Transcript File
UNIT 3
REGIONAL &
TRANSREGIONAL
INTERACTIONS
20%
600ce
To
1450ce
BIG 4
Silk Road, Trans Saharan, Indian Ocean,
Mediterranean
These large trade routes led to the birth and
growth of powerful new trading cities
Novgorod, Timbuktu, Swahili, Huangzhou, Calicut,
Baghdad, Melaka
1. New luxury goods spread along these routes
Silk, cotton, porcelain, spices, gems, slaves, exotic
animals
2. New commercial technology aided this spread
Caravanserai (roadside inns)
Camel saddles
BIG 4
3. New navigational technology aided this spread
Compass (from China) - magnetic
Astrolabe (from Hellenistic world) - altitude
Larger ship designs – “junks” ( Sternpost rudders and keeps =
greater stability)
4. New economic tools facilitated this spread
Bills of exchange
Credit/checks/banks
Government coins/paper money
Trading organizations
Government commercial infrastructure
**All of this expedited by the spread of large empires !
SILK ROAD
SILK ROADS: EXCHANGE ACROSS
EURASIA
Silk Road trade flourished the most when
large and powerful states provided
security for merchants and travelers
2 nd to 2 nd: Rome, Han
7 th & 8 th: Byzantine, Abbasid, Tang
13 th & 14 th: Mongols
SILK ROADS: EXCHANGE ACROSS
EURASIA
Goods contributed to Silk Road commerce
China: silk, bamboo, mirrors, gunpowder, paper,
rhubarb, ginger, chrysanthemums
Siberia/Central Asia: furs, walrus tusks, amber,
livestock, horses, falcons, hides, copper vessels, tents,
saddles, slaves
India: cotton textiles, herbal medicine, precious stones,
spices
Middle East: dates, nuts, dried fruit, dyes, lapis lazuli,
swords
Mediterranean: gold coins, glassware, glazes,
grapevines, jewelry, artworks, perfume, wool and linen
textiles, olive oil
SILK ROADS: EXCHANGE ACROSS
EURASIA
Silk though?
Status symbol! (Soft feel too)
“Husband no more an acquaintance to his wife’s body than a
foreigner”
As currency, as tribute
How is it made?
Mulberry tree leaves – silk worms – women ardently worked to
turn into fabric
Knowledge of how to do this spread beyond China by 6 th
century CE
Volume of trade on global scale was modest, however
SILK ROADS: EXCHANGE ACROSS
EURASIA
Buddhism
Conversion was a voluntary process
Diffusion accepted in large part by merchants, who
preferred universal message rather than caste
system of Hinduism
Buddhist monasteries – place of familiar rest,
resupply (long-distance trade)
Highly literate religion, slow to catch on with
nomadic peoples
Buddhism the religion of no desires?
Mahayana flourished on Silk Roads
INDIAN OCEAN SEA LANES
INDIAN OCEAN TRADE
INDIAN OCEAN TRADE
Monsoons
Nov-Feb: south form India to Africa
Apr-Sep: north Africa to India
INDIAN OCEAN TRADE
Is this the first time trading on Indian
Ocean? No.
Mesopotamia-Indus
Ethiopia/Somalia-Phoenicia
Tempo picks up…
5 th-3 rdBCE: Knowledge of monsoons, new tech
(lateen, dhow)
Faster…
6 thCE: New tech (junk, astrolabe, compass)
INDIAN OCEAN TRADE
Goods?
Not luxury goods, such as on Silk Roads
Why? Cost of transportation cheaper as boats could carry more.
Bulk.
Products contributed to Indian Ocean commerce:
Mediterranean: ceramics, glassware, wine, gold, olive oil
E Africa: ivory, gold, iron goods, slaves, quartz, leopard skins
Arabia: frankincense, myrrh, perfumes
India: grain, ivory, precious stones, cotton textiles, spices, timber
SE Asia: tin, cloves, nutmeg, mace
China: silks, porcelain, tea
TRANS-SAHARAN CARAVAN ROUTES
SAND ROADS: SAHARAN EXCHANGE
Camel
Can go 10 days without water
Originated in Arabia
Caravans – hundred camels/person
Travel at night to avoid heat
25-50 miles/day
Caravanserai (roadside inns)
MEDITERRANEAN SEA LANES
TRAVELERS’ TALES & OBSERVATIONS
These travelers, through their various accounts, reveal as much
about themselves and about mis/perceptions generated by cross cultural encounters.
XUANZANG
“Schwen-Zahng” (600-664)
Highly -educated, Buddhist monk from China traveled to
India for 16 yrs for religious reasons
A Biography of the Tripitaka Master (Huili)
Mahayana Xuanzang worshipped Bodhi tree/Buddha; Nalanda
University had 10k monks teaching Mahayana, 700yrs at that
point (345)
Religion and Politics king gave land/villages/people to support
Nalanda, “the scholars could therefore gain achievement in
learning (346).”
Record of the Western Region (Xuanzang)
Social stratification four classifications (347)
Specialization of labor, urban planning (centralized government),
monasteries (346)
Propriety fidelity, filial piety (347)
MARCO POLO
Marco Polo (1254-1324)
From a wealthy merchant family in Venice (north Italian city state, one of if not wealthiest in Mediterranean)
Traveled under security of the Mongol empire, living in China
for next 17 yrs and working for Kublai Khan
Very influential on western world
Skepticism today! – Why? Left out foot-binding, Great Wall,
tea
Travels of Marco Polo (Marco Polo, 1299)
Illustrates Hangzhou (“Kinsay”) as “finest city in the world”
Buddhism, silk, baths, long-distance trade, women, bureaucracy,
weapons, Great Khan’s soldiers
IBN BATTUTU
Ibn Battuta (1304-1368)
From Morocco, traveled throughout all of Eurasia (75,000
miles)
Islamic scholar who often traveled with merchants
Travels in Asia & Africa (Ibn Battuta, 1354)
Women in Walata (W Africa)
“Surpassing beauty”
“Shown more respect than men”
“A person’s heirs are his sister’s heirs, not his own sons”
“Do not veil themselves”
“Companions”
Qadi, safety of the road, “Pempi” shows tradition > Islam,
submissive to king, crowded mosques, naked girls, strange diet
WALATA (WEST AFRICA)