2.3 Emergence of Transregional Networks of Communication and Exchange
Common Era trade networks reached distances and capacities that Ancient Era trade had never been capable of reaching. Massive empires were involved in transregional trade in the Common Era. These empires were after luxury goods that were shipped across long distances of trade routes both on land and in water.
The appearance of large empires brought change to trade networks by encouraging many benefits that trade provided. Empires could obtain luxury and foreign commodities. Influence through trade could also create and spread new technological advancements, as well as help spread universalizing religions.
The major trade routes of the Common Era were the Silk Road, Trans-Saharan route, Indian Ocean network, Mediterranean Sea routes, and American
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Along caravan trade routes, sugar and some citrus fruits were able to spread from Southeastern and South Asia to the Middle East to North Africa.
Epidemics caused by domesticated animals, the bubonic plague, and smallpox all devastated a variety of countries through contact on trade routes. Domesticated animals carried and transferred many disease pathogens without humans knowing, leaving them unable to find any treatments. Smallpox first appeared in the Roman Empire and killed a large portion of the population. Trade along the Silk Road resulted in contact with Romans, and the Han Dynasty of China suffered from the epidemic. China was also infected with the bubonic plague from trading contact with Constantinople, the Roman Empire capital.
Religions spread along trade routes as merchants carried their beliefs from trade port to trade port. They spread their ideas and wished to bring new followers into their religions. By introducing new religions to the growing empires, rulers wished to show their absolute value and prove their legitimacy by using popular religious
“No nation was ever ruined by trade.” This quote was said by Benjamin Franklin in the late 1700s. These words are so simple, and it seems like anyone could have said them. However, this quote has a bigger meaning in that throughout world history, trade has been so important to so many countries and it has led to many empires successes. It has occurred for a very long time, and it has progressed dramatically. Trade has changed a lot, but some parts of trade stayed the same over a long periods of time. In the era between 300 CE and 1450 CE, trade between Eurasia and Africa changed because the empires and kingdoms in power were replaced and their control over trade differed;
Religion is a force capable of both strengthening and weakening an empire. It is also a source from which much of the literature, art, and government of the ancient and classic periods sprouted from. It can also be used as a way to form a commonality between two distinct cultures in order to facilitate trade and ensure safety. In Document 1, a missionary was attempting to convert a powerful ruler to the Roman Catholic religion. This may have been done for several reasons, but the most likely reason would be to ease the tensions between the two completely different cultures. Whatever the reason may be, missionaries played an important role in cultural diffusion. Ideas were easily spread to other people through missionaries, but the ideas of others were also seen by the missionaries. Missionaries travel the world with their ideas and come back to their homeland having seen new sights and ideas. Sharing the differences of other cultures with the ruler may result in an inspiration to model certain things in their kingdom, empire, or dynasty after the things that the missionaries have seen in completely diverse parts of the world.
Economic relationships between classical China and India were similar and almost seemed to rely on one another. India was considered “the center of trade”. Most trade routes were all passing through and dependent on India. Indian emphasis on trade and merchant activity was far more than in China, and also greater in the classical Mediterranean world. During the Maurya rule, India expanded their trade between the main centers of civilization Eurasia and Africa. Some products produced at one end of the system, such as Chinese silks and porcelains, were carried the whole length of the trading networks to be sold at the other end of the routes, in Rome. As a result, China and India both had to work together and figure out a way to make sure and help each other because both civilizations depended on each other for different things.
Silk Roads - The Silk Roads were a network of trade routes, formally established during the Han Dynasty of China, which linked the regions of the ancient world in commerce.
During the time period 600 C.E. to 1450 C.E., trade networks were relied upon to transfer goods, ideas, and services. Both the Trans-Saharan and Silk Road trade routes depended on animals, luxury goods, and economic growth. However, the trade routes differed in animals, types of luxury goods, and success of economic growth.
Although key elements of the trade between Africa and Eurasia changed during the era of 300-1450, a few factors stayed the same. In 300 C.E., trade routes were primarily between Europe and North Africa. The way that they changed by the time of 1450 was that they expanded southward and westward. By 1450, these trade routes went through West Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Indian Ocean. One factor that stayed the same during this time period was that the northern coast of Africa was always involved in the trade between Africa and the rest of Eurasia.
Throughout early history, civilizations often sought to receive resources from afar to sustain their societies and keep themselves thriving, and to this end trade relations and eventually trade routes began to emerge. This aided civilizations in their discovery of foreign items that they may use to better their societies. These items traded ranged from complex technology to something as simple as nutmeg. The main trade routes that were utilized in East and South Asia were the silk road and the Indian Ocean Trade Network. In the 7th- 12th centuries, both the silk road and Indian ocean trade route had affected east and south Asia by the introduction of religions such as Buddhism changing government forms and altering the belief systems of society and changing how individuals live their daily lives, however differences were present in the impact that these routes had on daily lives, such as the Indian Ocean Trade Route giving rise to an entire new culture in Africa known as the Swahili and leading to the innovation of the sailing boat known as the Dhow, and the silk road led to the transmission of religion and resources throughout Eurasia and it led to utilization of caravans and animals as a means of trade.
The trading routes, created by the desire from both the New and Old World for exotic foods and animals,
While the Indian Ocean and Silk Road were different as trade networks with respect to the spread of Religion and the process of travel, they were similar in terms of the spread of disease through trade.
The Silk Road was a route going through Asia, Europe, and Africa. It went through mountains, rivers, oceans, hills, and deserts. The Columbian exchange was between Africa and Europe but not Asia. The Columbian exchange was operated by boats and then traded at the docks. The Silk Road traded goods by people traveling it and going
Many thousands of years ago, upon the earliest creations of civilization, there were two thriving civilizations. Both of which knew little to nothing about each other’s existence. In this ancient world, there was no connection of the two civilizations, no trade in commerce or culture. It was not until the second century BC that Europe and Eastern Asia interacted in a significant way. What is known as “The Silk Road” was established during the Han Dynasty of China, it was a network of trade routes that created a link between these two regions during this ancient world (ancient.eu). Though these routes have history prior to the Han Dynasty, this is when many historians see the routes in full practice. This time during the second century BC was crucial in the connection of these separately thriving civilizations, connecting them through commerce, religion, and exploration.
Long distance trading had made it possible for people from different cultures to interact. Silk roads were one of the famous trade routes that were used in the ancient time. It stretched from China to central Asia and westward. It merged into one big series of routes. Traders traveled segments of the route, passing their goods on to others who took them further along the road, and in turn, passed them on again. The effect of long-distance exchanges altered the political geography of Afro-Eurasia. The Middle East became a commercial middle ground between the Mediterranean and Indian. The horse-riding nomads of Inner Eurasia made long-distance trade possible. Kushan empire in Afghanistan and the Indus River basin embraced a large and diverse
The Silk Roads were an established trading route between Western Rome and China`s Han Dynasty. This trade network included land and maritime routes. Due to these various trading mechanisms, many products could be traded to many different locations. The patterns of interaction that occurred along the Silk Road from 200 B.C.E. to 1450 C.E. show that changes and continuities regarding the Silk Road included products traded, cultural expressions and diffusion, and religion.
The Trans-Saharan trade was at the peak of formation from the 8th century until the early 17th century. The trade route existed before those times but was not as predominant. The route required one to travel across the Sahara from North to South. They would go from sub-Sharan Africa to the North African Coast or Europe to the Levant and vis versa.
empire covered they were able to send goods to locations all over the world with