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Trade, Institutions and Ethnic Tolerance:
Evidence from South Asia
Saumitra Jha∗
April 4, 2012
Abstract
I provide evidence that the degree to which medieval Hindus and Muslims could providecomplementary, non-replicable services and a mechanism to share the gains from exchange hasresulted in a sustained legacy of ethnic tolerance in South Asian towns. Due to Muslim-specificadvantages in Indian Ocean shipping, inter-ethnic complementarities were strongest in medievaltrading ports, leading to the development of institutional mechanisms that further supportedinter-ethnic exchange.
Using novel town-level data spanning South Asia’s medieval and colonial history, I findthat medieval trading ports, despite being more ethnically mixed, were five times less proneto Hindu-Muslim riots between 1850-1950, two centuries after Europeans disrupted Muslimoverseas trade dominance. I provide evidence that these differences were transmitted via thepersistence of institutions that emerged to support inter-ethnic medieval trade. I characterisethese institutions and the lessons they yield for reducing contemporary ethnic conflict.
JEL codes: N25, O18, Z12, F10Keywords: Trade, Institutions, Culture, Religion, Cities, Ethnic Conflict, Social Norms, Peace
1 Introduction
On February 27th, 2002, a carriage of the Sabarmati Express carrying Hindu activists caught fire at
Godhra railway station in the western Indian state of Gujarat. At least 58 people were burnt alive.
In the weeks that followed, towns throughout Gujarat succumbed to ethnic violence that claimed
at least a thousand lives and forced 98,000 people into refugee camps. The city of Ahmadabad,
particularly in its medieval precincts, experienced 24 days of rioting that took the lives of more
∗Stanford Graduate School of Business. Address: [email protected], 655 Knight Management Center, Stan-ford CA94305. I owe particular thanks to Susan Athey and Avner Greif, as well as Aprajit Mahajan, Kenneth Arrowand David Laitin. I am grateful for the suggestions of Ran Abramitsky, Amrita Ahuja, Roger Bolton, Feysal Devji,Claudia Goldin, Emeric Henry, Asim Khwaja, Michael Kremer, Prakash Kannan, Kimuli Kasara, Anjini Kochar,Timur Kuran, Jenny Kuan, Jessica Leino, Pedro Miranda, Monika Nalepa, Rohini Pande, Matthias Schuendeln, TNSrinivasan, Ashutosh Varshney, Steven Wilkinson, Gavin Wright, Joanne Yoong and seminar participants at Chicago,Clio, Davis, Harvard, Northwestern, Stanford, LiCEP, LSE, MIT, Princeton, NEUDC, NYU, UBC, UWO, the all-UC economic history group and the World Bank. Sangick Jeon and Astasia Myers provided much valued researchassistance.
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than 324 people. Once Mahatma Gandhi’s headquarters for non-violent teaching, Ahmadabad has
since become notorious for the frequency and intensity of its ethnic conflict.
The patterns of violence in Ahmadabad stand in sharp contrast to those that prevailed in Surat,
a historic port city just 140 miles south. Surat too, is divided into an old medieval city and newer
settlements. Surat’s proportion of Muslim residents, at 12.3 percent, mirrored Ahmadabad’s 13.0
percent (Census of India, 2001). Yet, over the course of the 20th century, Surat witnessed virtually
no religious violence. Even in 1969, when most other large Gujarati cities, particularly Ahmadabad,
succumbed to religious rioting, Surat was unaffected (Engineer, 1995, Varshney, 2002).1 It took
the destruction of the Babri Mosque in Ayodhya in December 1992 to end Surat’s unusual record
of religious peace, when six days of rioting left 175 dead. Following the Godhra incident ten years
later, Surat also experienced six days of violence that led to at least nine deaths. Yet, unlike in
Ahmadabad, where riots were concentrated in the old city, Surat’s riots were largely focused in
newer migrant settlements (Varshney, 2002). Despite possessing many attributes that commonly
correlate with religious violence, Surat’s reputation as an “oasis of peace” persists.2
The medieval-era precincts of India’s cities, which are often relatively poor and house Hindus
and Muslims in close and crowded proximity, are often cited in the popular press and by academics
as natural repositories for religious tensions that routinely explode into violence.3 Indeed, the
potent relationship between poverty, ease of insurgency and ethnic violence found in studies at the
cross-country level (eg Fearon and Laitin, 2003, Miguel, Satyanath and Sergenti, 2004) seem to find
ample validation in the crowded precincts of India’s towns. Hindu-Muslim violence has resulted in
more than 40,000 deaths or injuries since 1947, the overwhelming majority in towns and cities.4
However, the aggregate statistics of religious violence in India mask a great diversity in Hindu-
Muslim relations. Even within Gujarat, one of India’s wealthiest states, the contrast between
the relatively peaceful old city of Surat and its newer settlements and the violence throughout
1Between 1885 and 1985 Surat experienced two incidences of Hindu-Muslim violence, with one death in each case.In 1985-1986, when another wave of violence combining religious and inter-caste tension hit Gujarat, Surat’s riotswere between castes rather than religions (Varshney, 2002)[p228].
2This term was used to describe Surat during the Gujarat riots of 2002 by the Times of India editorial page,February 1st, 2007.
3See Engineer (1988) on Delhi, Vadodara and Hyderabad, Das (1990)[p.65] on Delhi. For Aligarh, Brass(2003)[p.162-3] cites Upar Kot–the walled medieval city or “the upper fort” as the location for all 29 mohallas(neighbourhoods) prone to religious violence in 1978.
4Wilkinson and Varshney and Wilkinson (2004) calculate that 93 percent of religious riot deaths occurred in urbanareas (settlements with above 5000 in population that possess a municipality) between 1950 and 1995. As the authorsdiscuss, this figure may be subject to reporting bias, due to the greater likelihood of counting urban deaths.
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Ahmadabad city suggests that old towns in India exhibit patterns of religious conflict that are
not completely explained by factors commonly associated with ethnic violence: the incidence of
poverty, ethnic composition, state or town-level electoral incentives or even rioters’ ability to avoid
the police. Understanding how communities that have all the ingredients for conflict still succeed
in maintaining tolerance may provide insight into how other communities may do the same.
In this paper, I provide evidence that the degree to which Hindus and Muslims could provide
one another with complementary, non-replicable services prior to European colonization has gener-
ated a legacy of reduced ethnic conflict even in towns that might otherwise seem likely locations for
violence.5 I use the fact that due to the coordination of overseas markets through Muslim pilgrim-
ages such as the Hajj, Muslims enjoyed exogenous complementary and non-replicable advantages
in accessing Indian Ocean trade routes in the medieval era. I find that medieval overseas trading
ports, which served as the geographical focuses of Hindu-Muslim complementarities in trade, were
five times less prone to Hindu-Muslim riots and around twenty-five percentage points less likely
than otherwise similar towns to experience a religious riot between 1850 and 1950, two centuries
after Europeans disrupted Muslim advantages in overseas trade. Between 1850 and 1950, medieval
port towns were around ten times less likely to experience their first outbreak of Hindu-Muslim
rioting in any given year. Though the differences in patterns of conflict between medieval ports and
other towns appear to diminish over time, Gujarati medieval trading ports continued to experience
fewer riots and exhibited less widespread religious rioting in the aftermath of the burning of the
Sabarmati Express in 2002.
The paper draws upon a novel town-level dataset that combines data on medieval trade and
political structures with colonial-era indicators of demography and development to provide evidence
that the differences between erstwhile ports and other towns are not the result of factors, such as
a more mixed ethnic composition or poverty, that are often suggested to explain ethnic violence.
Instead, I show that medieval ports are more ethnically mixed and poorer than similar towns,
both factors that are commonly associated with greater violence. In fact a medieval trade legacy
appears to reduce violence the most in larger towns that are more ethnically mixed. Further, the
results do not appear to be driven by the selection of medieval ports by Muslim traders based upon
5Technically, two actions are complements if 1) adopting one does not preclude adopting the other, and 2) wheneverit is possible to implement them separately, the sum of each return cannot be greater than doing them together.
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unobserved pre-existing factors that might have fostered a more tolerant local population. Because
of the severity of Indian Ocean storms, sheltered harbours were historically prized as locations for
medieval ports. Thus access to natural indentations on the historical coastline, or “medieval natural
harbours”, provide an exogenous determinant of medieval trade, one that I find later diminished
in determining the location of modern ports. Yet, those towns that became ports because of their
location at medieval natural harbours exhibit similar reductions in Hindu-Muslim violence to other
medieval port towns.
I then evaluate the potential mechanisms through which a legacy of medieval trade might have a
lasting effect on ethnic violence over two centuries later. I confirm that the differences in violence in
medieval trading ports and other towns arise specifically from overseas trade in the medieval era–
where Muslims enjoyed non-replicable complementarities– rather than medieval land-based trade–
where Hindus could locally replicate Muslim trading networks– or modern trade– where European
intervention eroded Muslims’ overseas advantages. I next show that continued colonial-era trade
in medieval ports does not explain the results. Due to heavy silting of inlets and river mouths
during the monsoon rains, a number of medieval ports have increasingly ceased to be accessible
to shipping over time. Those medieval ports that subsequently became inactive or inaccessible to
overseas shipping show a remarkably consistent legacy of reduced modern religious violence, while
modern overseas ports, a useful placebo comparison, do not.
A puzzle these results raise is why historical patterns of inter-religious complementarity might
have lasting effects on colonial and contemporary religious tolerance even after the decline of Mus-
lim advantages in trade. I draw upon qualitative fieldwork conducted in Gujarat in 2006-7 and
historical case studies to interpret the quantitative evidence as consistent with the development of
‘institutions’, systems of complementary elements that include cultural norms, beliefs and organi-
zations, that are subsequently taken as given by individuals (Greif and Laitin, 2004, Greif, 2005,
Milgrom and Roberts, 1990). These complementary institutional elements appear to have emerged
to reinforce the gains from peaceful exchange between Hindus and Muslims in the medieval era and
to have persisted even after increased European involvement in the Indian Ocean precipitated a de-
cline of Muslim advantages in trade. While the institutional elements that persist differ in different
medieval ports, they share an economic logic. In some communities, additional ethnic specialisation
in complementary roles occurred during the medieval period– these communities appear to have
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maintained inter-ethnic complementarity even after the decline of the original complementarity in
trade. In other communities, organisations and cultural norms emerged that appear to have miti-
gated the incentives for ethnic violence by allowing the gains from inter-ethnic trade to be shared
more equitably between groups and by building inter-ethnic trust.
Such mechanisms explain the main empirical findings. With continued incentives that support
inter-ethnic trust and exchange, mobile minority groups are more likely to stay, even in towns that
are relatively poor. Indeed, medieval ports, despite being poorer, appear to have retained more
ethnically diverse populations, even during extreme shocks, such as the Partition of the subcontinent
along religious lines in 1947, which led to mass migration and ethnic cleansing elsewhere. Further,
with continued ethnic specialisation in complementary activities, ethnic minorities are less likely
to compete with other groups, leading to less violence aimed at reducing competition. In fact,
with ethnic specialisation, larger ethnic minorities are likely to compete more within themselves,
dissipating oligopolistic rents and lowering incentives for violence against minorities to seize wealth.
Thus, unlike in other towns where more mixed populations may lead to more political and economic
inter-ethnic competition and violence, the persistence of community level institutional elements
that foster inter-ethnic complementarity and facilitate inter-ethnic redistribution may have lowered
the incentives for violence even in poorer towns with more ethnically-mixed populations. This is
precisely what we observe in erstwhile medieval ports.
I conduct a series of further auxiliary tests. I find evidence that medieval-era human capital
investments and the institutional legacy of inter-ethnic trade complementarities are themselves
complements in reducing subsequent violence. I also find that workers in medieval ports, while no
longer more involved in transport and shipping, are more likely to show higher proportions engaged
in trade and commerce in 1991, consistent with higher levels of trust. However, the reverse is true
for workers in colonial era ports and towns on medieval internal trade routes, where incentives
to develop reinforcing institutions supporting trust were also lacking. Medieval port voters also
show large and systematic swings against the ruling party, the BJP, in the elections immediately
following the Gujarat riots in 2002. Along with mitigating incentives for ethnic violence, the insti-
tutional legacy of historical inter-ethnic complementarities appears to continue to shape economic
and political decision-making in other fundamental ways as well.
This paper follows in a rich intellectual tradition evaluating the long-term effects of historical in-
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stitutions (eg Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson, 2001, Banerjee and Iyer, 2005, Guiso, Sapienza and
Zingales, 2008, Nunn and Wantchekon, forthcoming). By stressing the central role of inter-ethnic
complementarities in encouraging cooperation and discouraging conflict between ethnic groups,
this paper introduces a new dimension into an important set of studies that have sought to un-
derstand the role of ethnicity and inter-ethnic inequalities as a determinant of civil conflict and
public goods provision(eg Horowitz, 1985, Alesina and La Ferrara, 2005, Fearon and Laitin, 2003,
Miguel et al., 2004, Habyarimana, Humphreys, Posner and Weinstein, 2009, Baldwin and Huber,
2010, Jha and Wilkinson, 2011). The paper suggests that if the structure of economic incentives for
exchange, mobility and violence between ethnic groups are not considered, factors may be omitted
that can dramatically alter the impact of more proximate causes such as ethnic heterogeneity and
inter-ethnic inequalities on modern indices of peace, public goods provision and growth.6
This paper most closely builds upon important studies that have recognised the vital role of in-
stitutions in enhancing cooperation and mitigating ethnic violence, both in theory (Kandori, 1992,
Greif, 2005, Fearon and Laitin, 1996) and in the South Asian context in particular. Based on de-
tailed fieldwork, Brass (2003) finds the existence of what he terms “institutionalised riot systems”:
concerted action by local elites to maintain fissures along religious lines, for local, sometimes elec-
toral, gain. Wilkinson (2004) focuses upon the state-level incentives for fomenting and responding
to religious violence. He finds that when elections are close, riots are used by politicians to reaffirm
religious identities and thus to sway votes. Varshney (2002)’s work provides a very useful counter-
point to the work of Wilkinson and Brass. Varshney focuses on the importance of cross-religious
social capital or “civic engagement” in defusing religious tension. “Peace committees” develop from
existing cultural, political or business groups, that cross religious lines.7
These works provide extremely valuable insights into the proximate causes of ethnic violence
in contemporary South Asia and beyond. This paper furthers these studies by analysing the
6This paper also speaks to an emerging literature that explores the reasons why poor societies become and remainethnically diverse, despite the social costs. As we shall discuss, the role played by exogenous complementarities andreinforcing institutions is common to a number of ethnically diverse societies, one that adds to intriguing worksthat stress the roles of geographical constraints to migration and misguided governmental policies in fostering ethnicdiversity (Michalopoulos, forthcoming, Fearon and Laitin, 2011, Dippel, 2011).
