Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Silk Road (Encore)
Episode Date: December 10, 2024Despite having very different cultures and being separated by thousands of kilometers, Asia and Europe have been connected for thousands of years. Through a series of overland and sea trade routes, ...goods, ideas, and people were able to move from east to west and vice versa. These routes were responsible for some of history’s greatest cultural exchanges as well as some of its greatest disasters. Learn more about the Silk Road and how it shaped history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed MasterClass Get up to 50% off at MASTERCLASS.COM/EVERYWHERE Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! ButcherBox New users that sign up for ButcherBox will receive 2lbs of grass fed ground beef in every box for the lifetime of their subscription + $20 off your first box when you use code daily at checkout! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer 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 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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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Despite having radically different cultures and being separated by thousands of kilometers,
Asia and Europe have been connected for thousands of years.
Through a series of overland and sea trade routes, goods, ideas, and people were able to move from east to west and vice versa.
These routes were responsible for some of history's greatest cultural exchanges,
as well as some of its greatest disasters.
Learn more about the Silk Road and how it shaped history on this episode of Everything Everywhere.
daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine 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.
I should kick off this episode by explaining exactly what the Silk Road was because there's a lot of
confusion surrounding it. The Silk Road was not a road, meaning it was not a singular route that
connected Asia and Europe. Moreover, some of the things that fell under the Silk Road weren't even
roads. At the time it was used, no one called the Silk Road the Silk Road, sort of like how the term
Byzantine Empire was created after the fact. And to make it even better, the Silk Road wasn't even
necessarily about Silk. The term Silk Road was popularized in 1877 by the German geographer Ferdinand
Richthoven, who called it the Zadensstraza, or literally the Silk Road. The term Silk Road is one that
most people have probably heard and are familiar with, but it's fallen out of favor amongst historians
simply because of all the inaccuracies it entails. The terms Silk Roads or Silk Routes is now often
used simply because it's a bit more accurate. However, I'm going to continue to use Silk Road
for the rest of this episode, but keep in mind that the term Silk Road is more of a metaphorical one
than a literal one. It refers to all of the trade routes between East and West and not necessarily
even trade routes on land, even though the term is most closely associated with the land routes
that went through Central Asia. So that being said, the origins of the Silk Road are usually given
to have started in the year 138 BC when the Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty sent an envoy by the name of
Zhang Shien to establish diplomatic relations with the tribes and kingdoms of Central Asia.
If you look at a map of the territory of the Han Dynasty, it covers most of eastern China,
which was the traditional core of Chinese civilization.
And then it extends westward in a very long salient, aka panhandle, all the way out into Central Asia.
While there was no single Silk Road, there were points where mountain passes or other geographical features often focused travelers.
The Silk Road could also be considered more of a chain with multiple links than a singular road.
When goods arrived from China and Central Asia, they would be bought and sold by merchants,
who would then trade them with other merchants further to the west, who would in turn trade them
with other merchants and so on and so on.
Most of the trade from China began in several inland cities, but primarily from the city of
Shian, which used to be called Chang'an.
This was where the broad plains of eastern China started to meet the foothills and mountains
of Western China.
From there, it was a pretty straight shot arching around the Tibetan Plateau until it reached
the Takla Makhan Desert.
which is an enormous barren area in western China.
The route split into a northern and southern route, each of which went around the impassable
desert.
From there, it would pass through the Wakhan Corridor in what is today Afghanistan.
If you look at a map of modern Afghanistan, you'll notice a finger of land that extends to the east
and has a tiny border with China.
That is the Wakon Corridor.
The Wakon Corridor was and is an important pass between the Palmier Mountains to the north
and the Hindu Kush Mountains to the south.
From there, the main routes extended through the modern-day countries of Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan.
Once you get into Central Asia, you encounter several bodies of water in succession, the Aral Sea,
the Caspian Sea, and the Black Sea.
There were major routes that went south of these bodies and routes which went to the north.
The southern routes went through Iran, with branches extending into the Caucasus to link up with
the northern route.
Palmyra in modern-day Syria is usually considered to be the
end of the Silk Road to the south of the Black Sea, and from here would be connected to Egypt
and Constantinople, with routes going even further to places such as Venice. Several major cities
today were located on what is considered part of the Silk Road, including the aforementioned
Cheyenne, Samarkand, Tashkent, Baghdad, Aleppo, and Damascus. While these routes through
Central Asia were considered to be the heart of the land part of the Silk Road, there were also
routes going south as well. Known today as the T-horse Road, these went from Southern China.
into what is today Myanmar and ended up in Bangladesh and the Indian state of West Bengal.
From India, goods would then be distributed through trade networks in India and possibly loaded
onto ships. Here I have to stress just how inefficient shipping material by land was.
Even today, shipping pretty much anything by water is more efficient than shipping by land in terms of
cost. To illustrate the point, during colonial America, it cost as much to ship a piece of furniture
from London to Boston, as it did to ship the same piece of furniture 40 miles overland from Boston.
