How did The Silk Road Actually Work?

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  • čas přidán 7. 01. 2022
  • How did The Silk Road Actually Work?
    The Silk Road was the ultimate route for messengers, merchants, and explorers alike. The roads were used in a few manners, with the main being for commercial trade.
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    ♦Music by Epidemic Sound
    ♦Sources :
    www.worldhistory.org/Silk_Road/
    Boulnois, Luce (2004). Silk Road: Monks, Warriors & Merchants on the Silk Road
    Hill, John E. (2009) Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty, 1st to 2nd centuries CE
    web.archive.org/web/201309062...
    ♦Script & Research :
    Skylar Gordon
    #History #Documentary #SilkRoad

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @Knowledgia
    @Knowledgia  Před 7 měsíci +15

    Hello guys! Thank you so much for watching video about the Silk Road. 😊
    You can help us and support our work directly by Joining this channel and getting access to perks:
    czcams.com/channels/uCuEKq1xuRA0dFQj1qg9-Q.htmljoin

    • @kv4648
      @kv4648 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Full of inaccuracies and western bias

    • @ewardprince4342
      @ewardprince4342 Před 3 měsíci +1

      If you believe that story you also believe man been on the moon .

    • @davidstockhoff8801
      @davidstockhoff8801 Před 25 dny +1

      Please tell the narrator "hr·aa·duh·tuhs"

    • @Bezanthemum
      @Bezanthemum Před 21 dnem +1

      I am banishing you from my algorithm for 2 reasons;
      a) you pruposely mispronounce things to generate comments (or are truly incompetant)
      b) everything you say is wrong
      Telling a story doesn't mean you have to lie about it.

  • @napolien1310
    @napolien1310 Před 2 lety +3250

    If I remember correctly the Ottomans didn't shut the silk road to Europe but they demanded more money for it and only the Venetians can trade with them thus allowing venice a monopoly on trades to Europe which in return angered the Europeans which allowed their travels to find new roads

    • @billygr4784
      @billygr4784 Před 2 lety +145

      Yes something like this happened. You are right

    • @ZAR556
      @ZAR556 Před 2 lety +74

      yep,, this story more plausible and believable.

    • @yousandro1999
      @yousandro1999 Před 2 lety +262

      and then the Portuguese were like "alright no problem, let´s go all the way around Africa"

    • @jamesmeppler6375
      @jamesmeppler6375 Před 2 lety +61

      @@yousandro1999 it did help that the pope gave half the world to Portugal, which included most of Venice claims

    • @yousandro1999
      @yousandro1999 Před 2 lety +112

      @@jamesmeppler6375 it was the other way around
      the Treaty of Tordesillas was signed *half a century* after the Ottomans took Constantinople and the Portuguese was already going around Africa and making new trade posts and colonies

  • @googane7755
    @googane7755 Před 2 lety +1655

    The technology and ideas that travelled along the silk road alone shaped history as we know it. The impact of the silk road is incredibly underrated.

    • @rimanpele
      @rimanpele Před 2 lety +29

      I think it's actually overrated.
      The silk road was very important indeed, but many others have been used over the centuries and most of the people don't seem to really bother that much.
      Sometimes in history things get an importance much more from feelings towards a matter than by what they actually did.
      The Atlantic trade routes in the colonization of Americas for example, were insane and don't get as much attention, only Brazil in aprox 250 years bought about as many slaves from Africa as the Roman Empire have had on over a thousand (both about 5 million people, not counting the ones that had died on Sea).

    • @yvngschopenhauer
      @yvngschopenhauer Před 2 lety +104

      @@rimanpele HAhahaha what you have said (Atlantic trade routes) was a direct result of the silk road... but saying its overrated.. facepalm..