7Varshney’s use of pair-wise case studies is especially illuminating. Each pair consists of one town where religiousriots are rare: Calicut, Lucknow and Surat–and one where they are common: Aligarh, Hyderabad and Ahmadabad. Itis reassuringly consistent with the theory outlined here that two of the three cities that Varshney identifies as enjoyinghigh levels of civic engagement–Calicut and Surat–were once major medieval trading ports and the three cities wherecivic engagement between Hindus and Muslims ultimately failed–Aligarh, Hyderabad and Ahmadabad–were centresof Muslim political patronage, where Muslim clients acted as substitutes for Hindu clients.
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historical structure of incentives that led to the contemporary “institutional” environment.8 This
paper argues that contemporary inter-ethnic civic engagement, close ethnically-delineated elections,
inter-ethnic inequalities and ethnic violence are all in part the legacy of more than a thousand years
of the presence or absence of exogenous complementarities between ethnic groups.
Finally, this paper resolves an important paradox that concerns the effects of trade on tolerance.
At least as early as Montesquieu, philosophers have argued that commerce encourages civility be-
tween individuals, as the loss of trade makes conflict more costly (Hirschman, 1977)[pg.78,95]. Yet,
historical and contemporary examples abound of even the most commercially-oriented minority
groups around the world becoming repeated targets of ethnic violence and expropriation (Benbassa
and Rodrigue, 2000, Landa, 1994, Chua, 2003, Jha, 2007). By outlining the conditions that favour
peaceful exchange between groups over time, this paper shows the limitations of inter-ethnic spe-
cialisation and exchange as a means of reducing ethnic tension, while also pointing to potential
policy interventions that may bolster the effects of trade in encouraging inter-ethnic peace.9
Section 2 describes the structure of medieval incentives for exchange between Hindus and Mus-
lims and provides a taxonomy of the institutions that emerged in medieval ports. Section 3 explains
the empirical strategy. Section 4 describes the construction of the data. Section 5 presents results
from religious conflict across India between 1850 and 1950, as well as for the particular case of the
Gujarat riots of 2002. Section 6 concludes.
2 Incentives for exchange in the medieval Indian Ocean
A simple theoretical model can be used to illuminate why Hindus and Muslim traders enjoyed
an enduring environment of peaceful co-existence in the Indian Ocean region when many other
commercial ethnic minorities have not. It is useful to provide an intuitive sketch of the model and
its relevant predictions (please see Author (n.d.) for details of the formal theory).
The model focuses on settings where there are two types of agents: local and non-local. Non-
locals differ from locals only in that they have better outside options. In the case of medieval India,
8This paper also adds to other work on the proximate causes of Hindu-Muslim violence has stressed income shocksdue to changes in rainfall (Bohlken and Sergenti, forthcoming).
9This problem has some parallels with the literature on trade and conflict between nations (see Polachek andSeiglie (forthcoming) for an overview). A crucial distinction is that unlike most trading nations, individuals livingin the same town tend to have similar or replicable factor endowments and thus a key challenge is to maintaincomplementarity over time. The comparative advantages of each nation are generally assumed.
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“non-local” Muslim traders enjoyed resources, including information and networks, that linked
them to the Middle East and the rest of the Islamic World. These external resources made it less
costly for Muslims to leave a particular town and go elsewhere. In contrast, the resources of “local”
Hindus tended to be also concentrated locally.
In the model, individuals from either group have the following choices every period: to stay or
leave town, to produce a good for exchange, and to attack any other agent that they encounter.
Such violence is destructive, but violence may be useful for seizing the victim’s property and to
deter or punish the victim’s actions.“Strong” individuals may exist who are more likely to prevail
in a violent attack against weaker opponents. The model can be used to find conditions that favour
“peaceful co-existence” over time: an equilibrium with a mixed population of locals and non-locals,
full production, no out-migration and no violence.
In the environment above, an important condition that favours peaceful co-existence is that
non-locals and locals produce complementary goods or services. To see this, consider first the
alternative: that locals and non-locals provide substitute goods and thus are competitors. Then,
with repeated interactions, a strong local will have an incentive to attack weak non-locals, as this
allows that local not only to seize the non-local’s property but also to encourage non-locals to
leave, reducing the future competition the local faces. In fact, non-local competitors provide more
attractive targets of violence than weak locals, as local competitors are harder to encourage to
leave due to their lower outside options. Thus rather than class violence, societies where local and
non-local groups compete are likely to exhibit greater ethnic violence.10
In contrast, when ethnic groups provide complementary goods or services to one another, then
the incentive to attack non-locals falls over long time horizons. If non-locals leave if attacked, locals
will face reduced supply and higher future relative prices for goods that only non-locals can provide.
The more that non-local goods increase the value of local goods, the more valuable the presence of
non-local suppliers and the lower the incentives for ethnic violence.
Thus inter-group complementarity can support peaceful co-existence over time. However, even
with repeated interactions, peaceful co-existence will fail if members of one group are able to cheaply
replicate or violently seize the resources that make members of the other group desirable trading
10An alternative theory for why ethnic violence is more likely to occur than class violence is that mobilizationrequires resources available to the wealthy, who prefer ethnic violence to class violence (Esteban and Ray, 2007). Forevidence on economic competition and ethnic violence in the United States, see Olzak (1992).
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partners. Therefore, to maintain inter-group complementarity over time, it is necessary for the
source of each group’s complementarity to be difficult for others to acquire. Complementarities
emerging from expropriable assets such as wealth, machines or land, or even artisanal skills and
other forms of human capital that may be replicated, can therefore fail to sustain peaceful co-
existence in the long term.
Furthermore, in settings where the non-local group is a small minority, even such “robust”
complementarities may be insufficient to maintain peaceful co-existence. With few competitors,
members of a minority group that provide non-replicable complementary services can enjoy high
relative prices and substantial profits. This has been a common feature in the histories of many
ethnic minority trade networks. Particularly in times of resource shock or crisis, when strong locals
discount the future more highly relative to the present, such high profits may result in a temptation
for agents to engage in violence to seize these profits even at the cost of losing future gains from
trade.11 Thus the maintenance of peaceful co-existence over time will benefit from mechanisms that
redistribute the surplus between groups and thereby reduce incentives to violently expropriate.12
From the seventh century to the seventeenth century, Muslim traders involved in transoceanic
commerce satisfied all three of the conditions outlined above for sustaining peaceful co-existence.
First, there were Islam-specific advantages to trade across the Indian Ocean. Pilgrimages, particu-
larly to Mecca, coordinated the development of the world’s largest textile market during the Hajj
(Lombard, 2000). The Hajj was supplemented by pilgrimages (ziyaret) to other sites, such as Fustat
(Cairo), Kerbala, Basra and in Hadramaut (Yemen), that all fostered regional trade. Muslims had
strong preferential access to these pilgrimage routes, and the markets they induced.
Second, Muslim advantages in oceanic trade stemmed from preferred access to trade networks,
11See e.g. Landa (1994) for a discussion of how high relative prices and the resultant wealth led to an expropriationof the Chinese in Southeast Asia, and Chua (2003) for many other examples around the world. This is also consistentwith the findings of Baldwin and Huber (2010) on the role of between group inequality.
12As discussed in more detail in Author (n.d.), a rational response by minority members is to engage in greatertransfers to the strongest locals, for whom the constraint not to engage in violence binds first– often the local ruler.“Protection” by dictators has been a common feature of the histories of many market-oriented ethnic minorities inboth medieval and contemporary developing country settings (Chua, 2003, Benbassa and Rodrigue, 2000). Howeverin these settings, equilibria can exist where elites demonstrate their “protection” of minority groups and thus extractgreater long-term transfers by intermittently allowing pogroms by weaker locals.
With sufficient organisation within the minority community, a more efficient equilibrium may also exist wherenon-local minorities provide public goods that benefit the local group as a whole, as well as providing lower transfersto the elite. Such a pattern of transfers reduces the incentive by non-elites to engage in pogroms, as well as reducingthe ability of rulers to extract transfers over the long term. Thus they are incentive-compatible for minority members.Such strategies have historically been employed by highly organised minority groups, including the Bohra Muslimtrading community in India and the Ismaili community in East Africa (Penrad, 2000).
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which are difficult to steal or replicate. A key characteristic of trade networks is that they enjoy
increasing returns to scale. The remarkable scale of the Hajj in particular was such that it was
prohibitively costly for even a substantial number of Hindus to replicate. Since trade networks
are also intangible, they were also impossible for Hindus to steal. Oceanic trade differed from
land-based or riverine trade routes in this manner, as most long distance land-based trade can be
divided into relays of shorter distances, each of which can be replicated by a member of the local
group.13 Most sea trade routes, however, cannot be replicated in relays. It is therefore at towns
with direct access to the Indian Ocean that Muslim advantages in Middle Eastern trade became
most relevant and gains from exchange between Hindus and Muslims were most pronounced.14
Third, Muslims had access to a natural, decentralized mechanism of redistribution of the surplus
from trade to the local population: increased intra-Muslim competition due to the relative ease of
entry by any Muslim into Indian Ocean trade. Unlike most kin-based trade networks that have high
barriers to entry (Rauch and Casella, 2002), entry into Islamic trade networks was relatively cheap
for all Muslims. Pilgrimages provided a clear coordination device, so even non-merchant and newly
converted Muslims could enter trade. Family or community ties were not necessary to follow estab-
lished pilgrimage routes, and indeed many pilgrimages were financed through trade (Ibn Battuta,
1355, di Verthema, 1503, Lombard, 2000). Though trading “communities” did emerge, members of
these communities often were in economic competition either within their own communities or with
other Muslim trading communities (Penrad, 2000, Subrahmanyam, 2000).15 Incipient and actual
entry by Muslim competitors could improve the terms of trade for the local population whenever
relative prices for non-local goods became too high.16
13In the Indian context, for example, a Hindu trader in inland Aligarh who sought to sell to markets in the MiddleEast would not be forced to rely on a Muslim in Aligarh, but could hire a Hindu merchant to transport his goods tothe coast.
14Sizeable colonies of Hindu and Jain traders were established in some parts of the Middle East - particularlyneighbouring territories of Persia and Iraq. The French trader, Jean de Thevenot (1633-1667) noted the presence ofbania moneylenders in Isfahan, Basra and Hormuz (Mehta, 1991). However, shipping was dominated by Muslims,and the great textile mart at Mecca remained exclusively Muslim. The fate of Ludovico di di Verthema (1503), whovisited Mecca disguised as a Muslim, illustrates this. Exposed as a Christian in the Holy City, he was sold as a slaveto a merchant travelling to India. The chronicles of his journeys provide useful contemporary detail on the port townsof early 16th century India.
15Though Muslims dominated shipping, other Middle Eastern trading groups, including those of Jews and Ar-menians, were also involved in the Middle Eastern trade and cooperated in the Karimi convoys across the IndianOcean (Goitein, 1966). It is likely that the presence of Muslim competition made Indian ports less profitable butmore tolerant destinations for these groups as well.
16Though this issue has hitherto not attracted much attention in existing work, there appears a systematic rela-tionship between the strength of different Middle Eastern empires (e.g. Fatimids versus Abbasid) and conversion ofvarious sects of Islam on India’s coasts. For example there was a wave of conversion to Shaf’ii Islam (more common
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Trading ports in the Indian Ocean were thus well-favoured to provide geographical loci for
peaceful co-existence and trade between Hindus and Muslims. From the seventh century onwards,
Muslims, both immigrants to India and indigenous converts, dominated the shipping trade in
the Indian Ocean and Muslim trading networks expanded along both coasts (Arasaratnam, 1994,
Dasgupta, 2004) (see Figure 1[b]). Muslim dominance of overseas trade continued for close to a
thousand years. Though the Portuguese discovery of routes to the Indian Ocean in 1498 did not
entirely disrupt the flow of trade, the Portuguese did destroy the commerce of a number of key
trading ports, often via blockade. The end of Islamic trade dominance was further expedited
in the face of increased competition by the Dutch and English, and the disintegration of the
Mughal empire. Mughal ports, such as Masulipatam, Surat and Hughli, gave way to competition
from Madras, Calcutta and Bombay (Dasgupta, 2004). Muslim trading networks continued to be
important in trade with Southeast Asia and Zanzibar, but the expansion of colonial rule to these
regions brought competition from non-Muslim traders operating under colonial protection (Bose,
2006). By the beginning of the eighteenth century, the era of Muslim trade dominance in the Indian
Ocean was over, and many medieval trading ports ceased to be commercially important.
