Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Did Ancient Rome and China Know About Each Other? (Encore)
Episode Date: January 24, 20232,000 years ago the Han Empire in China and the Roman Empire in Europe were the two greatest empires in the world. Between them, they covered an enormous amount of the Earth’s land and a large perc...entage of the world’s population. But were these two great empires even aware of each other? If so, was there any contact between them? Find out how these two great ancient empires interacted with each other on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey everyone, this is Gary. I'm off this week traveling and attending a conference, and while I'm away,
I've lined up some vintage episodes and deep cuts that most of you probably haven't heard before.
And even if you have heard them, a refresher never hurts. I'll be back again with brand new episodes
on January 30th.
Two thousand years ago, the Han Empire in China and the Roman Empire in Europe were the two greatest
empires in the world. Between them, they covered an enormous amount of the Earth's surface and a large
percentage of the world's population. But were these two great empires even aware of each other?
If so, was there any contact between them? Find out how these two great ancient empires
interacted with each other on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? Throughline is a podcast that takes you
back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night. And how it shaped the world
now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. Before I start, I should say that
whenever we talk about the ancient world, there's a lot we just don't know. Most of the
writings we have from this time were written down hundreds of years after the events took place.
And of the things that were written down, the vast majority of them have been lost to history.
So what we have is a scattering of documents and whatever archaeologists might find.
That being said, there is ample evidence that China and Rome knew about each other,
but it doesn't mean they knew very much.
What they knew mostly consisted of rumors, legend, and stories.
There is little evidence of any direct contact between the two empires.
Not only were they separated by enormous distances with deserts, mountains, and seas between them,
but they also had some very large and powerful kingdoms and empires between them,
in particular the Parthian Empire, which consisted of much of what is today Iran and Iraq.
The Parthians had a very lucrative business in serving as middlemen between China and Rome.
Most land trade routes passed through their territory as they controlled all the land between
the Caspian Sea and the Indian Ocean. If you traveled by sea, you'd have to stop in one
of their ports if you wanted to avoid an open ocean crossing between India and the Arabian Peninsula,
which few ships at the time were willing to do.
To look at what they knew of each other, let's start with the Chinese and what they knew
about the Romans. Most of what we know about Chinese views of Rome,
come from a document called the Wei Lu, which was written by the historian Yu Huang,
during the three kingdoms period between 239 and 265.
The Chinese name for Rome was Da Quinn, or Great Quinn.
This could be a reference to the Quinn dynasty and the first emperor of United China,
Quinn. This might have been their way of implying that the Roman Empire was on a par with the
Quinn Empire in terms of greatness. Some of the passages indicate just how basic their knowledge of Rome was.
Here are some of the passages from the translation of the Wei Lu.
This country, Daiquin, has more than 400 smaller cities and towns.
It extends several thousand Li in all directions.
The king has his capital, that is the city of Rome, close to the mouth of a river, the tiber.
The outer walls of the city are made of stone.
This description of Rome is so generic it could apply to almost any city in Europe or even most of Asia.
It continues, the ruler of this country is not permanent, when disasters were
result from an unusual phenomenon, they unceremoniously replace him, installing a virtuous
man as king, and release the old king who does not dare show resentment. This is probably referring
to the Roman system under the Republic, where consuls were elected to one-year terms. However,
by the time the Wei Lu was written, it had been several centuries since this was the case.
The Wei Lu even goes to explain why they haven't had direct contact with Rome. They have always
wanted to communicate with China, but Aung Shi, Parthia, jealous.
of their profits would not allow them to pass through. And this was right on the money. The Parthians
made too much money off goods passing through their territory, and the last thing they wanted
was for Romans and Chinese to trade with each other directly. They also indicate the primary
product which Rome was importing. Furthermore, they regularly make a profit by obtaining Chinese
silk, unraveling it, and making fine Western silk damask. This is why this country trades with
Aung-she, Parthia, across the middle of the sea. And this was also true, the Romans would further
enhance the silk which they imported, almost all of which they imported from the Parthians.
They identified the Roman Senate by noting, they have appointed 36 leaders who discuss events
frequently. The Senate actually had way more than 36 people, but they did get the gist of it.
They even noted that Romans wore something like a toga and that they cut their hair.
So what did the Romans know of the Chinese?
The Roman word for China was Syrica, and the Chinese were called Syrians.