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 2 lety +7

      @@yvngschopenhauer atlantic trade routes were not result of silk road. it was result of ottoman dominating eastern mediterranean

    • @parkyamato9450
      @parkyamato9450 Před 2 lety +46

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd yeah becuz Europeans didn't have the access of the skill road and Indian spices lol

    • @manjinderdhesi9403
      @manjinderdhesi9403 Před 2 lety +6

      And don't forgot all the slaves they used who died mate

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Před 2 lety +688

    Ottomans didnt just completely shut down the Silk Road rather they demanded enormous taxes that led to its decease, eventually triggering the age of European expansion

    • @ozgurd5920
      @ozgurd5920 Před 2 lety +44

      @@talaltariqq_
      why they block the straits lol. they did not blocked anything.
      they just gain profit and helped to boost economy.
      they allied with venice and protected the port state ragusa in modern croatia,
      then they conquered egypt too and completely one handed the european trade.
      and raised prices.
      even milan duchy and france tried to declare war on venice about that situation. but venice threated them by saying they will invite ottoman army to italy, and with that threat they had truce with pope.
      europe couldnt be alive against that economic power if they didnt discover the other way.
      ottoman economy got huge load of infliation after discoveries
      and with french revolution nationalism, empire completely dissolved into ethno/national pieces.

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Před 2 lety +26

      Yeah, that makes more sense. It would make no sense for them to just shut it down entirely if they thought they could profit off of it instead. Why would they even do that? What's the motivation? It makes more sense that they just weren't that business savvy and as a result got too greedy with their taxation, introducing enough friction into the system that it finally became easier for the Europeans to seek their own routes where before it wasn't worth the cost and they just paid the markup.

    • @sztypettto
      @sztypettto Před 2 lety +27

      @@chriswhinery925 , a lot of people get confused by the use of vocabulary regarding the Ottoman control of trade routes to the East. Core reason behind that is most speakers aren't proficient in English. So they substitute words they use from their own language, which in itself may not be entirely accurate. For clarity - the Ottomans maintained a monopoly on the trade routes, extorting heavy prices. Those who couldn't pay or wanted to compete on the same trade routes, where shut down through warfare, piracy or banning access. There are some idiots who will come here to defend the Ottomans with their convoluted beliefs, portraying it like a fantastical Empire like Gondor that progressed in Science, Culture, etc. But all the Ottomans did was piggyback on the developments of the Selucid and Byzantine. As the Ottomans no longer continued investing in those areas, or rather never invested there to begin with whatever remnants of scholars, thinkers, and craftsmen that existed, simply died or migrated.

    • @sztypettto
      @sztypettto Před 2 lety +1

      @TheKingimport , I don't know where you're coming from but you definitely sound like someone who's been giving the Ottomans plenty of hand jobs.

    • @gwho
      @gwho Před 2 lety +1

      Tariffs

  • @evanalbright3151
    @evanalbright3151 Před 2 lety +480

    The fact that you had the 2 monks clothes change as they went between east and west is a great attention to detail. I really appreciated that little bit.

    • @olhasum4721
      @olhasum4721 Před 2 lety +59

      I feel like the mission of those 2 men would make for an amazing movie

    • @busterhikney6936
      @busterhikney6936 Před 2 lety +13

      you watched them change clothes and was appreciative

    • @sotsubreivaj
      @sotsubreivaj Před 2 lety +23

      @@olhasum4721 it could have been like "what happens in the silk road, stays in the silk road".

    • @kweejibodali3078
      @kweejibodali3078 Před 2 lety +1

      😂😂

    • @kaveen_93
      @kaveen_93 Před rokem +5

      Also Marco Polo's journey on water with boat and back to land no boat

  • @Can_BCE
    @Can_BCE Před 2 lety +283

    The two agents sent by the Justinian to steal silk production secrets/materials in China is such a good movie idea.

    • @saladbruh2625
      @saladbruh2625 Před 2 lety +15

      Would like to see that.

    • @arolemaprarath6615
      @arolemaprarath6615 Před 2 lety +8

      Thats the Greek for you

    • @zyronazinycraile4099
      @zyronazinycraile4099 Před 2 lety +7

      they steal gun founder production techniq

    • @mr.husbandoeu7254
      @mr.husbandoeu7254 Před 2 lety +14

      A historical comedy in contrast to the fated mission

    • @in5minutes556
      @in5minutes556 Před 2 lety +9

      @@arolemaprarath6615 Justinian wasn't ethnic Greek, he was either Romanized Thracian or Romanized Illyrian which were the ancestors of modern Romanians. So you cound say "that's the Romanian for you"

  • @sheilawang7563
    @sheilawang7563 Před 2 lety +272

    Thank you so much for your program, really enjoyed it. I am Chinese, but also have the DNA of all the ethnicities along the silk road including Turkey, Iran, Uzbekistan, Mongolia, northern India, and northern Thailand. this episode made me feel that I am visiting my silk road traveler ancestors. thank you.