Thus, for close to a thousand years, inter-group complementarities existed between Hindus and
Muslims in medieval trading ports. However, even during this period, peaceful co-existence could
still be threatened by shocks. Examples include resource or political shocks that threatened the
survival of strong locals, such as emerged with the increased instability of regional kingdoms and
the Mughal empire, or the exogenous development of new substitutes to Muslim shipping, such
as occurred with the European discovery of routes to the Indian Ocean. Thus, higher mutual
incentives existed in medieval ports than other towns for residents to invest in and develop com-
plementary mechanisms to maintain the incentives for peaceful co-existence even in the presence of
such shocks. Insofar as these mechanisms, once developed, were costly to reverse by any individual
agent, they can be considered part of the “institutional” environment that shape an agent’s subse-
quent incentives for peaceful co-existence. Such institutional mechanisms appear to have persisted
in shaping Hindu-Muslim interaction at medieval ports long after the decline of Muslim advantages
in the Arabian peninsula) during Islam’s early centuries, while Shia conversion in Indian ports, such as that of theBohra community, coincides with the expansion of the Fatimid caliphate, and the centrality of Fustat (Cairo) andYemen to trade.
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in trade that encouraged their initial development.17
Table 1 summarises evidence gleaned from both fieldwork conducted by the author in 2006-07
and the historical record for the different institutional mechanisms that emerged in medieval ports.
Medieval-era organisations appear to have fulfilled two distinct, but complementary roles. One set
of organisational mechanisms encouraged group specialisation and raised the costs of replicating
the services provided by another ethnic group. Specialisation in skilled activities was encouraged
through a system of apprenticeships that were often exclusively limited to members of the same
ethnic group (Campbell, ed, 1899, Haynes, 1991). Norms and own-group social sanctions also
emerged that raised the costs of replicating another group’s activities. A prominent example of
this was the norm of Kaala-paani (“black water”): that Hindus that sailed offshore would be
outcaste by their own community.18
A second set of mechanisms helped reduce the incentives for violence, whether by coordinating
responses to crises or by sharing the gains from exchange. In Gujarat and Malabar, merchant guilds
and inter-religious organisations helped organise both boycotts and joint petitions to political figures
to seek redress when members of one religious group were threatened by strong individuals (al Mal-
ibari, 1528, di Verthema, 1503). Organisations also emerged to encourage repeated interactions
between members of different religious groups, which encouraged trust and the formation of joint
ventures (Dasgupta, 1994). Muslim traders around India provided commercial taxes and explicitly
endowed local public goods, including water projects and even Hindu temples (Risley, Meyer, Burn
and Cotton, eds, 1909, Bayly, 1989).19 Relative to other areas, conversion to Islam and immigration
17Greif and Laitin (2004) provide a general theory of how equilibria can be self-reinforcing and self-undermining,altering ‘quasi-parameters’ that individuals take as given. I wed their work to a central insight from the theory ofmonotone comparative statics– that the presence or absence of complementarities underlie most robust conclusionson how optimizing behavior changes in response to shocks (Topkis, 1998, Milgrom and Roberts, 1990). An intriguingpuzzle that Greif and Laitin (2004) raise is on the role of foresight– if individuals are rational, they should foresee thattheir cumulative actions may lead to the undermining or reinforcing of the equilibria that they play. The presence ofcomplementary or substitute investments in institutional elements can resolve this puzzle. If individuals are perfectlyrational, the critical sufficient condition under broad range of assumptions for such self-reinforcing equilibria to emergeis that all such investments be mutual complements (Milgrom and Roberts, 1990).
18This cultural norm, though common to many Indian sea ports, was particularly prevalent in Calicut and otherports in Malabar (Bouchon, 2000). However, Kaala-paani proscriptions on Hindu travel overseas were not widelyfollowed in Gujarati ports until Muslim dominance of overseas trade began to decline (Mehta, 1991). Thus it may bethat these institutions were established as a response to growing competition between groups.
19An important example is that of the trading port of Veraval, adjacent to the Hindu pilgrimage centre of Somnath.Temple authorities were willing to provide land on their own grounds to a Muslim trader to build a mosque, not longafter Mahmud of Ghazni sacked the temple in 1026, a event long perceived to have resulted in a massive deteriorationin Hindu-Muslim relations. Hindu temple authorities encouraged Muslim traders as taxes on commerce provided amajor component of their revenues. Such inter-ethnic transfers were a common practice in many medieval ports inGujarat (Thapar, 2004).
12
Tab
le1:
Taxon
om
yof
inst
itu
tion
sin
Ind
ian
med
ieval
port
s
Coa
stM
ajor
med
ieva
l po
rtsM
uslim
trad
ing
grou
psSt
rong
co
mm
unity
or
gani
satio
n
Med
ieva
l co
mpl
emen
tary
se
rvic
es
Med
ieva
l ins
titut
ions
19th
cen
tury
/ co
ntem
pora
ry
com
plem
enta
ry
serv
ices
19th
cen
tury
/ con
tem
pora
ry in
stitu
tions
Con
tem
pora
ry
resi
dent
ial
inte
grat
ion
Add
ition
al
barr
iers
to
repl
icat
ion
Inte
r-re
ligio
us
orga
nisa
tions
Tran
sfer
m
echa
nism
s
Add
ition
al
barr
iers
to
repl
icat
ion
Inte
r-re
ligio
us
orga
nisa
tions
Tran
sfer
m
echa
nism
s
Guj
arat
Bro
ach,
C
amba
y,
Dw
arka
, Po
rban
dar,
Sura
t,
Som
nath
-V
erav
al
Ara
bs, D
audi
B
ohra
s, M
emon
s, N
izar
i Ism
ailis
Yes
7Tr
ans-
ocea
nic
ship
ping
App
rent
ices
hip
rest
rictio
ns5
Mer
chan
t G
uild
s, Po
litic
al
dele
gatio
ns2
Com
mer
cial
ta
xatio
n3 , Joi
nt
vent
ures
2
Aga
te,
Car
nelia
ns1 ,
Silv
er th
read
w
eavi
ng5 , Y
arn
cutti
ng, D
iam
ond
cutti
ng, (
Gul
f / S
E A
sia
netw
orks
)4
App
rent
ices
hip
rest
rictio
ns5 ,
Adm
inis
trativ
e sa
nctio
ns,
Soci
al sa
nctio
ns(K
aala
-paa
ni)1
Peac
e co
mm
ittee
s, B
usin
ess
asso
ciat
ions
4 , N
atio
nal
polit
ical
par
ty
``m
inor
ity
win
gs''7
Polit
ical
do
natio
ns,
Join
t ve
ntur
es6 ,
Loca
l pub
lic
good
s, D
isas
ter
relie
f7
Yes
4,7
Mal
abar
/ C
entra
l W
est
Bha
tkal
, C
alic
ut,
Cra
ngan
ore,
C
ochi
n,
Man
galo
re,
Qui
lon
Ara
bs, B
eary
s,
Koy
as, M
appi
las,
Naw
aiya
ts
Non
e ev
iden
tTr
ans-
ocea
nic
ship
ping
Soci
al sa
nctio
ns
(Kaa
la-p
aani
)8Po
litic
al
dele
gatio
ns8
Com
mer
cial
ta
xatio
n, Jo
int
vent
ures
, Eas
e of
con
vers
ion,
Lo
cal p
ublic
go
ods8
(Gul
f net
wor
ks),
Com
mod
ities
tra
ding
4,9
Soci
al sa
nctio
ns(K
aala
-paa
ni)2
Pe
ace
com
mitt
ees,
Cha
mbe
rs o
f co
mm
erce
, C
lubs
4,9
Loca
l pub
lic
good
s9Y
es4,
9
Cor
oman
del
(Eas
t)K
ilakk
arai
, M
asul
ipat
nam
, N
egap
atna
m,
Pulic
at,
Tutic
orin
, V
izag
apat
nam
Mar
raik
ayar
s, Pe
rsia
ns, L
abba
isY
es10
,11
Tran
s-oc
eani
c sh
ippi
ngN
one
evid
ent
Non
e ev
iden
tC
omm
erci
al
taxa
tion,
Join
t ve
ntur
es10
, V
olun
tary
do
natio
ns to
H
indu
-spe
cific
pu
blic
goo
ds11
pear
l div
ing,
co
asta
l shi
ppin
g,
(Gul
f/ SE
Asi
a ne
twor
ks)10
Non
e ev
iden
tR
egio
nal
polit
ical
pa
rties
10
No10
,11
Sour
ces:
1: M
ehta
(199
1), 2
: Das
gupt
a (2
000)
3: T
hapa
r (20
04),
4: V
arsh
ney
(200
2), 5
: Gaz
ette
er o
f the
Bom
bay
Pres
iden
cy (1
899)
, Hay
nes (
1991
), 6:
Con
cern
ed C
itize
ns T
ribun
al (2
002)
, 7:
per
sona
l int
ervi
ews,
Bla
nk (2
001)
, 8: a
l Mal
ibar
i (15
28),
di V
erth
ema
(150
3), B
ouch
on (2
000)
, 9: O
sella
(200
3), 1
0: M
ore
(199
7), 1
1: S
. Bay
ly (1
989)
13
from the Middle East was encouraged by local populations in Malabar ports (al Malibari, 1528),
reducing costs of entry into trade and further increasing within-Muslim competition. The sharing
of the gains from trade, whether through increased intra-group competition, explicit inter-group
transfers, or joint ventures between groups are likely to have provided Hindus and Muslims in
medieval ports reduced incentives for inter-ethnic violence in times of crisis.
As Table 1 indicates, a number of these mechanisms have persisted and evolved through the 19th
and 20th centuries. A tradition of inter-ethnic participation in organisations continues to flourish
in a number of towns that were once trading ports in the medieval period, including in business
organisations, clubs and even political parties (More, 1997, Varshney, 2002). These organisations
may have also facilitated the maintenance of complementarities between groups. In contemporary
Surat, for example, Muslims and Hindus have continued to explicitly adopt complementary roles in
production, long after the demise of Surat’s trade. Diamond-cutting and silver-thread weaving are
almost exclusively conducted by Muslim workers, while complementary roles in both production
processes are handled by Hindus and Jains (Varshney, 2002).20
Though the institutional mechanisms that emerged in medieval trading ports share an economic
logic, relations between Hindus and Muslims do differ across ports. For example, Muslim traders in
Calicut and Surat showed (and continue to show) evidence of social and residential integration.21
These cities are also notable for the presence of contemporary mechanisms, such as inter-religious
peace committees, for defusing conflict (Varshney, 2002). On the other hand, Muslim traders
in the Coromandel Coast lived in more segregated communities; instead they engaged in explicit
transfers to the majority community by endowing Hindu temples and pursued joint trading ventures
with the local rulers of Ramnad (More, 1997, Eaton, 1993, Bayly, 1989). Thus, the presence of
inter-ethnic complementarities has not necessarily resulted in widespread social and residential
integration between members of different religions. Instead, a common feature of these ports is
the development of institutional mechanisms that helped reduce the effect of shocks on violence,
either explicitly or by sharing the gains from trade between groups. These institutional mechanisms
also appear to have fostered inter-ethnic complementarities in new sectors following the decline of
20For other examples, including on restrictions on Hindu entry into the agate trade in Cambay, see Mehta (1991).21As one respondent from the Bohra (traditional Muslim trading) community in Surat told the author in 2007:
“When we went to our apartment complex in Nanpura [a predominantly non-Muslim neighbourhood], they asked us“are you ‘H-Class’ [Hindu] or ‘M-Class’ [Muslim]? When I said I am ‘M-Class’, they refused to rent to us. But thenI said I was [a] Bohra, and they said ‘in that case, you are welcome.’”
14
Muslim advantages in trade.
In direct contrast to the robust complementarities visible at medieval trading ports were the
incentives present in towns that were the centres of Muslim political authority, where Hindus and
Muslims acted as substitutes for one another and competitors for patronage. Concurrent with
the spread of medieval trade, Muslim political control began to expand into India (Figure 1(b)).
With the conquest came control of patronage and land revenue systems, based upon control of the
surplus from India’s mainly agricultural wealth. These patronage systems were concentrated in
towns, many of which were established by the fiat of the Muslim rulers themselves (Raychoudhari,
1998). Mints were established to monetize this wealth.
In medieval Indian kingdoms, political and religious patronage played a very important role.
Though not necessarily members of the royal household themselves, the majority of the city’s
population was often tied by client relations to people who were.22 Once flourishing cities that lost
their roles as political centres rapidly became ghost towns.
Following the Muslim conquest, it is likely that Muslim clients, both converts and immigrants,
substituted for and competed with Hindu clients for patronage. Though “vertical” inter-ethnic
links existed between Hindu artisans and Muslim patrons, such ties were often in competition
to intra-Muslim patron-client relations. Though the Hindu and Muslim artisans that constituted
the majority of the populations of these cities lived side by side, there was limited incentive for
inter-ethnic exchange between these groups.23 Thus, despite the fact that, like medieval ports,
political centres provided historical incentives for conversion to Islam and enjoyed historical wealth,
patronage centres were the historical focus of inter-ethnic competition rather than inter-ethnic
complementarity. Thus patronage centres were unlikely to develop institutions to support religious
tolerance.
22Thus, when the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb went South to campaign in the late 17th century, it was not unusualthat four of five of Delhi’s 400,000 residents left with him (Blake, 1991).
