Silk Road - History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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and high in value because they were carried on the backs of the limited number of camels in each caravan.
Thus, of necessity they were luxury items, not bulky rawmaterials or essential goods for daily use.
The oases and towns along the route, which were located in or near remote areas, profited from the Silk Road trade and reliedon it for their existence.
The great empires of Persia, China, and Rome, however, could easily have survived without the commerce in luxury goods.
V SPREAD OF RELIGION AND ART
Although the economic significance of the Silk Road was limited, its cultural impact was great.
As merchants, artisans, and missionaries traveled along the trade routes,they brought with them new products, ideas, technologies, and aesthetic principles.
For example, in the late 2nd century AD, when the Han dynasty was declining and China was in chaos, the Chinese people found stability and comfort in a new religion introduced to them via Silk Road travelers.
The religion, Buddhism, had originatedin northern India in the 6th century BC.
It began to appear in Central Asian oases and towns, finally spreading into China in the 1st century AD.
Buddhism greatly influenced not only the spiritual views of the Chinese but also their diets, funerary practices, knowledge of the outside world, and arts, as well as the economic structureof their society.
The pagoda style in architecture, new designs and motifs in painting, and sculptures of the historical Buddha and other Buddhist figures contributedenormously to Chinese art ( see Chinese Art and Architecture).
Spectacular Buddhist sculptures and paintings were produced in the Mogao caves of Dunhuang and in Kyzyl (in present-day southeastern Russia), two vital locations along the Silk Road.
VI HEIGHT AND DECLINE OF THE SILK ROAD
The fall of the Han dynasty in the early 3rd century caused Silk Road trade to decline.
However, the rise of the Tang dynasty in the 7th century revived this commerce.In fact, the Tang period witnessed an even greater quantity of goods flowing across Asia.
Simultaneously, cultural transmission increased, as Islam, Persian mysteryreligions, and Central Asian music and dance reached China and influenced Chinese civilization.
The fall of the Tang in the early 10th century dramatically curtailed trade.
This trend reversed in the 13th century, when the conquests of the Mongols ushered in an eraof frequent and extended contacts between East and West.
Carving out the largest contiguous land empire in world history, the Mongols expedited and encouragedtravel across Eurasia.
For the first time, western Asians and Europeans could journey as far east as China.
Artisans, envoys, missionaries, and merchants—includingMarco Polo—made the trip.
This increased contact created a demand for Asian goods in Europe, a demand that eventually inspired the search for a sea route to Asia.
The discovery of a sea route from Europe to Asia in the late 15th century around South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope dealt a damaging blow to the Silk Road trade.Ocean-going vessels could convey the bulkier essential goods and raw materials that caravans on the Silk Road could not.
Sea trade also entailed less cost andexperienced less harassment and plunder than did land-based trade.
As long-distance overland trade ceased and poor agricultural techniques increasingly changed fertile lands to deserts, Central Asian towns and oases declinedsignificantly.
During the 18th and 19th centuries most of Central Asia fell to either the expanding Qing dynasty of China or to the Russian Empire.
Chinese and Russian(and later Soviet) authorities continued to rule the Islamic and Buddhist peoples of Central Asia until recent times.
Meanwhile, European archaeologists and explorerscarted some of the greatest artistic treasures out of the region.
They sent these treasures to the British Museum in London, England, the Musée Guimet in Paris, France,and other museums in Europe.
VII THE SILK ROAD TODAY
Although the Silk Road no longer exists as a trade route, sites along its course remain important tourist destinations.
These sites include the ancient tradingmetropolises of Samarqand, Bukhara, and Khiva, and the towns of Dunhuang, Kashi, and Turpan, with their artistic and architectural treasures.
Contributed By:Morris RossabiMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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