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Compare And Contrast Mediterranean And Indian Ocean Trade

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In the early post-classical period, the Mediterranean Sea trade route and the Indian Ocean trade route flourished. Although both the Mediterranean Sea trade route and the Indian Ocean Maritime trade route persisted to deliver goods to diverse ports by way of sea, such as India’s transmission of manufactured goods, such as pottery produced by Burma, to several distinct ports, the volume and whereabouts of each particular trade route and the development of people’s characteristics due to trade varied drastically. Both the post-classical Mediterranean Sea trade route and the Indian Ocean Maritime System route transported goods to various ports by way of water. In the Indian Ocean Maritime System, trade took place in three distinct …show more content…

In the Indian Ocean Maritime System trade route, ships were constructed in a very complex and durable fashion, which was most likely due to the substantially extensive routes that seafarers had to endure in order to deliver their products. Indian Ocean vessels relied heavily on lateen sails, which are sails triangular in shape, to successfully complete their voyage. The planks used to construct Indian Ocean ships were pierced to interconnect, bound with palm fiber, and caulked with bitumen for additional stability. In contrast, Mediterranean sailors used square sails to navigate through the sea and simply nailed the planks of their ships together. Seafarers in the Mediterranean Sea used long banks of oars to move their ships. However, in the Indian Ocean trade route, there was no need for the usage of oars. Because of the several minute harbors and islands located in the Mediterranean Sea, oars were essential for the flow of ships through the sea to avoid becoming cemented to land, whereas ships sailed openly and freely throughout the Indian Ocean Maritime System route. The opposing construction of the post-classical standard Indian Ocean ship and the standard ship …show more content…

In the post-classical Mediterranean Sea trade route, seafarers grasped the characteristics they obtained from their homeland tightly and did not intermingle them at various sea ports, which was due to their constant interaction with other people. Yet, in the post-classical trade routes taking place in the Indian Ocean, the sight of other people was an extremely unlikely occasion to occur along the journey due to distal location of land. Therefore, seafarers became intimate with foreign women at port stops. These port wives introduced their homeland’s customs and attitudes to their husbands, mixing heritages, which would result in rich cultural diversity, commonly making children produced by the couples multilingual, multicultural, and cosmopolitan. Since the Mediterranean Sea trade route was proximal to land and the Indian Ocean trade route was more remote from land, sailors in the Indian Ocean Maritime System would take up opportunities with woman from different regions, whereas the seafarers in the Mediterranean Sea trade route preferred marriage to women from their own homeland. The differences in culture in both the Mediterranean Sea trade route and the Indian Ocean Maritime System are most likely due to how closely bound various

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