23The walled city of Delhi, Shahjahanabad, founded in 1638 as the capital of the Mughal empire, still appears toexhibit these features. In my fieldwork there, I found Muslims largely concentrated in separate mohallas near theJama Masjid, the Fatehpuri Masjid and Ballimaran. Distinct styles of clothing, the focus of community commonspace around the mosque and stalls that advertise using Arabic script (Urdu) provide overt indicators of the ethniccomposition of the mohalla. In Ahmadabad, gated pols separated ethnic groups within the medieval core. See alsoNoe (1993) on Delhi and Brass (2003)[p.150-160] on Aligarh.
15
3 Empirical strategy
As described above, the “robust” complementarities between Hindus and Muslims in India’s over-
seas ports were largely created by exogenous features, particularly the Hajj, that were inherent to
Islamic doctrine. Such complementarities made medieval trading ports conducive to inter-ethnic
exchange and favourable for further investment in institutional mechanisms that bolstered such
exchange.
My empirical approach uses towns that became medieval trading ports as an indicator of the
“treatment” of historic incentives for inter-ethnic trade.24 The ideal comparison would measure
the difference in Hindu-Muslim relations between a town that enjoyed such incentives and the same
town that did not. In the absence of such a counterfactual, I construct a series of control functions
that mimic such a counterfactual town under two sets of assumptions.
First, I assume that the selection of locations for medieval trade was uncorrelated with subse-
quent religious interaction. This assumption will be violated if medieval ports had different initial
conditions that might also have had an effect on religious violence, for example, through congenial
geography that provided increased opportunities for subsequent wealth. Thus, I add a rich set of
controls for initial conditions that might have impacted subsequent religious interactions. These in-
clude polynomial controls for longitude and latitude, propensity for natural disasters (which might
lower or enhance cooperation (Wade, 1988)), proximities to navigable rivers (which may raise town
wealth independently) as well as to the Ganges, which due to Hindu sacred geography is an ex-
ogenous driver of the proportion of upper castes. I also subset the data to only consider towns
proximate to the modern coast. Conditional on these factors, I can estimate the average treatment
effect of medieval trade on religious conflict in those towns that enjoyed medieval trade.
The experience of medieval ports can be compared not only to otherwise initially similar towns
that were not medieval ports, but also to other medieval towns which were historically rich but where
the theory suggests robust complementarities should not exist. These include geographically similar
towns on internal trade routes, where Hindus could locally replicate Muslim trade networks, and
towns that were centers of political patronage, where Hindus and Muslims were likely competitors.25
24Insofar as non-medieval port towns-e.g. Banaras- also developed inter-religious institutions over time, the mea-sured medieval port effect will under-estimate the effect of institutions in those ports on religious tolerance.
25A related approach would be to construct a propensity score for medieval trade based upon nearest neighbourmatching, both geographically and on medieval characteristics, and compare medieval ports to towns that had similar
16
Looking at effects over long periods of history raises a separate challenge that deviates from
a canonical experiment: even controlling for initial conditions, towns under study were subject to
different external political influences both during and after the treatment that might also influence
subsequent religious relations. Some component of these influences– e.g. the expansion of Muslim
or European political rule– might partly result from a desire to occupy regions with active trade.
To account for such political channels, I compare the effect of a medieval trading legacy both with
and without a rich set of controls for these political factors, including fixed effects for different
provinces and native states, as well as the timing of a district’s colonial annexation.26 As we shall
see, these controls do not greatly alter the measured treatment effects.
A second potential concern to the above approach is that Muslim traders may have chosen to
trade at geographically similar ports for unobservable reasons, such as having a local population
with a proclivity for peace independently of trade. This historically peaceful population might
continue to be inclined towards peace in modern times. To assess this hypothetical challenge to the
results, I relax the assumption that the selection of medieval ports was uncorrelated with subsequent
religious violence, and instead uses the presence of natural harbours on the historical coastline as
an instrument for medieval port location.
Given the severity of the monsoon winds, medieval ports– more so than their modern counterparts–
needed to be located in naturally-protected inlets. As the extract from the Portuguese cartographer,
Diego Homem’s 1558 portolan reveals (Figure 1a), these harbourages were typically located at small
inlets formed by indentations in the medieval coastline (Dasgupta, 2004). In fact, an overwhelming
share– 81%– of medieval ports in the sample were located at locations that possessed likely medieval
natural harbours (Table 2). Insofar, as seems plausible, that towns with an indentation in their
medieval coastline were not any more likely than otherwise geographically similar towns to have
attracted a more peaceful pre-existing population, this comparison allows us to assess the degree
to which medieval traders’ selection of locations in which to trade may have biased the results. I
provide evidence that suggests the medieval era coastal indentations do seem to have little effect
other than to drive medieval port location, including demonstrating that these indentations are
uncorrelated with the location of colonial era ports. I then exploit this exogenous determinant of
propensities to become such ports. This approach leads to similar results.26The timing of annexation had a number of effects, including different land tenure systems (Banerjee and Iyer,
2005).
17
medieval port location directly, providing instrumental variables estimates that compare modern
religious relations in towns that became medieval ports because of their historical natural har-
bours and geographically similar towns that would have become medieval ports had they had such
harbours.
Another natural process allows a further robustness check: the coast itself has moved over
time. The massive flow of water from the hills during India’s monsoon rains regularly pushes large
amounts of silt to the mouths of rivers and inlets. Over time, silting has meant that towns that were
at harbours in the medieval period have become increasingly inaccessible to shipping (Arasaratnam,
1994).27 By providing natural variation in the viability of trade in towns over time, the silting
process allows us to assess whether it is continued colonial era overseas trade and shipping in
medieval ports or other mechanisms that explain the legacy of medieval trade.
4 Data
The dataset on pre-Independence Hindu-Muslim violence, drawn from newspaper reports and offi-
cial sources, is largely based upon that compiled by Wilkinson (2005b). In this dataset, a religious
riot was defined as a violent confrontation by two communally-identified groups. Data on historical
trade in India’s ports came from a number of sources. The Periplus Maris Erythraei (Casson, ed,
1989) provided the locations of a number of pre-Muslim and early Muslim ports. The records of con-
temporary Muslim, Christian and Chinese observers, including Chau Jukua (1225), Ibn Ibn Battuta
(1355), Ludovico di Verthema (1503), Duarte Barbosa (1519) and Zayn al-Din al Malibari (1528)
provide supplementary evidence. These contemporary accounts were augmented by secondary
sources (Yule, ed, 1866, Subrahmanyam, 1990, Chaudhuri, 1995, Chakravarti, 2000). Finally, every
town listed in the Imperial gazetteers of India from 1907 was examined for evidence of contemporary
and medieval trade.
I identified a town as a medieval trading port if it exhibited substantive evidence of direct
overseas trade, prior to the 18th century and independent of European involvement. This definition
eliminates most river ports and those ports either founded by Europeans (including the Presidency
27Even contemporary dredging techniques (which of course were unavailable during the period of Muslim tradingdominance) are unable to contend with the volumes of silt generated. Even the modern port of Calcutta is no longeraccessible to most shipping, which has been diverted to the downriver town of Haldia.
18
towns of Bombay, Calcutta and Madras) or those that became overseas trading ports as a result
of European establishments (e.g. Hughli, Tranquebar). I found a total of 68 confirmed medieval
trading ports in undivided India, of which 59 were distinct towns in 1901.
These medieval ports were linked to their geographical location using ArcGIS. To categorize me-
dieval era “natural harbours,” I used the US Geological Survey Digital Atlas of South Asia 2001 to
identify water bodies that were within 10km of the modern Indian coastline, including non-perennial
ponds and streams and those without an outlet to the sea. If these water bodies intersected the
coast in the medieval period, they would have produced minor inlets, or sheltered harbours. I
define towns within 10km of those water bodies as having had access to a “medieval natural har-
bour.” This approach identifies major irregularities and inlets that are likely to have existed in the
medieval period.28
I constructed a GIS of trade routes, mints, crafts and towns in medieval India using the Mughal
census commissioned by Emperor Akbar, the Ain-i-Akbari and supplemental medieval sources
documented in Habib (1982) (see Figure 1b). I matched these towns to districts in colonial India
by manually tracing and then georeferencing pre-Independence district maps. This GIS was used
to link towns across district and state changes throughout history and across periods of British and
Muslim rule. I was able to match all towns to their British district and Native state.
In addition, I collected data from the Imperial gazetteers on a number of different natural dis-
asters from 1850 to 1900, including droughts, earthquakes, locust infestations, floods and cyclones.
The cross-district patterns in propensity to face these natural risks are likely to have persisted up
until India’s dramatic population gains beginning in the twentieth century. The Imperial gazetteers
provided information on the revenue, religious composition and political histories of each district
and many of India’s towns. The decennial censuses and Imperial gazetteers yielded data, mainly
at the district level, but also for larger towns, on religious demography, municipal income as well
as political histories. Municipal income per capita provides a town-specific measure of the average
wealth of the town–this measure was based mainly upon a tax on internal commerce (octroi) and
a poll tax with minimum wealth requirements.
28A placebo test of proximity to water bodies that are not near the coast reveals no effect on violence.
19
Table 2: Summary Statistics
Riots, 1850-1950 Obs Mean SD Obs Mean SD Obs Mean SD# of Hindu-Muslim Riots 476 1.116 3.416 53 0.925 5.487 59 0.136 0.472Any H-M Riot 476 0.418 0.494 53 0.170 0.379 59 0.102 0.305# Killed in H-M Riots 476 23.277 242.361 53 88.906 639.995 59 0.136 0.571Total Days of H-M Riots 476 1.630 11.301 53 3.000 20.598 59 0.051 0.289
Initial ConditionsMedieval Natural Harbour 476 0.132 0.339 53 1.000 0.000 59 0.814 0.393<10km from Modern Coast 476 0.111 0.315 53 0.528 0.504 59 0.898 0.305Log. Dist. Modern Coast 476 11.998 2.031 53 8.946 1.739 59 7.358 1.709Log. Dist. Navigable River 476 12.755 1.641 53 12.684 2.358 59 13.364 1.704Natural Disasters, 1850-1900 476 1.536 2.512 53 0.906 2.133 58 1.603 3.201Log. Dist. R. Ganges 476 11.846 1.960 53 12.823 2.091 59 13.292 1.537
Medieval Era CharacteristicsMedieval Town 476 0.592 0.492 53 0.566 0.500 59 1.000 0.000Mughal Mint 476 0.084 0.278 53 0.000 0.000 59 0.051 0.222Other Muslim Patronage Ctr 476 0.132 0.339 53 0.057 0.233 59 0.220 0.418Mughal Internal Trade Route 476 0.153 0.361 53 0.038 0.192 59 0.051 0.222Mughal Skilled Crafts in Town 476 0.048 0.215 53 0.075 0.267 59 0.169 0.378Major Shi'a Dynasty 476 0.200 0.400 53 0.208 0.409 59 0.186 0.393Centuries Muslim Rule 476 4.073 2.286 53 2.727 2.691 59 2.097 2.126
Colonial Era Outcomes and Covariates% Muslims 1901 244 29.879 17.732 20 18.596 14.884 22 32.449 22.101Mun. Income per Capita 316 1.805 3.092 28 2.155 2.6382 28 1.580 1.103Colonial Overseas Port (1907) 476 0.038 0.191 53 0.170 0.379 59 0.356 0.483Log. Population 1901 476 9.672 1.129 53 9.420 1.209 59 9.170 1.315
Natural Harbours, Not Medieval Ports
Towns, Not Medieval Ports
Medieval Ports
20
5 Results
Table 2 presents summary statistics comparing medieval ports to other towns that existed in 1901,
and to the subset of towns at natural harbours that did not become medieval ports. Medieval
ports exhibit strikingly lower incidences of religious violence compared to both these classes of
other towns, as well as to towns geographically close by (Figure 2). Medieval ports experienced
around five times fewer riots on average. The proportion of medieval ports experiencing at least one
outbreak of religious violence between 1850 and 1950 was around 10%; close to 40% of other towns
faced a riot. The intensity of the riots also appears to be lower: on average, five medieval ports
together experienced a single death due to religious violence, but in other towns, religious violence
claimed an average of nearly 23 lives per town. Natural harbours that did not become medieval
ports also have a greater incidence of religious riots and more intense violence than medieval ports.
However, as indicated by municipal income, medieval ports were on average poorer than both
harbour towns and other towns. Medieval ports also have a more mixed religious population (see
also Figure 2). These indicators are commonly associated with higher rather than lower incidences
of ethnic violence.
Table 2 also shows how medieval port towns compare along a range of geographical and medieval
characteristics. An overwhelming share, 81% of medieval ports, were located at natural harbours.
Medieval port towns are also more likely to be near the modern coast. Yet, apart from these
distinctions, medieval port towns actually appear similar in their geographical and medieval-era
characteristics to other towns.
The similarities between medieval ports and other towns are confirmed in Table 3, which shows
the determinants of medieval port location. Along a range of initial geographical conditions (Col
1) medieval-era measures of trade and human capital (Col 2), restricting the data to towns within
200 and 100 km of the modern coast, and adding colonial era fixed effects for native state, province
and timing of annexation (Col 5-7), there are only two key robust determinants of medieval port
location: coastal towns and medieval era natural harbours. This does not change if we do not control
for natural harbours (Cols 8-9). In contrast, colonial-era port location seems to be unrelated to the
presence of medieval era natural harbours (Col 10-11). The F-tests of the strength of the natural
harbour relation with medieval ports are sufficiently strong to avoid weak instrument pathologies
21
Tab
le3:
Regre
ssio
n:
Dete
rmin
ants
of
Med
ieval
an
dC
olo
nia
lO
vers
eas
Port
Locati
on
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
Out
com
eTo
wn
at M
edie
val N
atur
al H
arbo
ur0.
187*
**0.
176*
**0.
180*
**0.
210*
*0.
