Trade Routes: Silk Road, Indian Ocean, Trans-Saharan

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Presentation transcript:

Trade Routes: Silk Road, Indian Ocean, Trans-Saharan The spread of economic activity, religion, and disease through trade

Impact of Trade Brought wealth and access to foreign products and enabled people to concentrate their efforts on economic activities best suited to their regions Facilitated the spread of religious traditions beyond their original homelands Facilitated the transmission of disease

Classical Civilizations Classical empires such as the Han, Kushan, Parthian, and Roman brought order and stability to large territories They undertook massive construction projects to improve transportation infrastructure (roads, bridges, etc.) The expanding size of the empires brought them within close proximity to or even bordering on each other As classical empires reduced the costs of long-distance trade, merchants began establishing an extensive network of trade routes that linked much of Eurasia and northern Africa Collectively, these routes are known as the “Silk Roads” because high-quality silk from China was one of the principal commodities exchanged over the roads

Where did it go? Linked China and the Holy Roman Empire The two extreme ends of Eurasia Started in the Han capital of Chang’an There the road split into two main branches that skirted the desert to the north and south In northern Iran, the route joined with roads to ports on the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf and proceeded to Palmyra (modern Syria) There it met roads coming from Arabia and ports on the Red Sea The Silk Roads also provided access at ports like Guangzhou in southern China that led to maritime routes to India and Ceylon (modern-day Sri Lanka)

Organization of Long-distance Trade Individual merchants usually did not travel from one end of Eurasia to the other Instead they handled long-distance trade in stages

Silk Road Trade to the West Silk and spices traveled west from southeast Asia, China, and India China was the only country in classical times where cultivators and weavers had developed techniques for producing high-quality silk fabrics Spices served not just to season food but also as drugs, anesthetics, aphrodisiacs, perfumes, aromatics, and magical potions Chinese silk making

Silk Road Trade to the East Central Asia produced large, strong horses and jade that was highly prized by Chinese stone carvers The Roman empire traded glassware, jewelry, works of art, decorative items, perfumes, bronze goods, wool and linen textiles, pottery, iron tools, olive oil, wine, and gold and silver bullion Mediterranean merchants and manufacturers often imported raw materials such as uncut gemstones which they exported as finished products in the form of expensive jewelry and decorative items

Silk Road Technology Paper making Block printing Gunpowder Compass There were  Four Great Chinese Inventions that were brought back to Europe Bronze brought to China from Rome

Spread of Religion: Buddhism and Hinduism Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) first announced his doctrine publicly in India in 528 B.C. By the 3rd Century B.C., Buddhism was well-established in northern India Buddhism was especially successful in attracting merchants as converts Merchants carried Buddhism along the Silk Roads where it first established a presence in the oasis towns where merchants and their caravans stopped for food, rest, lodging, and markets Hinduism also spread along the Silk Roads, primarily along the sea lanes

Spread of Religion: Christianity Antioch, the western terminus of the overland Silk Roads, was an important center in early Christianity Like other religions, Christianity followed the trade routes and expanded east throughout Mesopotamia, Iran, and as far away as India However, its greatest concentration was in the Mediterranean basin, where the Roman Roads, like the Silk Roads, provided ready transportation

Disease: Bubonic Plague During the 1330s plague erupted in southwestern China During the 1340s, Mongols, merchants, and other travelers helped to spread the disease along trade routes to points west of China It thrived in the trading cities of central Asia where domestic animals and rodents provided abundant breeding grounds for fleas and the plague bacillus By 1346 it had reached the Black Sea ports of Caffa and Tana

Bubonic Plague in Europe In 1347 Italian merchants fled the plague-infected Black Sea ports and unwittingly spread the disease to the Mediterranean Basin By 1348, following trade routes, plague had sparked epidemics in most of western Europe Illustration of bubonic plague in the Toggenburg Bible (1411)

End of Silk Road The spread of the bubonic plague and the collapse of the Mongol Empire (we’ll talk more about the Mongols in Lesson 27) made overland travel on the Silk Roads more dangerous than before Muslim mariners began avoiding the overland route and bringing Asian goods to Cairo where Italian merchants purchased them for distribution in western Europe Europeans wanted access to those Asian goods without having to go through the Muslim middlemen They began seeking maritime trade routes directly to Asia which would largely displace the Silk Roads European Explorations

Indian Ocean Trade “Zone of interaction” First ocean to be crossed “Sailor's ocean” Warm water Fairly placid waters Wind patterns: one way = north of equator, the other = south of the equator Lateen Sail allowed sailors to sail across the Indian ocean, could sail into wind

Trade goods and technology Teak from India Arabian horses to India Spices from Southeast Asia & Spice Islands Frankincense from Arabia and Africa Technology Many of the same as silk road Swords from Arabia Slave trades Slaves from East Africa to Arabia/India

Spread of Ideas Religion Trading Language Indian merchants brought Brahmin priests Muslim scholars brought by Arab merchants Christian merchants brought priests Trading Language Swahili: mix of Arabic, Indian, and Bantu (African)

Trans-Saharan Trade A series of powerful trading kingdoms emerged in West Africa. The West African kingdoms controlled important trade routes that connected North Africa and West Africa. Beginning of Trans-Saharan Trade North Africa was rich in the salt that West Africa lacked. West Africa was rich in gold. The Trans-Saharan trade led to an exchange of salt for gold.

Technology Africa was not as advanced in technology as their trading partners Domesticated animals such as camels were introduced to northern trade partners Certain types of weaponry also traded

Ghana: 400-1200 Ghana was called the “land of gold” but it did not have gold. Instead, the trade routes passed through Ghana and the kings of Ghana taxed all entering and exiting the kingdom. The kingdom of Ghana emerged as early as 500 A.D. It collapsed in the 11th century. The kings of Ghana used their wealth to build a powerful army and keep the peace within their empire. Religious Muslims, Almoravids, invaded and destroyed Ghana in the 1100s but another West African kingdom rose to power to protect the valuable Salt for Gold Trade.

Mali: 1250-1400 After decline of Ghana, the West African Kingdom of Mali emerged as a great trading empire. Took control of Gold Trade Most famous king: Mansa Musa set up a great center of learning in Timbuktu Expanded empire Converted to Islam and went on Hajj Gave away tremendous amount of gold

Songhai: 1450-1600 The West African kingdom of Songhai was the largest of the three trading kingdoms Muslim controlled the profitable Trans-Saharan trade Eventually, the kingdom of Songhai fell to invading armies from Morocco in 1591 (they had guns)