Third-Wave Civilization Trade Routes
Silk Roads
138 BCE - China
needs horses, trades
silk in return; mulberry
bushes are a limiting
resource for silkworms
Gandhara culture; Zhang Qian
is the father of the Road; defense
against the Xiongnu by alliance
with the Yuezhi
Chinese capital of
Chang'an (Tang)
connected the Middle East
with China/India
Spread of the Black Death,
Bubonic plague, etc.
Mongols
Genghis Khan supports
international trade
Pax Mongolica
commerce between China and Persia
Trans-Saharan
Trade Routes
animal
domestication
South Saharan
salt deposits
exchanged salt
for kola nuts and
palm oil
moved from cattle breeders
to horse&chariot, then camels
American Web
limited interaction
among large areas
Mainyly Pochteca and
Cahokian trading
Panama's bottleneck inhibited
contact bettween North/South
America
No "great traditions"
south-to-north diffusion
of maize, originating
in Mesoamerica; also a
north-to-south into
the Andean civilization
IOMS
spices, aromatic resins,
pearls, Chinese pottery,
wine, ivory, porcelain, etc.
"The Periplus of the
Erythrean Sea"
South China Sea, Southeast Asia,
west coast (India), Persian Gulf,
East Africa (Zanzibar)
sailors seldom retained
ties to homeland
Srivijaya
Major Buddhist
center in Asia
Swahili civilization; influenced
heavily by Bantu culture
Mediterranean
Sea
called the
Mare Nostrum
minimal trade
occurred before
fall of Rome
(476 CE)
involved Arabs
(Muslim world)
and Byzantines
(Gaul, Iberia,
Moaghreb)
wine was a
commodity
Hanseatic
League
Baltic to North Sea,
on the coast of
Northern Europe;
"merchant guilds";
13th-17th centuries
timber, wax,
amber, resins,
fur, wheat, rye
trade with
Scandanavia
and Kiev Rus