263*
**0.
299*
**0.
368*
**-0
.040
-0.0
33[0
.054
][0
.051
][0
.060
][0
.072
][0
.064
][0
.059
][0
.086
][0
.091
][0
.116
]To
wn
<10k
m fr
om M
oder
n C
oast
0.45
7***
0.43
4***
0.42
7***
0.39
9***
0.45
3***
0.41
4***
0.35
6**
0.52
4***
0.50
1***
0.56
4***
0.59
3***
[0.0
83]
[0.0
93]
[0.0
87]
[0.0
94]
[0.1
14]
[0.1
11]
[0.1
26]
[0.0
91]
[0.1
06]
[0.1
34]
[0.1
53]
Log.
Dis
tanc
e to
Mod
ern
Coa
st-0
.014
-0.0
16-0
.010
-0.0
08-0
.012
-0.0
08-0
.004
-0.0
24-0
.030
-0.0
05-0
.002
[0.0
15]
[0.0
14]
[0.0
38]
[0.0
45]
[0.0
29]
[0.0
33]
[0.0
38]
[0.0
15]
[0.0
28]
[0.0
21]
[0.0
31]
Log.
Dis
tanc
e to
Nav
igab
le R
iver
0.01
30.
008
0.01
40.
173*
**-0
.004
-0.0
600.
253*
**0.
004
-0.0
18-0
.002
0.01
6[0
.008
][0
.008
][0
.046
][0
.052
][0
.023
][0
.089
][0
.072
][0
.007
][0
.021
][0
.009
][0
.013
]N
atur
al D
isas
ters
, 185
0-19
000.
014
0.01
20.
034
0.03
70.
011
0.02
60.
028
0.01
40.
014
-0.0
02-0
.002
[0.0
12]
[0.0
12]
[0.0
26]
[0.0
30]
[0.0
17]
[0.0
41]
[0.0
45]
[0.0
12]
[0.0
18]
[0.0
02]
[0.0
05]
Log.
Dis
tanc
e to
Gan
ges
-0.0
01-0
.001
-0.0
37-0
.196
***
-0.0
010.
083
-0.2
48**
*-0
.006
-0.0
05-0
.005
-0.0
10[0
.006
][0
.008
][0
.031
][0
.038
][0
.005
][0
.079
][0
.080
][0
.007
][0
.009
][0
.007
][0
.007
]M
edie
val T
own
0.05
10.
118
0.19
7*0.
024
0.11
10.
203*
0.03
40.
020
[0.0
33]
[0.0
70]
[0.0
92]
[0.0
31]
[0.0
97]
[0.1
11]
[0.0
29]
[0.0
23]
Mug
hal M
int i
n To
wn
-0.0
39-0
.046
-0.0
29-0
.026
-0.0
040.
069
-0.0
62-0
.046
[0.0
33]
[0.0
73]
[0.0
97]
[0.0
35]
[0.0
89]
[0.1
14]
[0.0
48]
[0.0
30]
Oth
er M
edie
val P
atro
nage
Cen
ter
0.02
60.
053
0.02
90.
028
-0.0
06-0
.055
0.03
90.
067*
*[0
.035
][0
.074
][0
.069
][0
.053
][0
.114
][0
.117
][0
.052
][0
.030
]M
edie
val I
nlan
d Tr
ade
Rou
te-0
.010
-0.0
75-0
.138
-0.0
01-0
.046
-0.1
37-0
.028
0.00
4[0
.036
][0
.093
][0
.115
][0
.042
][0
.119
][0
.149
][0
.037
][0
.025
]M
edie
val S
kille
d C
rafts
in T
own
0.04
50.
058
0.04
60.
020
-0.0
37-0
.091
0.07
2*-0
.104
*[0
.035
][0
.105
][0
.128
][0
.039
][0
.059
][0
.078
][0
.040
][0
.054
]M
ajor
Shi
'a st
ate
befo
re 1
857
0.00
70.
018
0.00
3-0
.026
0.11
60.
111
-0.0
100.
044
[0.0
38]
[0.0
94]
[0.1
06]
[0.0
59]
[0.0
96]
[0.0
91]
[0.0
94]
[0.0
89]
Cen
turie
s Mus
lim R
ule
-0.0
14-0
.050
-0.0
71**
*-0
.028
-0.0
26-0
.101
-0.0
250.
019
[0.0
15]
[0.0
31]
[0.0
21]
[0.0
39]
[0.1
07]
[0.0
75]
[0.0
38]
[0.0
23]
F-te
st (N
atur
al H
arbo
ur)
12.1
712
.03
8.97
8.61
17.1
25.4
918
.32
0.19
0.08
Prob
>F0.
000.
000.
010.
010.
000.
000.
000.
670.
78Sa
mpl
eFu
llFu
llC
oast
al,
<200
kmC
oast
al,
<100
kmFu
llC
oast
al,
<200
kmC
oast
al,
<100
kmFu
llFu
llFu
llFu
ll
Prov
ince
/ N
S x
Ann
exat
ion
FEN
oN
oN
oN
oY
esY
esY
esN
oY
esN
oY
esO
bser
vatio
ns24
824
811
089
248
110
8924
824
824
824
8R
-squ
ared
0.62
0.63
0.63
0.64
0.68
0.69
0.71
0.59
0.64
0.55
0.63
__O
vers
eas P
orts
190
7_
M
edie
val O
vers
eas P
orts
(7th
- 17t
h C
entu
ry)
Not
es:
All
regr
essi
ons
incl
ud
equ
adra
tic
pol
yn
om
ials
inL
on
git
ud
ean
dL
ati
tud
e.R
ob
ust
stan
dard
erro
rs(c
lust
ered
at
Nati
veSta
tex
An
nex
ati
on
leve
l):
*si
gnifi
cant
at10
%;
**5%
;**
*1%
22
in most specifications.
The average effect of medieval trade on the number of Hindu-Muslim riots faced by medieval
ports between 1850 and 1950, is assessed in Columns 1-5 of Table 4, which present incidence ratios
from negative binomial regressions appropriate for count data.29 Towns with medieval trade legacies
experienced around five times fewer religious riots than similar towns between 1850-1950. This
result is robust and remarkably consistent even after controlling for initial conditions that might
shape port selection (Col 1), and medieval factors influencing trade and Hindu-Muslim relations
(Col 2). The effect actually strengthens when we add colonial era provincial and annexation fixed
effects (Col 3), and select finer coastal samples (Cols 4-5). OLS also provides consistent results
(Cols 6-7).
It may be that outlying towns that were highly riot-prone are driving these results. Columns
8-11 addresses this by instead examining the probability that a town experienced any religious riots
between 1850-1950. The effect is again remarkably consistent effect across specifications– medieval
ports are around 25 percentage points less likely to experience a religious riot.
I can evaluate a number of alternative explanations. Otherwise similar coastal towns do not
appear more ‘cosmopolitan’, and the propensity for natural disasters also does not appear affect
ethnic tolerance by fostering risk-mitigation institutions (Wade, 1988). It may be that medieval
ports that are still towns in 1901 are drawn from successful “survivors” that experienced less
religious violence. However controlling for whether a town was mentioned in the Ain-i-Akbari
or other medieval sources does not affect the results, and towns with (often crowded and poor)
medieval precincts that were not medieval ports actually appear somewhat more prone to violence.
Other useful medieval comparison groups include towns where the Mughals established Mints
to monetize wealth– as the theoretical framework suggests, these towns despite being historically
wealthy, arguably provided incentives for inter-ethnic competition between Hindus and Muslims
rather than complementarity. Indeed, Mint towns were 1.5 to two times more riot-prone. Likewise,
towns on inland trade routes, where Hindus could locally replicate Muslim networks via relays, also
show an increased probabilities of subsequent ethnic violence. Thus, rather than historical trade
29This table uses the sub-sample of 248 towns for which complete data exist. Using the full sample for each setof covariates yields similar results, but suffers from the problem of under-reporting of rioting in non-descript towns,including many medieval ports. Towns that are well-documented by official sources also tend to be those where thereligious rioting is well-documented.
23
Tab
le4:
Regre
ssio
n:
Hin
du
-Mu
slim
Rio
ts,
1850-1
950
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
Neg
. Bin
. (I
. Rat
ios)
Neg
. Bin
. (I
. Rat
ios)
Neg
. Bin
. (I
. Rat
ios)
Neg
. Bin
. (I
. Rat
ios)
Neg
. Bin
. (I
. Rat
ios)
OLS
OLS
Prob
it,
dF/d
XPr
obit,
dF
/dX
Prob
it,
dF/d
XO
LS
Med
ieva
lOve
rsea
sPor
t0
209*
**0
291*
**0
074*
**0
019*
**0
013*
*-1
330*
-117
6*-0
237*
**-0
223*
**-0
194*
**-0
266*
**
A
ny H
-M R
iot,
1850
-195
0?
# o
f Hin
du-M
uslim
Rio
ts in
Tow
n, 1
850-
1950
Med
ieva
l Ove
rsea
s Por
t0.
209*
**0.
291*
**0.
074*
**0.
019*
**0.
013*
*-1
.330
*-1
.176
*-0
.237
***
-0.2
23**
*-0
.194
***
-0.2
66**
*[0
.101
][0
.125
][0
.050
][0
.023
][0
.028
][0
.679
][0
.555
][0
.071
][0
.060
][0
.046
][0
.071
]To
wn
>10k
m fr
om M
oder
n C
oast
6.76
8*3.
670
3.57
13.
705
5.22
80.
589
0.29
50.
467*
**0.
456*
*0.
116
0.27
8*[6
.999
][3
.313
][4
.384
][3
.270
][5
.428
][0
.701
][0
.424
][0
.159
][0
.184
][0
.132
][0
.143
]Lo
g. D
ista
nce
to M
oder
n C
oast
1.16
71.
147
0.94
80.
937
0.95
40.
005
-0.0
280.
042
0.03
9-0
.002
0.00
6[0
.256
][0
.246
][0
.278
][0
.151
][0
.373
][0
.153
][0
.185
][0
.048
][0
.048
][0
.041
][0
.038
]Lo
g. D
ista
nce
to N
avig
able
Riv
er1.
200*
**1.
272*
**1.
409*
**8.
736*
1.01
70.
523
-0.1
180.
028
0.06
20.
133
0.10
8***
[0.0
83]
[0.0
67]
[0.1
56]
[11.
115]
[1.0
05]
[0.3
67]
[0.1
44]
[0.0
34]
[0.0
39]
[0.1
17]
[0.0
31]
Nat
ural
dis
aste
rs, 1
850-
1900
1.09
31.
054
1.04
30.
778
0.75
90.
037
0.03
60.
024*
0.02
40.
008
0.02
9[0
.066
][0
.043
][0
.073
][0
.173
][0
.227
][0
.069
][0
.026
][0
.014
][0
.015
][0
.017
][0
.023
]Lo
g. D
ista
nce
to G
ange
s0.
838*
**0.
891
0.95
20.
220
1.81
1-0
.393
0.70
8***
-0.0
54*
-0.0
44-0
.095
-0.0
17[0
.050
][0
.065
][0
.086
][0
.231
][1
.735
][0
.358
][0
.210
][0
.032
][0
.035
][0
.150
][0
.020
][0
.050
][0
.065
][0
.086
][0
.231
][1
.735
][0
.358
][0
.210
][0
.032
][0
.035
][0
.150
][0
.020
]M
edie
val T
own
1.19
61.
414*
4.11
3*1.
685
0.21
10.
128
-0.0
24-0
.049
-0.0
61[0
.270
][0
.260
][3
.162
][1
.780
][0
.239
][0
.297
][0
.067
][0
.100
][0
.058
]M
ugha
l Min
t in
Tow
n2.
167*
**1.
553
1.62
81.
561
0.67
81.
726*
*0.
138
0.19
50.
038
[0.6
10]
[0.4
17]
[0.9
41]
[1.7
17]
[0.7
15]
[0.5
76]
[0.1
33]
[0.2
42]
[0.1
08]
Oth
er M
edie
val P
atro
nage
Cen
ter
0.84
61.
254
1.08
92.
380
0.65
90.
063
0.12
80.
141
0.15
6[0
.244
][0
.434
][0
.186
][1
.928
][0
.647
][0
.185
][0
.114
][0
.139
][0
.112
]M
edie
val I
nlan
d Tr
ade
Rou
te1.
420*
1.19
80.
837
1.66
50.
400
1.33
9**
0.21
4***
0.28
70.
148*
*[0
.283
][0
.221
][0
.658
][1
.706
][0
.419
][0
.532
][0
.072
][0
.182
][0
.056
]M
edie
val S
kille
d C
rafts
in T
own
1.89
1*2.
322*
*5.
934*
**6.
164*
1.61
31.
134
-0.0
440.
246
0.10
4[0
.616
][0
.812
][3
.214
][6
.710
][1
.002
][0
.916
][0
.125
][0
.307
][0
.111
]M
ajor
Shi'a
stat
ebe
fore
1857
1.54
00.
391
0.46
30.
165
-1.8
43**
-1.0
22*
-0.1
63-0
.176
***
-0.3
20**
Maj
or S
hia
stat
e be
fore
185
71.
540
0.39
10.
463
0.16
5-1
.843
-1.0
22-0
.163
-0.1
76-0
.320
[0.6
67]
[0.4
32]
[0.6
88]
[0.2
39]
[0.8
74]
[0.5
09]
[0.1
12]
[0.0
52]
[0.1
40]
Cen
turie
s Mus
lim R
ule
1.19
61.
023
0.50
61.
819
-0.0
56-0
.248
0.06
1*0.
106
0.02
8[0
.130
][0
.130
][0
.236
][1
.063
][0
.237
][0
.409
][0
.034
][0
.081
][0
.058
]Sm
ith-B
lund
ell E
xoge
neity
Tes
t: c2 (1
)0.
