1) The Chinese eagerness for western products and the growing and flourishing of the cities led to the development of the Silk Road. Also, the favored idea by the Europeans, of a route linking many lands together to trade, was also an event that led to the Silk Road. 2) The Mesopotamian border entrepôts and Samarkand, are examples of the impact that the Silk Road had on Asia because goods from other countries were bought and sold throughout different countries, and stops were made along the way to trade with others. 3)…
In the Han empire, the roads were called The Silk Roads. On the Silk Roads, people traded things like spices and Chinese silk. The roads linked Central Asia, India, and the Roman Empire all together making trade easier and getting new goods easier as well. Trade on water was another way to get goods and then Han empire traveled the Indian ocean to do so. Just like the Han, the Roman empire too had their own roads.…
The Silk Road was one of the most revolutionary innovations in all of Chinese history. The Silk Road stretched all the way from China to the Middle East (doc 4). China was known for holding the secret of silk making and China used the Silk Road to trade silk across the Middle East to Europe, this gave China great wealth (Doc 4). It also brought cultural diffusion to China eventually bringing Buddhism to China (IO). The Great Wall of China was also expanded to protect those who followed the Silk Road.…
Traveling the Silk Road was more reliable before then traveling today. China was the central source for silk. Silk was a precious luxurious cloth used for clothes, decoration etc. China made Silk from silkworms and China was the only one who grasped this secret. China had about eight billion dollars of…
The Silk Road has intentionally and unintentionally transformed civilizations. Document two states that “caravans of traders carried silk, tea, and pottery westward.... Religious practices like Islam, Buddhism, and Christianity spread from the Silk Road. In the city markets, traders from the East and West helped spread traditions, art and culture. Inventions such as gunpowder, paper, and the magnetic compass also gain popularity along the Silk Road.”…
In the Middle Ages the population of towns and cities in Europe began to grow. The growth of trade fairs and markets along with advancements in farming, such as the heavy plow that lead to increased food production, caused this growth in population. People's lives in the Medieval Times was controlled by different systems that told them how to live and what their job was. Merchants were in control of the trade system over the Silk Road, which provided the country of Europe new goods and a way to obtain them. The rest of the people, which includes lords, nobles, serfs and commoners, were told what job was theirs and who to serve in that job by the feudalism and manorialism systems.…
The main points and influences of sugar involved its association with the Atlantic Ocean and its involvement with the creation of the Atlantic plantation system. This commodity was influential in the movement of slaves and servants from Africa and Europe to the Americas to produce sugar. The main points and influences of silk mostly involved the areas of West Africa, East Africa, and South and Southeast Asia. Silk was a status symbol and is tied to the Silk Road, a network of caravan routes from China to the Mediterranean Sea where silk was a major commodity of the trade…
The Silk Road was a network of trade routes, formally established during the Han Dynasty of China, linking China to Central and West Asia, the Mediterranean and India. The Silk Road got its name from the German geographer, Ferdinand von Richthofen in 1877 because it’s major product was silk and it was traded through this route. Besides the exchange of the silk, there were many other merchandises, such as spices, cloth, paper, porcelain, chinaware, grape and wine, glass, and music instruments that were traded. It was also the route by which Buddhism and Nestorianism found new converts. The Silk Road wasn't only for trading goods but it also was used to spread different cultures from China, India, Persia, Arabia, Greek and Rome.…
The Mongols created the largest empire in all of history. The land they had conquered is more than two times that of the next greatest conqueror, Alexander the Great. But unlike Alexander, who is often remembered as a hero, the legacy of the Mongols is one of brutality and barbarism. But in truth, these so-called “barbarians” were, in fact, not very barbaric at all. Recent discoveries challenged the long-accepted statement of Mongols being savage brutes, suggesting that they were perhaps wrongly labelled; the facts about them were twisted and lost to history.…
In Susan Whitfield’s Life Along the Silk Road, she takes primary sources from the Dunhuang Manuscripts to create conglomerate characters, proving the inaccuracy of the popular phrase “Silk Road, ” a label for popular trading networks that stretched all the way from Rome, Africa, India, and China. In her introduction, Whitfield makes it clear to her readers of the origin of the term “Silk Road.” The first to coin this phrase was a German geographer, Baron Ferdinand von Richthofen. Many students throughout the years learn of the Silk Road as a single route from Rome to China, exchanging goods, especially the Chinese silk. This is, however, is a false narrative and extremely limiting definition of the trading network, itself.…
Another contributor to China’s economy was the invention of silk. Silk was a highly valuable material that China used for trade. Because silk was so popular, this lead to the Silk Road; a trading rout between China and other civilizations. As a result, this trading caused cultural immersion, making Chinese culture more diverse and bringing in new…
Drawing from across the faces of Asia and Europe the Silk Road acted as a highway for anything and everything. From Russia and Tartary flowed some of the highest quality leathers and linens. Exported from Cathay were the finest silk clothes and jewelry. Embalmed with precious rubies, diamonds, and pearls the Empire created some of the most valuable merchandise to flow along the Silk Road.…
The Chinese played a large part in forming the Silk Road, since much of the silk that was made came from this region of the world. During the 2nd century B.C.E., the Chinese began forming trade routes that would span across various Chinese territories and then move outward through India and, eventually, into Europe. In this manner, the highly desirable silk products brought from China would inevitably open up a new form of international trade between differing inter-connecting civilizations: “This was what became known as the “Silk Road” whereby some manufactured products but mainly hard currency found its way to the East and silk, spices, tea, etc found there way to the West” (Hilton et al. 124). Much like the Trans-Saharan and Roman-Indian trade routes, the link between civilizations would be a foundation for inter-connecting differing civilizations in the movement of goods across large geographic areas. This was a major positive development in the opening of trade between major civilizations during this historical period.…
The Silk Road is one of the oldest trading routes. In an article by Mark Joshua he states that the Silk Road was “established during the Han Dynasty of China, which linked the regions of the ancient world in commerce” (Mark, J). This means…
The Silk Road’s ancient trade routes allowed for cultural and material trade throughout the Mediterranean to East Asia. Xinru Liu’s The Silk Road in World History exemplifies the complex exchange of commodities and ideas between different nations and peoples. Starting with the Chinese looking west and ending with the Mongol conquest. Liu’s focus gives the reader examples of specific historic events that were only able to take place because of this intricate trade network.…