Cross-Cultural Exchange on the Silk Roads

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Transcription:

Cross-Cultural Exchange on the Silk Roads

Trade Networks Develop Long-distance travel increases in Classical Age Better roads, large empires that reduced risk Sea lanes 1. Indian Ocean trade Discovery of Monsoon wind patterns Egyptians discovered the patterns that enabled mariners to safely to Indian Ocean basin Winter-Blow from NE Summer- Blow from SW 2. Mare Nostrom

The Silk Roads, 200 B.C.E. 300 C.E.

Chinese Silk in Rome A mosaic of the second century C.E. depicts a musician playing flutes and a dancer wearing a thin and revealing silk garment.

The spread of Buddhism, Hinduism, and Christianity, 200 B.C.E. 400 C.E.

Spread of Buddhism Buddhism becomes the dominant faith of Silk Roads in 200BCE -700 CE Merchants carry religious ideas of India through central Asia to east Asia Cosmopolitan centers promote development of monasteries to shelter traveling merchants Oasis towns: Merv, Bukhara, Samarkand, Kashgar Early Buddhist sculpture in Bactria reflected the influence of Mediterranean and Greek artistic styles. This seated Buddha from the first or second century C.E. bears Caucasian features and wears Mediterranean-style dress.

Buddhism in China Originally, Buddhism restricted to foreign merchant populations Monasteries and missionaries offered Buddhism the potential to attract Chinese converts Spreads to larger population beginning 5 th c. CE after fall of the Huns Confucianism unpopular after fall

Christianity in SW Asia Influence of ascetic practices from India Abstained from sexual contact, refused fine food, sometimes w/drew from family life and society These practices influenced some Mediterranean Christians Desert-dwelling hermits, monastic societies After 5 th c. CE, most Christians of SW Asia became Nestorians Emphasized human nature of Jesus Spread these ideas east across Silk Roads

The Spread of Epidemic Disease Role of trade routes in spread of pathogens Smallpox, measles, bubonic plague Chinese and Roman populations decline ¼ to 1/3 from their highpoint Reign of Augustus, pop. 60 million to 2 nd c. CE only 45 million Smallpox in Med. 160-180 CE most destructive By 400 CE, Rome was 40 million Effect: Economic slowdown, move to regional self-sufficiency

Epidemics in the Han and Roman Empires Chinese Population, 0-600 CE Roman Population, 0-400 CE 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 c. 0 CE c. 200 CE c. 400 CE c. 600 CE 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 c. 0 CE c. 200 CE c. 400 Millions Millions

Fall of Rome Internal political problems 1. The Barracks Emperors 235-284 C.E., 26 claimants to the throne, all but one killed in power struggles 2. Epidemics Disintegration of imperial economy in favor of local and regional self-sufficient economies 3. Divisions and Factions b/c of the size cause problems Sculpture of the tetrarchs, or four corulers of the Roman empire, during the late third century C.E.; from left, Galerius, Constantius, Diocletian, and Maximian. Do you think the tetrarchs were really such close companions as this sculpture suggests?

Diocletian (r. 284-305 CE) Divided empire into two administrative districts Co-Emperors rule each district More efficient Currency, budget reform Adjust expenditures to income Price caps to stop inflation Army is under imperial control Relative stability disappears after Diocletians s death, civil war follows Constantine emerges victorious Moves capital to Constantinople

Fall of Rome: External Factors 1. Visigoths, influenced by Roman law, Christianity Formerly buffer states for Roman Empire 2. Attacked by Huns under Attila in 5 th c. CE 3. Massive migration of Germanic peoples into Roman Empire Fleeing the Huns 4. Germanic tribes sack Rome in 410 CE, established Germanic emperor in 476 Ce

Germanic invasions and the fall of the western Roman empire, 450 476 C.E.Many different groups invaded the Roman empire following many different routes. Why did the Germanic invasions concentrate on the western Roman empire?

Cultural Change in the Roman Empire Growth of Christianity Constantine s Vision, 312 CE Promulgates Edict of Milan, allows Christian practice Converts to Christianity 380 CE Emperor Theodosius proclaims Christianity official religion of Roman Empire The colossal head of Constantine is one of the few remaining fragments from a marble statue that originally stood about 14 meters (46 feet) tall.