And that was in an era of larger sailing ships. There's just only so much you can put on the back
of a camel or in a cart. Conditions along any of the Silk Road routes were dangerous as you
would be under constant threat from bandits. To protect themselves from bandits, traders would
often group together in caravans, and they would stop for the evening in protected areas known as
Caravan Sarize. Caravan Sarize were the Silk Road equivalent of truck stops, where travelers
could rest and where they could do business. The actual roads were often in horrible condition,
as there was often no authority that was responsible for the roads, or worse, there were conflicting
and warring states along the way. Almost no one traveled the entire length of the Silk Road,
regardless of the route. Traders would have fixed routes between two points where they would buy
and sell in each location before moving on. Goods were also not necessarily,
sent directly from China to Europe. There were goods purchased and sold all along the way.
Some goods that ended up in Europe may have come from China, but many of them may have
originated in Central Asia, India, Persia, or the Middle East. One of the few people who did travel
the entire length of the Silk Road was Marco Polo. Much of what we know of the Silk Road from
the 13th century comes from Marco Polo's diaries. One of the reasons why Marco Polo was able to
travel the entire distance is because during this period, most of the entire Silk Road was
under the control of the Mongol Empire, or at least various Mongol kingdoms.
The Mongols provided the stability that resulted in the heyday of the Silk Road.
A single government allowed for easier trade and for fewer bandits.
It was very similar to how the Roman Empire facilitated trade during its peak.
When Marco Polo took the Silk Road to China, it took him over three years of travel
to get from Venice to the court of Kubla Khan.
While he wasn't on the move constantly, it does illustrate just how slow the overland route
was. While the overland routes received most of the attention, there were probably far more
goods shipped via sea. The maritime Silk Road is pretty easy to grasp. It basically followed the
coast of everything in Asia, from China through Southeast Asia and the Straits of Malacca,
around India, and then finally to the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, and down the east coast of Africa.
Here too, sailors would often travel not from China all the way to the Persian Gulf, but would
rather stop at various ports to buy and sell goods. Chinese traders were common all throughout
Southeast Asia, including many of the islands in the Malay and Indonesian archipelago.
Gigantic Chinese treasure ships, the likes of which I discussed in my episode on Admiral
Zheng He, actually were able to sail all the way from China to East Africa and back.
Perhaps the greatest seafarers in the region were the Arabs who sailed the waters of the
Indian Ocean following the monsoon patterns. A trading trip might often take a full year
in order to take full advantage of the seasonal winds. The goods transported on the Silk Road were
many and varied. It wasn't just silk, even though that was the one product that probably received
the most attention in Europe. In addition to silk, from the east came porcelain, tea, jade, precious
stones, and copious amounts of spice. From the west were sent incense such as frankincense,
glassware, silver, ivory, medical herbs, olive oil, wool, linen, and wine. All along both the land
and maritime routes, in both directions, were shipped various grains, fruits, meats, and leather.
It wasn't just goods that were transported either. Ideas were as well. Buddhism, Nestorian
Christianity, and Islam were all spread through these trade networks. Books and manuscripts
would often find their way to stops along the Silk Road. To illustrate the point, the city of
Koshi India, due to its fantastic port and the many traders who visited, was the home of the first
Christian church in India, the first Islamic mosque in India, and the first Jewish synagogue in India.
Technical innovations, many of which I've covered in previous episodes, such as paper and gunpowder,
were all transmitted along the Silk Road by traders.
People settled in these sports cities and trading posts as well, spreading culture and cultural practices across different countries.
Many of the things that the Silk Road spread weren't necessarily positive.
It's widely believed that the Black Death, which killed between 75 to 200 million people,
may have been spread by traders on the Silk Road.
The end of the classical Silk Road period can be attributed to a couple of things.
The first was the decline in the Mongol Empire, which once again made the overland trading
route subject to a host of different rulers and increased banditry.
The other thing was the rise of the Ottoman Empire.
The Ottoman Empire grew until it was able to control the land routes in the north,
as well as all of the maritime routes in the south.
Everything that came to Europe from the east now had to go through the Ottomans,
who are able to block most trade or at least severely tax it.
I'm often asked what's the most surprising thing that I've learned in the course of doing this podcast,
and I would have to say it's this.
The Ottoman control of trade from the east along all of the routes of the Silk Road
was one of the most significant things in history that almost never gets mentioned.
The reason why it's so important is that it was the event that ushered in the European Age of Exploration.
The Europeans set out to find alternate trade routes because they didn't want to pay the high prices that the Ottomans demanded.
A very direct line can be drawn from the Ottoman control of the Silk Road trade routes to the European colonization of the Americas.
The Silk Road system of trade between the eastern and western parts of Eurasia was one of the most important developments in human history.
The Silk Road changed all of the civilizations that it touched, and its effects can still be seen today in our technology, religion,
and culture. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate
producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever. I want to give a big shout out to everyone who supports
the show over on Patreon, including the show's producers. Your support helps me put out a show every
single day. And also, Patreon is currently the only place where Everything Everywhere Daily merchandise
is available to the top tier of supporters. If you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and
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Links to everything are in the show notes.
