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2: 157-160.
- Hourani, G. F., (1960). Arab Seafaring in the Indian Ocean in Ancient and Early Medieval Times. Translated by: Mohammad Moghadam, Tehran: Ibn Sina. [In Persian].
- Hourani, G. F., (1995). Arab seafaring in the Indian Ocean in ancient and early medieval times. Princeton: University of Princeton.
- Ibn Athir, A.-Ibn M., (2006). Al-Kamal fi al-Tarikh. vol. 5, Beirut, Dar Sader. [In Arabian].
- Ibn Battuta, M.-bin A., (1997). Ibn Battuta's travel. first and second volumes, translated by Mohammad Ali Mohd, (6th ed.), Tehran: Sepehr Naqsh. [In Persian].
- Ibn Faqih, A.-bin M., (2000). Al-Buldan Ibn Faqih. translated by Mohammad Reza Karimi, Tehran: Farhang Iran Foundation. [In Persian].
- Kennet, D., (2004). Sasanian and Islamic Pottery from Ras al-Khaimah: Classification Chronology and Analysis of Trade in the Western Indian Ocean. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series.
- Kervran, M., Hiebert, F. & Rougeulle, A., (2005). Qal'at al-Bahrain, A trading and military outpost, 3rd millennium B.C.-17th century A.D. Brepols.
- Khairandish, Abdul-R. & Zarei, S. Z., (2017). “Investigating the process of formation and causes of commercial competition in the Persian Gulf and its reflection in the port of Canton, China (1st to 3rd century AH/7th to 9th AD)”. Quarterly Journal of Islamic and Iranian History of Al-Zahra University (S), 27 (33: 123): 116-89. [In Persian].  https://doi.org/10.22051/hii.2017.11376.1191
- Klein, R., (1994). “Trade in the Safavid Port City Bandar Abbas and the Persian Gulf Area (ca. 1600-1680): A Study of Selected Aspects”. Thesis (Ph.D), University of London.
- Kulke, H., (2016). “Śrīvijaya Revisited: Reflections on State Formation of a Southeast Asian Thalassocracy”. Bulletin de l'Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, 102 (1): 45-95
- Kulke, H., (2016). “Śrīvijaya Revisited: Reflections on State Formation of a Southeast Asian Thalassocracy”. Bulletin de l'Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, 102 (1): 45-95.
- Lamb, A., (1964). “A visit to Siraf”. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the RAS, 37: 1-9.
- Lo, J‐P., (1958). “The Decline of the Early Ming Navy”. Oriens Extremus, 5: 149‐168.
- Lowick N. M., (1982). “Further unpublished Islamic coins of the Persian Gulf”. In: Lowick, Islamic coins and trade in the medieval world Pt., XII: 247-261.
- Maghdisi, Abu-A. M.-bin A., (1982). Ahsan al-Taqasim fi Marafah al-Aqalim. translated by Ali Naqi Manzavi, first volume, Tehran: Kumesh. [In Persian].
- Masoudi, A.-bin H., (2003). Moruj al-Zahahab. translated by Abul Qasem Payandeh, Qom, Dar al-Hijra Foundation. [In Persian].
- Mazaheri, A. A., (1995). Silk Road. Volume 2, translated by Malik Nasser Nuban, Scientific and Cultural Publishing Company. [In Persian].
- Medley, M., (1975). “Islam, Chinese Porcelain and Ardabīl”. Iran, 13: 31-37.
- Medley, M., (1974). Yuan Porcelain and Stoneware. London, Pitman Publishing.
- Meicun, L. & Zhang, R., (2015). “Zheng He’s voyages to Hormuz: the archaeological evidence, Antiquity Publications Ltd”. ANTIQUITY, 89: 417–432.
- Miksic, J., (2023). Chinese Ceramic Production and Trade locked. Oxford: University of Oxford.
- Morgan, P., (1991). “New thoughts on Old Hormuz: Chinese ceramics in the Hormuz region in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries”. Iran, 29: 67–83. 
- Mousavi, M., (1997). “Archaeological exploration in the historical city of Harira, Kish Island. Archaeological Reports”. Archeological Research, 1: 205-235. [In Persian].
- Omidi, K., (2021). “Archaeological report the first season of the Leshtan site in Bandar Kong”. Archaeological Research Institute (unpublished). [In Persian].
- Pellat, Ch., (1960). “Al-Basra”. In: H. A. R. Gibb et al., (eds.) The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. I. E.J. Brill/Luzac & Co.: Leiden/London: 1085-86.
- Peng, X., (1965). A Monetary History of China (Zhongguo Huobi Shi). Edward H. Kaplan (Translator), Western: Western Washington University.
- Peng, X., (1965). Zhongguo Huobi Shi. Shanghai.
- Pézard, M., (1914). Mission à Bender-Bouchir. Documents Archéologiques et Épigraphiques. Ernest Leroux, Paris.
- Priestman, S. M. N. & Kennet, D., (2002). “The Williamson Collection Project: Sasanian and Islamic pottery from southern Iran”. Iran, 40: 265-67.
- Priestman, S. M. N., (2005). “Settlement and Ceramics in Southern Iran: An Analysis of the Sasanian and Islamic Periods in the Williamson Collection”. M.A. Thesis, Department of Archaeology, University of Durham.
- Priestman, S. M. N., (2013). “A Quantitative Archaeological Analysis of Ceramic Exchange in the Persian Gulf and Western Indian Ocean, AD c.400 – 1275”. Ph. D Thesis, Centre for maritime Archaeology, Department of Archaeology School of Humanities, University of Southnmpton.