012
0.05
30.
216
Prob
> c2 (1
)0.
914
0.81
80.
642
Prob
c(1
)Sa
mpl
eFu
llFu
llFu
llC
oast
al,
<200
kmC
oast
al,
<100
kmFu
llC
oast
al,
<100
kmFu
llFu
llC
oast
al,
<100
kmFu
ll
Prov
ince
/ N
S x
Ann
exat
ion
FEN
oN
oY
esY
esY
esY
esY
esN
oN
oN
oY
esO
bser
vatio
ns24
824
824
811
089
248
8924
824
889
248
R-S
quar
ed0.
440.
590.
42
Not
es:
All
regr
essi
ons
incl
ud
equ
adra
tic
pol
yn
om
ials
inL
on
git
ud
ean
dL
ati
tud
e.R
ob
ust
stan
dard
erro
rs(c
lust
ered
at
Nati
veSta
tex
An
nex
ati
on
leve
l):
*si
gnifi
cant
at10
%;
**5%
;**
*1%
24
per se, it appears that it is the exogenous and non-replicable inter-ethnic complementarities present
in medieval overseas ports that have lasting effects on ethnic tolerance.
It has also been argued by Bayly (1985) and Prior (1993) that pre-Independence religious
violence tended to occur when major (Shia) Muslim festival processions–Urs and Muharram–tended
to coincide with Hindu festivals. Since both religions follow the lunar calendar, these processions
coincide every three decades. According to Bayly (1985), such religious festivals were used as a
display of wealth and power by an emergent Hindu middle class in the wake of the decline of Muslim
political power. If it is the case that the coincidence of timing of processions played an important
role in pre-Independence riots, then it is likely that riots should occur more often in areas with
long-term Shiite traditions. Table 4 also examines whether riots are more likely in regions that
experienced long periods of Shiite rule and thus where there was a greater tendency for Shiite
conversion and immigration. However, the medieval port effect is robust to matching by their Shia
histories, and towns with long histories of Shia rule actually appear to less riot-prone and less likely
to experience any religious rioting.
An important debate exists between whether ‘institutions’– considered narrowly to be for-
mal rules or executive constraints– or human capital are responsible for beneficial social out-
comes (Glaeser, La Porta, Lopez-de Silanes and Shleifer, 2004, Rodrik, Subramanian and Trebbi,
2004). Tables 4 also assess whether historical human capital accumulation– as measured by the
medieval presence of skilled craftsmen– subsequently reduces ethnic violence. Not only is the effect
of a medieval legacy robust to controlling for the presence of such skills, it appears that skilled
towns are more riot-prone.
Yet, as the interaction terms in Table 5 suggests, the legacy of medieval skills differs dramatically
depending on whether they were accumulated in medieval port towns– where skills accumulation by
Hindus and Muslims were more likely to be institutionally organized to maintain complementarity–
and in other towns. In fact, medieval port towns that accumulated skills experienced between two
and four fewer religious riots than otherwise similar towns, in contrast to non-port towns which
experienced two additional riots.
These effects are consistent with a more general interpretation– that the returns to human
capital rise in environments where there is greater cooperation, just as investments that coordinate
and support greater cooperation are cheaper when there is greater human capital available. In
25
Table 5: Regression: Complementarities and Human Capital
OLS (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)(A) # of Hindu- Muslim Riots in Town (1850-1950)Medieval Overseas Port -0.532 -0.543 -0.307 -0.902* -0.899** -0.532*
[0.454] [0.436] [0.338] [0.529] [0.356] [0.262]Medieval Skilled Crafts in Town 2.015* 2.360* 1.906* 1.927* 2.380* 2.055*
[1.165] [1.296] [1.070] [1.108] [1.248] [1.107]Medieval Port x Skilled Town -2.734*** -4.004*** -4.181*** -2.201* -3.678** -4.020**
[0.978] [1.240] [1.128] [1.263] [1.492] [1.436]R-squared 0.270 0.510 0.640 0.440 0.600 0.710
(B) Probability of Any Hindu-Muslim Riot in Town (1850-1950)Medieval Overseas Port -0.206** -0.244** -0.180** -0.250*** -0.237** -0.126
[0.077] [0.084] [0.076] [0.084] [0.107] [0.115]Medieval Skilled Crafts in Town -0.017 0.216 0.213 0.115 0.306* 0.345
[0.113] [0.160] [0.211] [0.127] [0.169] [0.209]Medieval Port x Skilled Town 0.002 -0.158 -0.150 -0.081 -0.173 -0.217
[0.269] [0.244] [0.254] [0.292] [0.275] [0.237]
SampleFull Coastal,
<200kmCoastal, <100km
Full Coastal, <200km
Coastal, <100km
Province/NS x Annexation FE No No No Yes Yes YesObservations 248 110 89 248 110 89R-squared 0.27 0.33 0.40 0.42 0.45 0.58
Notes: All regressions include quadratic polynomials in Longitude and Latitude and Log. Distances fromthe Modern Coast, Navigable Rivers and the Ganges, Coastal Town and Natural Disasters. Medieval-eracontrols add: Medieval Town, Mughal Mint, Other Patronage Center, Inland Trade Route, Skilled Crafts inTown, Major Shi’a State, Centuries Muslim Rule. All interactions are demeaned. Robust standard errors(clustered at Native State x Annexation level): * significant at 10%; ** 5%; *** 1%
26
other words, rather than being substitute explanations for economic development, as sometimes
mooted in the literature, at the very least in the context of peaceful coexistence in South Asian
towns, the evidence suggests that human capital and institutions were complements.
If institutional mechanisms that foster inter-ethnic complementarity, cooperation and trust
persist from the medieval period, they should also impact the types of economic activity in which
individuals engage. However, as the case evidence outlined in Table 1 suggests, while sharing
an economic logic, there is heterogeneity in how such institutions have supported cooperation in
different medieval ports over time. Table 6 examines the long-term effects of medieval trade legacy
in both skilled and unskilled towns on the composition of modern employment in 1991. Notice
that while there is some weak evidence that the initial economic rationale for ports and trade
routes– as locales for transport and communications– continues to influence employment patterns
in colonial era ports and medieval internal trade routes, medieval ports do not appear to have
greater proportions of their labour force in this sector (Cols 1-3). Also in contrast to colonial ports
and medieval inland trade routes, residents of medieval ports do to be employ significantly more
in (mainly domestic) trade and small commerce, a sector which often relies on the presence of
greater trust (Cols 4-6). This contrast once again appears to confirm that historic non-replicable
inter-ethnic complementarities, rather than other forms of historic trade, appear to have lasting
effects on trust.30
A further intriguing aspect of Table 6 is that historical human capital accumulation- as mea-
sured by skilled crafts– does not, by itself, show much persistence in fostering either trade or
manufacturing. However historic skills appear to influence the coordination of employment activity
in medieval port towns, favouring non-household manufacturing over trade. As the case evidence
in Table 1 suggests, in some medieval ports, non-household manufacturing has been organized and
coordinated to maintain inter-ethnic complementarity in new areas. Because of the potential for
one group to ‘hold up’ the other when both groups invest in complements, such arrangements, once
again, are consistent with inter-ethnic trust.
30The latter resonates with Nunn and Wantchekon (forthcoming)’s finding that trade can actually have negativeeffects on contemporary trust when it is coercive, as in Africa’s slave trade.
27
Tab
le6:
Eff
ects
on
Mod
ern
Em
plo
ym
ent
Com
posi
tion
,1991
Indi
vidu
als p
er 1
000
(199
1) in
:(1
)(2
)(3
)(4
)(5
)(6
)(7
)(8
)(9
)
(A) M
edie
val P
orts
(OL
S)M
edie
val O
vers
eas P
ort
0.05
60.
029
0.01
70.
287*
**0.
188*
**0.
353*
**0.
161*
0.15
2*0.
093
[0.0
47]
[0.0
30]
[0.0
60]
[0.1
03]
[0.0
62]
[0.0
94]
[0.0
90]
[0.0
88]
[0.1
39]
Med
ieva
l Por
t x S
kille
d To
wn
-0.0
320.
001
0.02
9-0
.161
*-0
.144
-0.5
03**
*0.
076
0.03
70.
155
[0.0
67]
[0.0
44]
[0.0
59]
[0.0
87]
[0.1
19]
[0.1
18]
[0.0
73]
[0.0
71]
[0.2
17]
Med
ieva
l Tow
n-0
.006
-0.0
09-0
.053
-0.0
69-0
.021
-0.1
73-0
.053
-0.0
520.
036
[0.0
08]
[0.0
10]
[0.0
34]
[0.0
67]
[0.0
52]
[0.1
05]
[0.0
52]
[0.0
54]
[0.1
19]
Mug
hal M
int i
n To
wn
-0.0
14-0
.020
*-0
.057
-0.0
58-0
.074
0.18
5-0
.067
*-0
.092
**-0
.197
***
[0.0
11]
[0.0
12]
[0.0
35]
[0.0
53]
[0.0
60]
[0.1
19]
[0.0
38]
[0.0
43]
[0.0
57]
Oth
er M
edie
val P
atro
nage
Cen
ter
0.00
60.
014
0.06
7***
-0.0
77*
-0.0
85*
-0.2
190.
017
0.02
6-0
.003
[0.0
10]
[0.0
09]
[0.0
20]
[0.0
42]
[0.0
45]
[0.1
43]
[0.0
34]
[0.0
51]
[0.1
01]
Med
ieva
l Inl
and
Trad
e R
oute
-0.0
01-0
.002
0.09
7**
-0.1
01**
-0.1
15*
-0.1
90-0
.085
*-0
.109
*-0
.343
*[0
.014
][0
.017
][0
.036
][0
.047
][0
.063
][0
.175
][0
.043
][0
.056
][0
.176
]M
edie
val S
kille
d C
rafts
in T
own
-0.0
010.
003
-0.0
07-0
.011
-0.0
15-0
.008
0.00
80.
041
0.04
9[0
.008
][0
.007
][0
.017
][0
.041
][0
.045
][0
.162
][0
.034
][0
.045
][0
.096
]R
-squ
ared
0.15
0.36
0.62
0.17
0.38
0.61
0.17
0.38
0.56
(B) C
olon
ial P
orts
(Pla
cebo
- OL
S)Po
rt w
ith fo
reig
n tra
de, 1
907
0.06
20.
047*
0.03
60.
074
-0.0
100.
088
-0.0
82-0
.047
0.02
2[0
.041
][0
.025
][0
.023
][0
.062
][0
.045
][0
.067
][0
.148
][0
.138
][0
.095
]R
-squ
ared
0.16
0.37
0.62
0.16
0.37
0.58
0.15
0.37
0.54
Sam
ple
Indi
aIn
dia
Indi
a,
Coa
stal
(<
100k
m)
Indi
aIn
dia
Indi
a,
Coa
stal
(<
100k
m)
Indi
aIn
dia
Indi
a,
Coa
stal
(<
100k
m)
Con
trols
Med
ieva
lM
edie
val
Med
ieva
lM
edie
val
Med
ieva
lM
edie
val
Med
ieva
lM
edie
val
Med
ieva
lPr
ovin
ce/ N
S x
Ann
ex F
EN
oY
esY
esN
oY
esY
esN
oY
esY
esO
bser
vatio
ns21
621
676
216
216
7621
621
676
Trad
e an
d C
omm
erce
Non
-Hou
seho
ld M
anuf
actu
ring
Tran
spor
t and
Com
mun
icat
ions
Not
es:
All
regr
essi
ons
incl
ud
equ
adra
tic
pol
yn
om
ials
inL
on
git
ud
ean
dL
ati
tude
an
dL
og.
Dis
tan
ces
from
the
Mod
ern
Coast
,N
avig
ab
leR
iver
san
dth
eG
ange
s,C
oast
alT
own
and
Nat
ura
lD
isas
ters
.M
edie
val-
era
contr
ols
ad
d:
Med
ieva
lT
own
,M
ugh
al
Min
t,O
ther
Patr
on
age
Cen
ter,
Inla
nd
Tra
de
Rou
te,
Skille
dC
raft
sin
Tow
n,
Ma
jor
Sh
i’a
Sta
te,
Cen
turi
esM
usl
imR
ule
.R
ob
ust
stan
dard
erro
rs(c
lust
ered
at
Nati
ve
Sta
tex
An
nex
ati
on
level
):*
sign
ifica
nt
at10
%;
**5%
;**
*1%
28
5.1 Placebos and Robustness
So far the location of medieval ports has been assumed to be exogenously determined. I now test
and relax this assumption. First, it is possible to use the historical natural harbour instrument
to test for this exogeneity assumption under the probit assumptions (Smith and Blundell, 1986) .
Although natural harbours are a strong determinant of medieval port location (Table 3), I fail to
reject the null hypothesis of exogeneity with close to 90% confidence (Table 4). In other words,
medieval ports that were chosen for trade due to their natural harbour locations do not appear
significantly different from other medieval ports in unobserved ways that might be relevant for
modern religious conflict. Thus it seems reasonable to interpret the coefficient of medieval port
as the average treatment effect of medieval trade on religious violence in those towns that enjoyed
medieval trade.
Even though the exogeneity tests suggest that selection does not appear important in this
context, for completeness, Table 7 subjects the main results to a battery of placebo checks as well
as providing local average treatment comparisons. As I have argued, inter-ethnic complementarities
between Hindus and Muslims in overseas trade were largely disrupted during the colonial period.
