Reading material - Reference by chapter:
[ 3.2a ] [ 3.2b ] Indian States of the Malay Peninsula in the first centuries of the christian era {pp.38 ~40}.
[ 4.3a ] [ 4.3b ] States of the Malay Peninsula and Indonesia from the fourth to the sixth centuries {pp.50 ~55}.
[ 5.6a ] [ 5.6b ] States of the Malay Peninsula in the seventh century {pp.77 ~79}
-&- Indonesia: Ho-Ling in Java and Malayu in Sumatra {pp.79 ~80}.
[ 6.1a ] [ 6.1b ] Beginnings of the Kingdom of Srivijaya (end of the 7th century) {pp.81 ~85}.
[ 7.5a ] [ 7.5b ] Malay Peninsula -&- Sailendras in Java and Sumatra from 813 to 863 {pp.107 ~109}.
[ 8.4a ] [ 8.4b ] San-Fo-Ch’i, or the Sumatran Kingdom of Srivijaya {pp.130 ~132}.
[ 9.3a ] [ 9.3b ] Srivijaya and its relations with the Cholas of Tanjore (1003-30) {pp.141 ~144}
-&- Srivijaya and the Cholas (1067-69) {pp.147 ~148}.
[ 11.3a ] [ 11.3b ] Indonesia at the end of the twelfth century: The weakening of Srivijaya (Palembang) to the benefit of Malayu (Jambi) {pp.178 ~180}
-&- Srivijaya on the eve of its dismemberment (1225-70) {pp.183 ~185}.
[ 12.7a ] [ 12.7b ] Sumatra and its dependencies at the time of Marco Polo; the beginnings of Islam {pp.201 ~204}.
[ 13.7a ] [ 13.7b ] Malay Peninsula and Sumatra: The spread of Islam {pp.230 ~232}.
[ 14.4a ] [ 14.4b ] Sumatra: The heirs of the old kingdom of the Maharaja in the fourteenth century {pp.242 ~245}
-&- Malacca: From its foundation in 1403 to its seizure by the Portuguese in 1511 {pp.245 ~246}.