This word derives from the Latin word for silk, Syracum.
While Syracum mostly refers to China, it really sort of applies to everything east of India.
They just didn't have enough knowledge of the region to differentiate the different cultures which live there.
Pliny the Elder noted,
Then east of the Caspians, we find again tribes of Skithians, and again desert tracts occupied only by wild animals,
till we come to that mountain chain overhanging the sea, which is called Tabis.
Not till nearly half the length of the coast, which looks northeast, has been put past,
do you find inhabited country?
The first race then encountered are the Ceres, so famous for the fleecy product of their forests.
He got the general direction of China right,
however, he had no clue where silk came from, thinking it was a product of the forest and was a type of wool.
Almost all mentions of Syracca in Roman literature are with regards to,
silk or its location. There is very little which indicates they knew about Chinese culture or the
people who live there. As for trade, we know the Romans imported silk, but we have very little
evidence of what the Chinese might have imported. The truth is, they probably imported very little
of actual Roman origin, because most of what Rome exported would have been bulky goods like
wine, wheat, and ore, which would have made it to Parthia, but not much further. However, there have been
some recent discoveries which indicate that there were some Roman goods in China. There have been
several finds, including the tombs of Xi'an, where Roman coins were found. Recent finds of Roman
coins in Japan almost certainly found their way there via China. There were also several samples
of Roman glass, which were found in Chinese tombs as well. There was glass making in China,
so the demand for foreign glass probably wasn't that high, and transporting something so fragile,
so far was extremely difficult. Did any people ever make the trip from Rome to China?
The answer is yes, but not very many.
The Roman historian Flores made note of envoys from the east who visited Rome during the rule of the Emperor Augustus.
Even the rest of the nations of the world, which were not subject to imperial sway, were sensible of its grandeur and looked with reverence to the Roman people, the great conqueror of nations.
Thus, even Scithians and Samartians sent envoys to seek the friendship of Rome.
Nay, the series came likewise, and the Indians who dwelt beneath the vertical sun, bringing presence of precious stones and pearls,
and elephants, but thinking all of less moment than the vastness of the journey which they had undertaken
and which they had said they occupied four years. In truth, it need but look at their complexion to
see that they were people of another world than ours. There is no record in any of the documents
of the Han Empire which made note of an official delegation to Rome, so they were probably
just merchants acting on their own. In the year 97, a Han envoy by the name of Gan Ying was sent to
explore the west. He arrived in Parthia, but the Parthian convinced him not to travel any further
west as they told him it was dangerous and it would take two more years to get to Rome.
Most Chinese knowledge of Rome probably came from secondhand information learned by Gainian
on his voyage. There was a Roman delegation that arrived in China in the year 166.
The Han records show them having been sent by an emperor called Andun, which is believed to have been
the Emperor Antoninus Pius or his adopted son, Emperor Marcus Aurelius. The envoy
were said to have traveled by sea from the south, entering China through what is today Vietnam.
As with the Chinese in Rome, there are no Roman documents confirming that an envoy was sent to China.
Nonetheless, the Emperor Huon played up the visit of the Romans to help his domestic political
situation, as ambassadors from Da Quinn provided him with a great deal of prestige.
So the answer to if the Chinese and Romans knew of each other is yes. But what they knew is
really vague secondhand information. The Chinese knew the Romans wanted their silk, and the Romans knew
they produced silk, but there was almost no direct contact between the two empires. Before a close,
I should make note of one final thing, the legend of the lost Roman legion. In 54 BC, the Roman general
Krasis, one of the original members of the first triumvirate with Pompey and Julius Caesar,
lost the Parthians in the Battle of Karai. It was one of the most humiliating losses in Roman history.
20,000 Romans were killed, and over 10,000 were captured. Those 10,000 captured Roman legionaries
were believed to have been sent to fight for Parthia on their eastern frontier.
The Chinese general Ban Gu reported of fighting approximately 100 men
who used what he called a fish scale formation,
which is very similar to the Roman testudo formation,
where soldiers would interlock their shields for protection.
A legend started in the 20th century in the Chinese village of Lycheon
that some of the people there were descended from these Roman legions
who worked their way to China after the Battle of Karai.
Unfortunately, there has been no archaeological evidence
of any ancient Europeans ever having traveled that far inland into China.
And recent DNA testing shows that European traits that some of the residents show
most probably came from Central Asia.
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