Asked by lil darkie

Which option best analyzes how trade contributed to cultural change in Southeast Asia in the Medieval era?(1 point)
Responses

Trade led to Arab merchants establishing themselves in Southeast Asian communities and largely assimilating to existing religions, while spreading other cultural practices to the region.
Trade led to Arab merchants establishing themselves in Southeast Asian communities and largely assimilating to existing religions, while spreading other cultural practices to the region.

Trade did not lead to significant cultural change in Southeast Asia during this period.
Trade did not lead to significant cultural change in Southeast Asia during this period.

Trade led to increasing connections between Arabia and Southeast Asia, leading to acculturation.
Trade led to increasing connections between Arabia and Southeast Asia, leading to acculturation.

Trade led to the creation of merchant communities, which caused the diffusion of religious practices from Arabia to southeast aisa

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"Trade led to the creation of merchant communities, which caused the diffusion of religious practices from Arabia to southeast aisa."

Reason: Indian Ocean trade brought Muslim Arab (and later Indian) merchants who settled, married locally, formed diasporic merchant communities and influenced rulers and elites. These contacts spread Islam and other cultural elements (law, language, institutions, architecture) across coastal Southeast Asia.