Developmental Historiography of the Ancient Silk Road

Publication Date: 12/10/2021

DOI: 10.52589/AJCHRT-A7OD6NDN


Author(s): Sheriff Ghali Ibrahim, Akeje Kizito.

Volume/Issue: Volume 4 , Issue 1 (2021)



Abstract:

This study seeks to explain the history of the ancient Silk Road and also explain its strategic importance as a network of trade routes connecting China and the Far East with the Middle East and Europe. Using the library's documented instrument and historical descriptive methodology, findings show that the Silk Road is historically connected with the Eastern and Western civilizations and culture. Merchants on the Silk Road transported goods and traded at bazaars along the way. They traded goods such as silk, spices, tea, ivory, cotton, wool, precious metals, and ideas. The Silk Road also enabled cultural transfers, for instance when Genghis Khan and the Mongols invaded China, they came along with their own culture, e.g., buttons on clothes were introduced in China as a cultural import from Central Asia especially under the rule of Kublai Khan during the Yuan Dynasty. The paper concludes that the Silk Road rose to prominence during the Han and Tang dynasties. The long-distance trade at this time did not just transport goods and luxuries, it was also a lifeline of ideas and innovations from Persia, India and countries of the Middle East and Central Asia.


Keywords:

Silk Road, Development, Historiography, Mongols, Yuan Dynasty, Bazaars.


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