    • @ritzx5470
      @ritzx5470 Před 2 lety +28

      DAMN bro DAMN, you are
      genetically strong and diverse then

    • @win79526
      @win79526 Před 2 lety +6

      你是那里人?!

    • @sheilawang7563
      @sheilawang7563 Před 2 lety +12

      我爸爸是黑龙江人,妈妈是湖南人。

    • @joeshen2232
      @joeshen2232 Před 2 lety +12

      lol me too, my mom and I have curly brown and dark red hair, if we're not some kind of mutant my family must have an ancestor from the far west

    • @win79526
      @win79526 Před 2 lety

      @@sheilawang7563 那里测的基因?

  • @sourav894
    @sourav894 Před 2 lety +220

    Marco Polo was not the only travelled person. He writes in his memoir about meeting a next-village friend in China. He writes about many other such travellers from all over the world. Marco Polo's name remains because he recorded his travels.

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +62

      And also because he is european. There are many more middle eastern traders that kept record. But caliphate and roman war has its effect even now.

    • @GholamFareed
      @GholamFareed Před rokem +41

      Ibn Battuta during the same era travelled to more lands than Marco Polo ever did!!!
      All his travels were well documented, Europe just hates giving credit to the Middle East that's a fact!!!

    • @DudeMan2805
      @DudeMan2805 Před rokem +24

      @@GholamFareed while ur right about history favoring Europeans, the fact is, Marco Polo did all the shit he did first, he was born in 1254 while Ibn Battutu was born in 1304, Marco Polo was discovering lands and cultures before Ibn Battutu was even born, Ibn’s travels took him to places that were already written or known about the only exceptions was Sub Sahara Africa and the East Coast of Africa, other than that Marco Polo actually discovered the places he went to while Ibn Battutu went to lands already discovered other than the two I listed above

    • @GholamFareed
      @GholamFareed Před rokem +10

      @@DudeMan2805 Marco Polo also visited lands that were already known to the Islamic world namely the silk route so what are you on about??? The silk route was well traversed since ancient times, Marco Polo discovered nothing. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @DudeMan2805
      @DudeMan2805 Před rokem +17

      @@GholamFareed the lands Marco Polo went to may have been known to the Islamic world but they weren’t known to the European World which is who he was doing this for, by ur logic Ibn Battutu only discovered Sub Sahara Africa and The East Coast of Africa all the other lands he went to we’re already found and discovered by Marco Polo, Marco Polo discovered all he did first and that’s why he’ll go down in history as the more famous individual, saying he discovered nothing is just ignorant

  • @serkandggan
    @serkandggan Před 2 lety +526

    Before the conquest of Constantinople, trade to Europe through Silkroad was mainly done by Genoese and Venetian traders. After the conquest, Ottomans dispelled Genoese traders from their ports and banned them from trading goods as well, because of the help Genoese provided to Byzantium in the siege (they had sent their fleet to blockade the golden horn, if I'm not mistaken). To damage Geneose in Mediterranean even more, Ottomans gave Venetian traders -competitors of Genoese - privileges in trading. Any other foreign trader had to pay much more taxes contary to their Venetian counterparts. That said, trading goods from Venetians was almost much more cheaper than paying taxes to Ottomans. The first capitulation in Ottomans' history, later they gave such and more privileges to French in Suleiman's reign.

    • @OYANOYA
      @OYANOYA Před rokem +3

      100%
      Confirm

    • @CjqNslXUcM
      @CjqNslXUcM Před rokem +32

      Interestingly it was a Genoese who went on the desperate search for a new western route to Asia: Christopher Columbus.

