Transcript Slide 1
Middle East and
South Asia: How
separate are
they?
They are regions of Asia …
Caucasus
Iraq
West Cent
Asia
Iran
Tarim Basin
Altai
Moutains
Gobi Desert
MongoliaAmur
North China
Hindu Kush
Indus Basin
Ganga Basin
Burma to
Vietnam
… and more broadly, of Afro-Eurasia
(the
world region that Marshall Hodgson considers the vast historic homeland of
what he calls “Islamicate cultures”).
Early urban civilization
sites at Harappa (Indus
Valley, now in Pakistan)
were connected by trade
and migration to
Mesopotamia and
Mediterranean Basin
Indo-European
languages spread with
ancient migrations
across western and
southern Asia
Many routes of mobility well documented and
influential across Afro-Eurasia by 1500 were alive
and well 2000 years earlier …
Ancient silk road and
Marco Polo’s route
Routes interconnected
regions of Afro-Eurasia
by land and sea. They
carried all the elements
of culture in various
directions.
<==Spread of Buddhism:
300BCE-300AD
Spread of
Black
Plague,
circa 1300
Alexander the Great
followed trade routes
to India, fought and
lost battles in the
Hindu Kush, and died
in retreat in Iran
He lost to Mauryan armies
dispatched from the
eastern imperial heartland
of the Ganga River basin.
India’s first empire
marched west in the 4th
century BC … as
Alexander marched
west …
The Mauryan Empire
rose on the eastern
Ganga edge of routes
extending across Iran to
the Mediterranean …
marked by competitors
for territorial control over
routes of mobility.
The stupa at Sanchi is one of the oldest of the
surviving monuments from the Buddhist
period.
… but the homeland of Buddhism
was always on the move … in
various directions
Empire in South Asia was always a
moveable feast,
moving along routes of trade and
cultural exchange …
… and compelled
substantially by
nomadic warriorherder-merchants who
migrated to conquer
settled sites of
intensive agricultural
development –
dependent on river
water supplies – along
routes of trade and
cultural mobility in one
vast differentiated
region of Afro-Eurasia
… always connected
to the Middle East.