Stretching over 10,000 kilometers, the Silk Road extended from the Mediterranean in the west to India in the south, and China in the east. It was formally established in the third century as the principal route linking the East and West. However, there are accounts of trade along this trail going back much further. Constant flow of goods, technologies, and ideas blurred the lines between Silk Road civilizations and ushered in the modern world.
1#Prehistoric Silk Road Civilization
The rare copper-smelting mill is the earliest of its kind yet discovered. The site has also yielded carbonized barley and wheat seed along with stone farming equipment and adobe houses. These attest to East-West trade going back along this route far longer than the Han dynasty (202 BC–AD 220), which was previously assumed to be the opening of the Silk Road. Adobe construction, wheat, and barely all emerged in Western Asia and spread via this ancient technology corridor.
2#Yiddish’s Silk Road Origins
Harnessing the DNA of Yiddish speakers and GPS, researchers were able to pinpoint the origin point of this enigmatic tongue. Northeast Turkey has emerged as the ground zero of Yiddish. Its emergence as a Silk Road tongue is supported by its over 251 terms for “buy” and “sell.” Some believe that the Ashkenazi Jews settled in Khazaria in the first millennium prior to spreading through Europe after the collapse of trade routes. Others, like University of Tel Aviv’s Paul Wexler, disagree, insisting that Yiddish is a Slavic tongue that acquired new words from other tongues while maintaining its original grammar.
3#Sick Road
Researchers believe the Silk Road’s camels may have been a key vectors for the plague. These beasts of burden could have easily caught plague-bearing fleas from gerbils and passed them on to humans. The team has developed a model of 15 years between plague outbreaks in Europe. The first stage involves contact with human hosts. The second is western travel along caravan routes like the Silk Road. The final stage was reintroduction to Europe through maritime trading hubs
4#Lost Branch Of The Silk Road
The tea’s chemical composition matched that of tea discovered in the tomb of a Han Dynasty emperor dating to 2,100 years ago. Experts believe both tea varieties originated in Yunnan in southern China. Researchers see these finds are evidence of a long-lost high-altitude portion of the Silk Road. This challenges the tradition notion that mountains are barriers. Instead, researchers are realizing seemingly insurmountable heights can be conduits of trade and technologies.
5#Sogdian Letters
Some believe Chinese authorities confiscated the correspondence. Others believe the mail carrier abandoned the settlement in haste. Letter 2 was written by a Sogdian living in China and discusses the recent attacks of Huns on Yeh and Luoyang. Letter 5 also discusses the threat of the Huns. Letters 1 and 3 were written by a woman named Mewnai, who was abandoned by her husband in Dunhuang.
6#Cannabis Burial Shroud
Researchers believe the burial belongs to the ancient Subeixi culture, which dominated the region between 3,000 and 2,000 years ago. The Turpan oasis has always been a popular stopping point along East-West travel along the Silk Road. The deceased man, who bore Caucasian features, was laid on a wooden board with his head on a pillow of reeds. This burial adds to the mounting evidence that cannabis was “very popular” on the Silk Road.
7#Terracotta Army’s Greek Influence
Not everyone agrees with the Greek influence theory. Chinese historians point out that “The Records of the Grand Historian” contain a detailed account of the manufacture of the tomb and the terracotta army without any reference to European inspiration. However, there is no doubt that East and West met along what we now know as the Silk Road long before its official opening in the third century. By the time of their first emperor, Romans were wearing Chinese silk.
8#Kizil Caves
The murals’ date of origin remains a mystery. The lack of Chinese elements suggests they were painted before the introduction of Tang influence in the region in the eighth century. The presence of Graeco-Indian and Iranian elements suggests a much earlier date for these mysterious murals. Many of the caves’ murals have been defaced after the rise of Islam and China’s Cultural Revolution.
9#Oasis Cemetery
The identity of the people buried at this Silk Road cemetery remains unknown. Grave robbers looted the site, and no writings or inscriptions reveal the deceased’s names. Researchers are confident that the elaborate nature of the construction suggests elite burial. Some of the tombs were reused multiple times. A few of the chambers contain as many as 10 individuals. Kucha was once the most populated oasis in the Tarim basin, and center of a Buddhist kingdom, which controlled trade along the northern edge of the Silk Road.
10#Silk Road South
Given that there is no evidence of local silk production, researchers now believe that Samdzong was on the trade network of the Silk Road, suggesting the route went farther south than previously imagined. The dry climate and high altitude of 4,000 meters allowed excellent preservation of the Samdzong fabric. The find reveals that the Upper Mustang region was once a small, but integral component to a much larger trading network.
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