If my interpretation is true, the effect colonial era port status on ethnic tolerance should be weaker
than the effect of medieval ports. If instead, the effect of medieval ports is coming from some
unobserved characteristic of port towns that make them more tolerant, such as simply increased
wealth or human capital accumulation, we should expect colonial-era overseas ports to have lower
colonial-era violence. As Panel A suggests, however, status as a colonial era port seems to have no
relationship with the propensity for colonial-era violence.
It still might be the case that medieval ports enjoy unobserved differences in wealth stemming
from their location at harbours that are not captured by colonial port records, such as profits from
smuggling. Panel B compares the sample of medieval ports that subsequently silted up and became
inaccessible to overseas shipping. Though there are only thirteen silted medieval ports, the effect of
silted ports on the effect on probability of religious violence is remarkably consistent in magnitude
with that of all medieval ports. Thus, the transmission mechanism that links a medieval trading
legacy to contemporary religious relations does not appear to be through unobserved modern trade.
Panel C presents instrumental variable results, comparing towns that became medieval ports
29
Table 7: Regression: Placebos and Robustness
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)A) Coefficient on Overseas Port in 1907 (OLS)# H-M Riots, 1850-1950 -0.346 0.326 0.085 0.201 0.306 0.591 0.690
[0.542] [0.549] [0.616] [0.573] [0.919] [0.807] [0.770]R-squared 0.16 0.26 0.36 0.48 0.43 0.46 0.57
Any H-M Riot, 1850-1950 0.066 0.084 0.034 0.057 0.148 0.082 0.095[0.133] [0.117] [0.119] [0.116] [0.142] [0.120] [0.101]
R-squared 0.21 0.26 0.30 0.39 0.41 0.43 0.57B) Coefficient on Medieval Port Silted by 1901 (OLS)# H-M Riots, 1850-1950 -0.410 -1.308*** -1.245** -1.298** -1.187* -1.439** -1.375*
[0.371] [0.417] [0.533] [0.564] [0.635] [0.671] [0.716]R-squared 0.16 0.26 0.39 0.51 0.44 0.49 0.59
Any H-M Riot, 1850-1950 -0.217** -0.272** -0.233* -0.198** -0.203 -0.201 -0.096[0.106] [0.111] [0.111] [0.086] [0.126] [0.144] [0.150]
R-squared 0.21 0.27 0.31 0.40 0.41 0.44 0.57C) Coefficient on Medieval Port (2SLS)# H-M Riots, 1850-1950 -3.734 -3.938 -3.550* -2.056 -3.363* -2.374** -2.118**
[2.323] [2.531] [2.005] [1.421] [1.979] [1.034] [0.966]Any H-M Riot, 1850-1950 -0.472 -0.253 -0.657 -0.359 -0.240 -0.637 -0.648*
[0.553] [0.543] [0.526] [0.298] [0.370] [0.415] [0.333]Sample Full Full Coastal,
<200kmCoastal, <100km
Full Coastal, <200km
Coastal, <100km
Province / NS x Annex FE No No No No Yes Yes YesObservations 248 248 110 89 248 110 89
Notes: Each cell represents a regression. All regressions include quadratic polynomials in Longitude andLatitude and Log. Distances from the Modern Coast, Navigable Rivers and the Ganges, Coastal Townand Natural Disasters. Medieval-era controls add: Medieval Town, Mughal Mint, Other Patronage Center,Inland Trade Route, Skilled Crafts in Town, Major Shi’a State, Centuries Muslim Rule. Robust standarderrors (clustered at Native State x Annexation level): * significant at 10%; ** 5%; *** 1%
30
because they were close to indentations on the medieval coastline to towns that would have been
medieval ports had they enjoyed such proximity. This comparison yields results that are broadly
consistent with the average treatment effect in magnitude and direction.
An alternative transmission mechanism linking medieval trade to contemporary religious rela-
tions may be that medieval ports, which were historically wealthy, continue to be wealthy, and it is
the persistence of wealth that explains the connection between a medieval port legacy and a reduced
modern incidence of religious conflict. Conversely, it could be that following their decay, medieval
trading ports lost their Muslim population in the colonial period, and thus had less potential for
Hindu-Muslim conflict. Indeed, an argument with a venerable tradition in the popular press and
among academics is that Hindu-Muslim violence is more likely in areas with more mixed religious
populations. According to this argument, the more likely a member of one group is to interact or
compete with another, the more likely there is to be conflict.31
Table 8 estimates the effect of a medieval trading legacy on indices of income and religious
demography.32 As the table demonstrates, a medieval trade legacy has a negative effect on the
log. municipal income per capita. However, medieval trading ports, like other medieval towns and
Mughal mint towns, continue to have a greater proportion of Muslims than the towns and villages
in their surrounding district. However, unlike those other, more riot-prone ethnically mixed towns,
medieval ports exhibit lower violence, despite also being poorer. Once again, as the placebo checks
reveal, these effects are specific to medieval, not colonial, ports.
Though the effect of medieval trade on contemporary religious violence may operate partially
through population size and religious demography, it may be of interest to make these results
more comparable to existing studies and assess the residual effect of medieval trade on violence,
controlling for the ethnic mix and size of population. As Table 9 reveals, medieval ports with similar
populations and religious demography as other towns continue to be half as riot-prone. Further,
while the linear and quadratic terms on the proportion Muslim confirm the common finding in
the literature that more ethnically mixed towns tend to be more prone to riots in general, the
interactions of the linear and quadratic terms with a medieval legacy have exactly the opposite sign:
more religiously- mixed medieval ports actually are less prone to religious violence. Further the
31See Wilkinson (2005a) for an overview.32This sample is confined to those towns that possessed municipal corporations and thus enjoyed municipal income.
These were mainly in areas of British administration.
31
Table 8: Effect of Medieval Trade on Colonial Income and Religious Demography
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)A) OLS Medieval Overseas Port 0.140** 0.126* 0.103 -0.385** -0.384* -0.424*
[0.058] [0.072] [0.079] [0.168] [0.209] [0.211]Medieval Town 0.058** 0.074** -0.358** -0.218
[0.028] [0.032] [0.143] [0.158]Mughal Mint in Town 0.056** 0.062** 0.056 0.059
[0.025] [0.028] [0.198] [0.158]R-squared 0.38 0.42 0.55 0.11 0.22 0.5B) IVMedieval Overseas Port 0.299** 0.420** 0.355** -1.899** -2.463** -2.678***
[0.135] [0.187] [0.174] [0.832] [1.166] [0.914]C) Placebo (OLS)Port with foreign trade, 1907 0.042 0.041 0.018 -0.425* -0.142 0.236
[0.066] [0.079] [0.101] [0.235] [0.226] [0.350]R-squared 0.37 0.41 0.54 0.11 0.21 0.49SampleObservations 237 237 237 195 195 195
Controls Initial Medieval Medieval Initial Medieval MedievalProvince / NS x Annexation FE no no yes no no yes
|%Muslims in Town - District| Log Mun. Income Per Capita
British MunicipalitiesSubcontinental
Notes: All regressions include quadratic polynomials in Longitude and Latitude and Log. Distances fromthe Modern Coast, Navigable Rivers and the Ganges, Coastal Town and Natural Disasters. Medieval-eracontrols add: Medieval Town, Mughal Mint, Other Patronage Center, Inland Trade Route, Skilled Craftsin Town, Major Shi’a State, Centuries Muslim Rule. Robust standard errors (clustered at Native State xAnnexation level): * significant at 10%; ** 5%; *** 1%
32
Table 9: Interactions with Contemporaneous Population and Religious Demography
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)Neg. Bin. (I. Ratios)
Neg. Bin. (I. Ratios)
OLS OLS OLS OLS OLS OLS
Medieval Overseas Port 0.479*** 0.534** -1.213** -0.882* -0.472 -0.455 -1.292** -0.893*[0.127] [0.154] [0.544] [0.462] [0.526] [0.617] [0.538] [0.466]
Log Population, 1901 2.884*** 2.793*** 0.487* 0.610 1.652*** 1.443*** 0.432 0.540[0.249] [0.352] [0.273] [0.372] [0.412] [0.427] [0.274] [0.368]
% Muslim in town, 1901 1.398*** 1.334** 0.070 0.021 0.390*** 0.356* 0.097 -0.003[0.158] [0.164] [0.136] [0.177] [0.124] [0.178] [0.168] [0.185]
% Muslim in town2, 1901 0.872** 0.859*** 0.041 0.086 -0.219*** -0.220*** -0.139 -0.126[0.048] [0.046] [0.043] [0.061] [0.077] [0.074] [0.135] [0.125]
Medieval Port x Log Population -1.248** -1.601*** -1.490* -1.712[0.559] [0.543] [0.830] [1.221]
Medieval Port x % Muslim -0.428* -0.111 -0.026 -0.076[0.247] [0.311] [0.299] [0.368]
Medieval Port x % Muslim2 0.282* 0.151 0.060 0.086[0.139] [0.118] [0.104] [0.105]
Observations 248 248 110 89 248 248 110 89R-squared 0.54 0.64 0.38 0.41 0.58 0.69F-test (Medieval Port Variables) 3.95 3.84 1.46 1.39Prob>F 0.01 0.01 0.27 0.29Sample Full Full Coastal,
<200kmCoastal, <100km
Full Full Coastal, <200km
Coastal, <100km
Controls Initial Medieval Medieval Medieval Initial Medieval Medieval MedievalProvince / NS x Annex FE No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes
Notes: All regressions include quadratic polynomials in Longitude and Latitude and Log. Distances fromthe Modern Coast, Navigable Rivers and the Ganges, Coastal Town and Natural Disasters. Medieval-eracontrols add: Medieval Town, Mughal Mint, Other Patronage Center, Inland Trade Route, Skilled Craftsin Town, Major Shi’a State, Centuries Muslim Rule. Orthogonal polynomials in the Proportion Muslim areused. All interactions are demeaned. Robust standard errors (clustered at Native State x Annexation level):* significant at 10%; ** 5%; *** 1%
33
medieval port effect is greater in larger towns.33 These results are consistent with the persistence
of inter-ethnic complementarity in medieval ports: when a minority population specialises in a
complementary service, increases in its population tend to increase intra-minority competition and
improve the terms of trade for the members of the majority, reducing incentives for expropriative
violence.
5.2 Persistence and Change, 1850-1995
I now examine the relationship between a medieval trade legacy and the time series variation in
ethnic riots. Figure 3 compares the timing of the first failure of inter-religious peace among the
same sample of towns, using data on religious violence through 1995 from Varshney and Wilkinson
(2004).
Notice first that most towns in the sample analysed above experienced at least one riot over the
145 year period, including a majority of medieval trading ports. Though tragic, the latter finding
adds confidence that the sample of medieval ports were also at risk for violence earlier in time
as well, and not different in unobserved ways that simply made conflict impossible or unreported.
However, at all times ethnic tolerance in medieval ports have enjoyed a better survival probability
than non-ports. The difference is most remarkable in such periods as the emergence of mass religious
politics in the wake of the Khilafat agitations on the 1920s and the turmoil of Partition in 1947
that steadily resulted in the failure of religious tolerance in other towns.
One important shock also experienced just prior to Partition was the shock to private organiza-
tional skills gained by India’s combat troops during the Second World War. Yet, Jha and Wilkinson
(2011) find that though districts that raised troops that acquired more combat experience tended
to have greater ethnic cleansing of their ethnic minorities, districts with medieval ports that ex-
perienced such organizational shocks reveal significantly less ethnic cleansing during the Partition.
This is once again consistent with the presence of persistent inter-ethnic complementarities, as both
members of the majority and minority would lose from ethnic cleansing in such an environment.
Table 10 provides the results of Cox proportional hazards regressions on survival of religious
tolerance for the same sample used in Table 4, between 1850 and 1950 to control for other factors
that might be driving the unconditional differences in Figure 3. A medieval trading legacy reduces
33This also reassures that our results are not driven by possible under-reporting in small medieval port towns.
34
Table 10: Survival of religious tolerance in towns of India, 1850-1950: Cox proportionalhazards regression providing hazard ratios of the time till first incidence of Hindu-Muslim rioting in asample of towns over 5000 in population in 1901.
Hazard Ratios (1) (2) (3) (4) (5)Medieval Port 0.165*** 0.118*** 0.075*** 0.047*** 0.004***
[0.058] [0.064] [0.020] [0.049] [0.007]Mughal Mint in Town 1.598 6.723* 1.488 3.632
[0.504] [6.932] [0.416] [6.452]Medieval Inland Trade Route 1.706*** 5.645** 1.655*** 5.534
[0.245] [4.291] [0.286] [7.488]Medieval Skilled Crafts in Town 1.910*** 1.292 2.197*** 1.867
[0.468] [0.996] [0.583] [3.061]Centuries Muslim Rule 1.314** 2.490*** 1.148 3.801**
[0.159] [0.639] [0.179] [2.158]Sample Full Full Full,
Coastal (<100km)
Full Full, Coastal
(<100km)Controls Initial Medieval Medieval Medieval MedievalProvince/ NS x Annex FE No No No Yes YesLog-Likelihood -1088.98 -1046.26 -86.13 -1005.69 -81.01Observations 408 408 107 408 107
Notes: All regressions include quadratic polynomials in Longitude and Latitude and Log. Distances fromthe Modern Coast, Navigable Rivers and the Ganges, Coastal Town and Natural Disasters. Medieval-eracontrols add: Medieval Town, Mughal Mint, Other Patronage Center, Inland Trade Route, Skilled Craftsin Town, Major Shi’a State, Centuries Muslim Rule. Robust standard errors (clustered at Native State xAnnexation level): * significant at 10%; ** 5%; *** 1%
the risk of the first outbreak of religious rioting in each year by around and ten times, with the
coefficient strengthening with the addition of controls (Cols 1-5). In contrast, tolerance was likely
to fail significantly more rapidly in towns that were on medieval inland trade routes, and in towns
with skilled human capital in the medieval era.
