Silk Roads: Exchange Across Eurasia

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1 Silk Roads: Exchange Across Eurasia The Growth of the Silk Roads Eurasian landmass has long been home to the majority of as well as the world s most productive, largest, and greatest concentration of peoples. It also gave raise to one of the world s most and networks of exchange among its diverse peoples. Eurasia is often divided into inner and outer zones with different ecologies Eurasia: relatively warm, well-watered (China, India, Middle East, Mediterranean) Eurasia: harsher, drier climate, much of it pastoral (eastern Russia, Central Asia) (forest and grasslands) products were exchanged for agricultural products and manufactured goods Movement of in and out of these zones served to Indo-European languages, bronze metallurgy, horse-based technologies and more. The creation of classical civilizations and imperial states in 500 0 BCE included efforts to pastoral peoples (Persian Empire, Alexander the Great, Han China s efforts to control the Xiongnu) By the early centuries of the Common Era, there was a of transcontinental exchange, often by pastoral peoples (relay system of trade) Trading networks did best when large states provided for trade (3 phases) In the classical era when and empires anchored commerce In the seventh and eighth centuries, the Empire, dynasty, and dynasty created a belt of strong states In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the Empire controlled almost the entirety of the Silk Roads

Goods in Transit A vast array of goods traveled along the Silk Roads, often by Mostly goods for the elite High of transport did not allow movement of goods 2 Region China Forest lands of Siberia and grasslands of Central Asia India Middle East Mediterranean Basin Products Contributed to Silk Road Commerce Silk, bamboo, mirrors, gunpowder, paper, rhubarb, ginger, lacquerware, chrysanthemums Furs, walrus tusks, amber, livestock, horses, falcons, hides, copper vessels, tents, saddles, slaves Cotton textiles, herbal medicine, precious stones, spices Dates, nuts, almonds, dried fruit, dyes, lapis lazuli, swords Gold coins, glassware, glazes, grapevines, jewelry, artworks, perfume, wool and linen textiles, olive oil Silk symbolized the Eurasian exchange system At first, China had a on silk technology Silk from China and cotton textiles from India led to a drain of from the Roman Empire to the east Romans regarded silk as By the sixth century c.e., other peoples produced silk Stories of led to silk being produced in the Byzantine Empire, Korea, Japan, India, and Persia Silk was used as and a means of accumulating in Central Asia Silk was a symbol of high status laws restricted silk clothing to the elite in China and the Byzantine Empire Silk was linked to the in Buddhism and Christianity Gifts to as a sign of honor and respect Christianity silk wall hangings and altar covers were signs of and piety Silk industry only developed in in twelfth century Irony of splendid churches depending on silks manufactured in the world Volume of trade was, but of economic and social importance Peasants in the Yangzi River delta of southern China produced goods (silk, paper, porcelain, etc.) instead of Well-placed individuals could make enormous

Cultures in Transit Cultural transmission was more important than exchange of goods The case of (a cultural product of Indian civilization in the 6 th century BCE) Spread along Silk Roads through Central and East Asia Had always appealed to because of its universal message rather than Hinduism that favored the higher castes blocked the spread of Buddhism to the west Conversion was heavy in the cities of Central Asia (Merv, Samarkand, Khotan, Dunhuang) Cities became cosmopolitan centers of and e.g., Buddhist texts and cave temples of Dunhuang Conversion was rather than being linked to conquest or foreign rule Inhabitants of Central Asian cities found a link to the larger, wealthier, and more prestigious civilization of Winning religious by founding monasteries Monasteries provided for merchants Spread much more slowly among Central Asian Pastoralists didn t have a language Monasticism is central to Buddhism, but pastoralists are Shi Le, ruler of the nomadic people (ruled northern China after collapse of Han), accepted along with thousands of others, thanks to the monk Fotudeng In China, it was the religion of merchants or for centuries before it became popular among the Chinese themselves 3

Buddhism was during its spread The original faith the material world, however, monasteries became rich and involved in affairs Begging bowls became a rather than a daily activity Sculptures and murals show musicians and acrobats as well as women applying makeup and drinking at parties form of Buddhism flourished Picked up influences The of many peoples along the Silk Roads were incorporated into Buddhist practice as 4

Disease in Transit The major population centers of the Afro-Eurasian world developed characteristic disease and ways to deal with them Long-distance trade meant to unfamiliar diseases Early case: great epidemic in in 430 429 BCE that killed up to % of its army During the Roman and Han empires, and devastated both populations Although the diseases probably strengthened the appeal of and because they offered compassion in the face of immense suffering In 534 750 CE, bubonic plague from ravaged Mediterranean world Traveled by that carried the disease on ships Kept the Empire from regaining Italy and renewing the Roman empire (10,000 people a day died over a 40-day period in 534) Made it harder for Christendom to spread of Islam The spread thanks to the Empire s unification of much of Eurasia (thirteenth fourteenth centuries) Could have been bubonic plague, anthrax, or collection of epidemic diseases Killed of European population between 1346 and 1350 Not all bad, tenant and urban who were now in short supply could demand higher wages and better terms Similar death toll in China and parts of the Islamic world Central Asian steppes were badly affected ( Mongol power) Disease exchange gave Europeans an when they reached the Western Hemisphere after 1500 Less issue with disease in the Americas absence of animals, less among centers of population, and from the Eastern Hemisphere Peoples of the Americas had little to European and African diseases 5