- Qasem Bagloo, M., (2005). The coins of siraf. Tehran: Institute of Contemporary History Studies. [In Persian].
- Qazvini, Z.-bin M., (1994). Athar Al-Bilad Wa Akhbar Al-Ibad. translated by: Mirza Mohammad Jahangir Qajar, Tehran: Amir Kabir. [In Persian].
- Schottenhammer, A & 蕭婦., (2016). “China's Gate to the Indian Ocean: Iranian and Arab Long-Distance Traders”. Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 76 (1/2): 135-179.
- Schottenhammer, A., (2015). “Yang Liangyao’s Mission of 785 to the Caliph of Baghdād: Evidence of an Early Sino-Arabic Power Alliance?”. Bulletin de l'Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, Vol. 2015: 177-241.
- Sirafi, S., (2002). The Chronicles of Al-Tawarikh or the Chronicles of Al-Sain and Al-Hind. translated by Hossein Qara-Chanlu, Tehran: Asatir. [In Persian].
- Stein, M. A., (1937). Archaeological Reconnaissance in North-Western India and South-Eastern Iran. London, Macmillan.
- Tampoe, M., (1989). Maritime Trade between China and the West. An Archaeological Study of Ceramics from Siraf (Persian Gulf), 8th to 15th Centuries AD. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.
- Tofaqian, H., (2022). “A research on the history of maritime trade between Iran and China, study example: the historic port of Najirom”. Iranian Archaeological Research Quarterly, 11 (31): 191-218. [In Persian]. https://doi.org/10.22084/nb.2021.21925.2156
- Vosoughi, M. B., (2010). The causes and factors of the relocation of commercial centers in the Persian Gulf. Tehran: Research Institute of Islamic History. [In Persian].
- Vosoughi, M. B., (2017). Iranian Sailors Heritage in the Chinese Ports (Ports of Guangzhou, Quangzhou, Khansa). Tehran: Research Institute of Cultural Heritage. [In Persian].
- Vosoughi, M. B., Karimian, H., Esmaili-Jelodar, M. E., Mohammadpour, H., Omidi, K. & Rahimi, T., (2021). In Search of Kojaran, A research on the myth, history and archeology of Leshtan Castle. Tehran: Research Institute of Cultural Heritage. [In Persian].
- Whitehouse, D. & Williamson, A., (1973). “Sasanian Maritime Trade”. Iran, 11: 29-49.
- Whitehouse, D., (1968). “Excavations at Siraf, First interim report”. Journal of Persian studies, VI: 1-22. 
- Whitehouse, D., (1969). “Excavations at Siraf, Second interim report”. Journal of Persian studies, VII: 39-62.
- Whitehouse, D., (1970). “Siraf: A Medieval Port on the Persian Gulf”. World Archaeology, 2 (2): 141-158.
- Whitehouse, D., (1971). “Chinese stoneware from Siraf: the earliest finds”. In: N. Hammond (ed.), South Asian Archaeology, Papers from the first international conference of South Asian archaeologists held in the University of Cambridge, London: 241-255.
- Whitehouse, D., (1976). “Kish”. Iran, 14: 146-147.
- Whitehouse, D., (1983). “Maritime Trade in the Gulf: The 11th and 12th Centuries”. World Archaeology, Islamic Archaeology, 14 (3): 328-334.
- Whitehouse, D., Whitcomb, D. S. & Wilkinson, T. J., (2009). Siraf: history, topography and environment. Oxford.
- Wilkinson, T. J., (1975). “Sohar Ancient Field Project”. Journal of Oman Studies, 1: 159- 166.
- Williamson, A., (1972). “Persian Gulf Commerce in the Sassanian Period and the firest two Centuries of Islam”. Bstan Chenassi va Honar-e Iran, 9-10: 142-152. [In Persian].
- Williamson, A., (1973). “Hormuz: the Trade of the Gulf in the 14th and 15th centuries AD. Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies”. Vol. 3, PROCEEDINGS OF THE SIXTH Seminar for Arabian Studies held at the Institute of Archaeology, London: 27th and 28th September 1972: 52-68.
- Williamson, A., (1988). Regional Distribution of Medieval Persian Pottery in the Light of Recent Investigation. Oxford: Studies in Islamic Art. Yol.4. (posthumous publication).
- Yaqoubi, A.-bin I., (2002). Al-Baldan Al-Yaqoubi. Volume 1, The Corrected by Mohammad Amin Zanawi, Beirut, Dar Al-Katb Al-Alamiya. [In Arabian].
- Yiliang, Y., (2010). Introductory Essay: Outline of the Political Relations between Iran and China”. in: Kauz, Ralph, Aspects of the Maritime Silk Road: From the Persian Gulf to the East China Sea, Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden, 2010, pp: 3-6.
- Zhang, R., (2018). “Chinese Ceramic Trade Withdrawal from the Indian Ocean: Archaeological Evidence from South Iran”. Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies in Archaeology, 6: 73-92.
- 乌苏吉 著 伙伴, (2021). 拉施塔城堡镇: 处从中国 引进蚕养殖业的伊朗遗迹  基于文献、地理考察和考古遗存的推论, 故宮博物院院刊, 年第, 11期:  30-48.
- 桑原隲藏, 1898. 蒲寿庚の事跡, 東陽文庫