While it appears that a medieval trading legacy slowed the failure of religious tolerance in towns,
as Figure 3 suggests, the effect of institutions– even those forged over a millennium– can erode over
time. Carefully unpacking the time series variation in religious relations in India’s towns in the
post-independence period is beyond the scope of this paper, but remains a topic for future research.
However it is possible make a few observations. First, while the failure of tolerance in non-port
towns seems to have followed a gradual deterioration, the legacy of tolerance in medieval ports
appear to have been challenged more abruptly, particularly at the end of 1970s, timing that seems
to follow the oil shocks and the subsequent relative increase in funding by certain Gulf states for
religious schools and institutions that promote a version of Islam less adapted to domestic norms
35
Table 11: Effects on religious violence:, February-April 2002: Effects of medieval port legacyon medieval ports on days of rioting and probability of violence (including isolated incidents), in towns ofGujarat.
Dependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)OLS OLS OLS OLS
Religious riot occurred?
-0.229*** -0.302*** -0.293*** -0.329**[0.049] [0.077] [0.099] [0.114]
R-squared 0.46 0.56 0.58 0.61
Days of rioting -1.754* -2.805** -2.733* -2.903*[0.858] [1.316] [1.418] [1.447]
R-squared 0.51 0.63 0.65 0.67
Any religious violence? -0.104 -0.129 -0.141 -0.18**[0.113] [0.139] [0.093] [0.082]
R-squared 0.61 0.62 0.65 0.67
Observations 199 153 148 137Historic controls no yes yes yesContemporary controls no no yes yes% Muslim(²) controls no no no yes
Notes: All regressions include linear and quadratic controls for longitude and latitude and log. distancesfrom coast, navigable rivers, coastal town, Natural Disasters, log. population (1991), Class of town (I,II,III),distance to Godhra (100,200,300km), district fixed effects. Historical controls include: Centuries Muslimrule, Muslim-founded or capital, Town in British India, Land revenue 1901. Contemporaneous controlsinclude: Proportion SC/ST, Municipal income and expenditures per capita, Modern port. Robust standarderrors in brackets (clustered at 1991 district): * significant at 10%; ** 5%; *** 1%
and traditions.34
5.3 Results from the Gujarat riots, February-April 2002
While the subcontinent-wide analysis allows me to evaluate the generalisability of the analysis
across regions that would later house three countries and one-fifth of the world’s population, it
leaves open the possibility that controls for unobserved geographical and historical variation are
inadequate. Further, as Figure 3 suggests, tolerance in medieval ports does appear to have weakened
over time. I therefore supplement the subcontinent-wide analysis using data from the two months
of religious violence in the towns of one particular state of India, Gujarat, following the burning of
the Sabarmati Express in Godhra in 2002.
34Such new externally-funded schools were among the only new buildings in relatively economically stagnantmedieval port towns like Veraval as well playing an increasing role even in economically vibrant port towns like Suratas well [author’s field observations, 2006-7].
36
To construct the variables used in this analysis, I went through news reports on Gujarat from
the day of the burning of the Sabarmati Express, February 27th until April 15th.35 Following
Varshney and Wilkinson (2004), I coded a riot as occurring in a town if there was evidence of
violence by communally-identifiable “mobs” or other large groups in that town. I also coded a day
of “violence” as having occurred in a town if there was an isolated incident, such as a stabbing,
without any evidence of broader groups being involved.
Table 11 shows the effects of medieval trading legacy on the probability of religious rioting
experienced by Gujarati towns following the burning of the Sabarmati Express at the town of
Godhra. All specifications include district fixed effects and controls for town size and distance to
Godhra. Once again, towns with a medieval trading legacy were around 20-30 percentage points
less likely to experience a riot. The magnitude of this effect is remarkably consistent with the South
Asia-wide colonial sample, and strengthens with the addition of historical and religious demographic
controls.
Table 11 also presents the medieval port effect on other outcomes: the duration of rioting
and whether the town experienced any violence (both riots and isolated incidents). As Row 2
suggests, a medieval trade legacy reduced the duration of religious rioting by around two to three
days. In contrast, medieval trading ports appear to have little effect on whether violent incidents
occurred at all. Rather the major effect of a medieval trade legacy appears to be to reduce the
escalation of religious violence into broader mob confrontation. This is consistent with the presence
of community-level incentives provided by institutional mechanisms that mitigate shocks to inter-
ethnic peace, rather than the presence of inherently peaceful individuals in medieval ports.36
These community level incentives appear to also be reflected in the electoral consequences of
Gujarat’s riots. In non-medieval port constituencies, the riots appear to have solidified support
for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which was perceived to have been complicit in the
religious violence. The vote share for the BJP rose significantly from 43.43% in 1998 to 48.92%
in the elections immediately following the 2002 riots, sufficient to win the BJP an additional 13
35News sources include rediff.com and the Times of India. These were supplemented from an amicus curiae briefby the Concerned Citizens Tribunal, which provided information about less-widely publicised violence in smallertowns and villages.
36One respondent in Porbandar mentioned that attempts were made to instigate violence by outsiders, who sentwomen’s bangles to the members of the Hindu community as a symbol of their lack of masculinity in not joiningthe riots. However, he said “This did not work. We didn’t want [violence], our police and officials did not want it.Nobody wanted it.” [author’s field observations, 2006-7]
37
seats in non-medieval port constituencies. In contrast, while each of the ten Gujarati medieval port
constituencies had actually elected a BJP candidate in the 1998 elections– with an average vote
share of 55.3%– in the elections immediately following the Gujarat riots in 2002, medieval port
voters reduced the BJP vote share by 6.11 percentage points, enough to cause the BJP a loss of
three seats. Thus, relative to non-medieval ports, medieval ports showed a vote swing against the
party associated with the religious violence by a remarkable 11.6 percentage points or 6590 voters
per port. These findings may be due to the influx of refugees from the violence in other parts of
the state due to the ports’ reputations as “oases of peace”.37
6 Discussion
This paper has sought to establish that inter-ethnic medieval trade has left a lasting legacy on the
patterns of religious violence. In the ports of the medieval Indian Ocean, Islam, by making trade
accessible to all Muslims, satisfied three conditions that support peaceful co-existence over time:
the provision of a complementary service, a high cost for the majority to expropriate or replicate the
source of complementarity, and a means to redistribute the surplus from trade. These conditions
appear to have laid the basis for an enduring legacy of ethnic tolerance.
The logic underlying peaceful coexistence between Hindus and Muslims in medieval ports and
the supporting institutions that emerged can be readily applied to other historical and contem-
porary settings where non-local and local ethnic groups co-exist, both to understand why ethnic
tolerance fails, and how tolerance may be fostered. The theory and evidence described here suggests
that ethnic violence is more likely when ethnic groups compete, when the source of inter-ethnic
complementarity is easy for one group to expropriate or replicate, or when no mechanism exists
to redistribute the gains from trade. Competition between locals and immigrant groups for jobs
has often been cited as a reason for ethnic tension in the United States (Olzak, 1992). The theory
above suggests that these tensions are most likely to arise in jobs that are unspecialized and require
either few or generally-available skills or inputs, since these are the least costly for locals to enter.
Yet, even non-local minorities who do not compete, but enjoy complementarities that stem from
37At the same time, there have may also have been an element of retrospective sanctioning of the ruling party. InPorbandar, I interviewed several Muslim members of the BJP minority wing, which also maintained an active rolein several other medieval port towns. Donations to the BJP from minority groups were reportedly high prior to theviolence as well, but lowered afterwards.
38
tangible assets, such as land, machines or other forms of physical capital, may be targets of violence.
Being impossible to violently expropriate, specialized skills do provide a better basis for inter-
ethnic complementarity and tolerance, but even these can be replicated in the longer term. Mi-
norities that have specialized skills can become increasingly attractive targets of violence if locals
become able to duplicate those skills. The forced expulsion of Jews from Spain at the end of the 15th
century was precipitated in part by prior conversions, both forced and voluntary, of Jews to Chris-
tianity. These “new” Christians provided the administrative skills to Spanish rulers for which they
previously depended on the better-educated Jewish population (Benbassa and Rodrigue, 2000).
It is possible that the expansion of public education in Western Europe and the United States
may also have had the unfortunate side-effect of raising the likelihood of violence against educated
minority incumbents in skilled jobs by rendering them more replaceable by locals.38
In contrast to physical and human capital, most ethnic trading networks are both difficult to
steal– being intangible– and extremely costly to replicate. Because there are network externalities–
the value of a trading network increases with the size of its membership– there will be high costs for
any local to invest in a set of personal exchange relationships that would attain the scale necessary
to compete with an ethnic trading network. Thus non-locals can use the privileged access to goods
and services from ethnic ties elsewhere to provide the basis for sustained complementarity in mixed
communities.
Like Muslim traders in medieval Indian ports, Sephardic Jews benefited from valuable trading
networks in the 15th and 16th centuries that rendered them welcome arrivals in Ottoman ports in
the Mediterranean. With links to Spain and the Atlantic economy, their immigration was actively
encouraged by local Ottoman authorities and the city of Salonica in particular attracted a large
number of Jewish refugees. A combination of permissive immigration and religious specialisation
resulted in a long history of peaceful ethnic co-existence (Benbassa and Rodrigue, 2000). For the
next four centuries, Ottoman Salonica, sometimes referred to as the “Mother of Israel”, maintained
a remarkable degree of ethnic tolerance, with Jews specialised in commerce (Mazower, 2005).39
While the trading networks of the Chinese in modern Indonesia and South Asians in modern
38Indeed anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany was particularly pronounced among the relatively literate Protestantpopulation.
39Indeed, consistent with and building in part on an earlier version of this paper, Voigtlander and Voth (2011)find that German overseas trading ports that were part of the Hanseatic League were less likely to show persistentanti-Semitism.
39
East Africa also made them valuable to the local population, these groups have tended to lack
a general mechanism of redistribution. Chinese and South Asian ethnic trading networks, based
upon personal and community ties, were closed to competitors, and thus relatively small minority
groups were able to capture much of the gains from trade (Rauch and Casella, 2002). This ar-
guably rendered these minorities increasingly attractive targets for ethnic violence and susceptible
to expropriation by “strong” locals.
A key intuition of this paper is that by encouraging members of different ethnicities and religions
to be competitive among themselves but to assume complementary roles between groups, it is
possible to provide incentives to encourage the development of further complementary institutional
mechanisms that support inter-religious tolerance and economic integration.
These approaches may yield dividends for ethnic tolerance today, though some tradeoffs do
exist. Education systems that foster general human capital may have the adverse effect of making
ethnic groups economic substitutes, leading to increased conflict and polarization. In contrast,
developing education systems that allow minority individuals the choice of leveraging the advan-
tages of their group to engage in broader exchange, rather than promoting homogenisation of a
town’s human capital, may preserve ethnic complementarity and generate more opportunities for
exchange. Organisations that match members of different communities with complementary skills
in the creation of joint business ventures may also be effective for improving ethnic relations.40
A drawback of these approaches are, of course, that they may reinforce potentially dynamically
inefficient ethnic distinctions.
An alternative lesson does exist, however. Just as inter-ethnic business partnerships allowed
the sharing of gains in trade in the Indian Ocean, policies that assist communities in providing
explicit and well-publicised systems of joint assetholding may allow groups to share in each others’
futures in a way that reduces ethnic conflict and distinctions (Author, 2012). Trading networks
may have afforded minority groups an important source of comparative advantage that rendered
them valuable neighbours. Long after the decline of Indian Ocean trade, it may be that we can
apply some of their institutional learning to the pressing problems of inter-ethnic peace today.
40Such an organization has indeed been established by the Ismaili community in East Africa (Penrad, 2000).
40
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nts#
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ernal
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teNa
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le Ri
vers
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slim
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wn, 1
931 (
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Mugh
al Mi
nts#
Medie
val P
orts
EInt
ernal
Trade
Rou
teNa
vigab
le Riv
ers# R
iots,
1850
-1949
0
1
2
3
4
56 -
9 10 - 14
15 - 24
25 - 40
Prop
. Mus
lim 19
42 (D
ecile
s)
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omete
rs
(b)
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du-M
usl
imR
iots
,1850-1
950
Fig
ure
2:
Med
ieval
Legacie
s:R
eligio
us
Com
posi
tion
an
dH
ind
u-M
usl
imR
iots
The
patt
ern
of
moder
nre
ligio
us
dem
ogra
phy
mim
ics
patt
erns
of
Musl
imru
le,
med
ieva
ltr
ade
and
politi
cal
patr
onage.
Med
ieva
lp
ort
sand
majo
rM
usl
impatr
onage
cente
rs(s
uch
as
those
that
house
dM
ints
)co
nti
nued
tohav
egre
ate
rM
usl
imp
opula
tions
than
nea
rby
are
as
even
in1931.
47
Other Towns
Medieval Ports
Khi
lafa
t Mov
emen
t Fai
ls
Par
titio
n
Oil
Sho
cks
0.2
5.5
.75
1
0 50 100 150
years elapsed since 1850
Figure 3: Timing of the first failure of religious tolerance, 1850-1995: This Kaplan-Meiercurve compares the survival rate of towns without violence. Notice that most towns in the sample experi-enced at least one riot over the 145 year period, including most medieval ports. However, medieval portshave consistently survived for longer without religious violence, including in the aftermath of the KhilafatMovement and the Partition of South Asia. Unlike the gradual failure of tolerance in other towns, 35%of medieval ports abruptly experienced their first Hindu-Muslim riot in the years following the OPEC oilshocks (1973-79).
48