    • @Izixster
      @Izixster Před rokem +4

      There were a lot of venetian mercenaries at Constantinople also, like the infamous Giustiniani

    • @Gameboob
      @Gameboob Před rokem +11

      That's so FASCINATING!! I was wondering why it was the rest of Western Europe that capitalized most in the age of exploration that was kicked off by the Ottomans taking over trade thru the silk road. It always seemed weird to me that some Italian city didn't lead the way. They already had the ship building capability. But I guess like blockbuster vs Netflix, they already had their method and it was working for them. The future didn't scare them. Ironic how that deal with the Ottomans worked against them in the long run

    • @goxyeagle8446
      @goxyeagle8446 Před rokem +3

      Turks 😡

  • @camsaffari
    @camsaffari Před 2 lety +229

    Persians pretty much never get credit for their historical contributions to humanity. Good that they were at least mentioned at the beginning of the video. Even though they created much more of this concept (e.g., the whole concept of Caravanserai and hubs) and many of the goods described as Western exports were actually Persia's exports to both East and West. Still, respect for mentioning something.

    • @yousifbk8165
      @yousifbk8165 Před 2 lety +27

      As an Arab, I couldn't agree more.

    • @s.a.s5838
      @s.a.s5838 Před 2 lety +10

      Same for arabs and south asians

    • @yousifbk8165
      @yousifbk8165 Před 2 lety +18

      @@s.a.s5838 i feel like it’s the middle east, NA, and east-south asia in general as a whole. There’s a lot that Turks persians arabs greeks Egyptians akkadians sumerians assyrians indians Chinese and many others that don’t get their recognition enough.

    • @Kaiyanwang82
      @Kaiyanwang82 Před 2 lety +28

      @@yousifbk8165 What are you talking about. In Italy, when we study history, we start from Sumer and Egypt. Then is Crete, Babylon, Hatti. Then Persia and Greece. And only THEN, we start with Rome. Even Alexander greatest contribution is considered to have opened more the road between east and west. If we considered Persia irrelevant (and how could we, after all the history shared with Rome) why remember him like that? Do you think we don't know where the modern numbers come from? Or that the arabs saved a lot of greek classics?

    • @yousifbk8165
      @yousifbk8165 Před 2 lety +13

      @@Kaiyanwang82 Im not talking about East and South Europe education cultures, Im addressing the west (Canada, US, Uk, and a few other countries). I know that because I literally study there and never have I ever heard about the achievements of the middle east, south-east asia, Rome, and the greeks. I am very sure that Italian Greek Baltic (East and South Europeans basically) people educate themselves about the people I mentioned.

  • @misterlianghui
    @misterlianghui Před 5 měsíci +20

    The world seemed so much bigger back then, so many untold stories and experiences ... Man I love history 😊

  • @DiscJokeyDarkSigns
    @DiscJokeyDarkSigns Před 2 lety +50

    What I've learned with these series is that humanity truly thrives when there is open trade and times of peace. Why can't we just all get along?

    • @isleschild
      @isleschild Před 2 lety +9

      Because people are, at heart, wicked.

    • @cgz5658
      @cgz5658 Před 2 lety +7

      Because every nation want to be served by the others, just like the USA and west Europe now.

    • @strongbrain3128
      @strongbrain3128 Před 2 lety +10

      The US only want goods with cheap price which they don't want to produce themselves. At the same time they don't want sell high-end products to others, or sell them at very high price. So the US benefits from both ways. And the US enforces this using its navy plus US dollars.

    • @YQFang
      @YQFang Před 2 lety +3

      Because the one who lost money in the trade now has the best gun

    • @strongbrain3128
      @strongbrain3128 Před 2 lety

      @@YQFang well said. All it can do now is use navy to enforce the US dollars as currency for world trading.

  • @YY-kn9qk
    @YY-kn9qk Před rokem +195

    It saddens me to think how many war-torn cities were once bustling trading hubs along the Silk Road.

    • @anneneville6255
      @anneneville6255 Před rokem +24

      This is how the world works. Cities that are big and powerful today, would probably be extinct in 200/300 years, new cities will emerge or the cities that are poor today, may become the big hubs. 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @ChicanoOne760
      @ChicanoOne760 Před rokem +4

      They can return to power any moment

    • @Trgn
      @Trgn Před rokem

      Yep those forgotten ancient kingdoms along the Silk Road were of the most diverse and rich cultural hub of teh ancient world

    • @bmona7550
      @bmona7550 Před rokem

      @@fraskf6765 Time

    • @nomoreman
      @nomoreman Před rokem

      @@anneneville6255 i think its more like 750 years i mean rome was founded nearly 3000 years ago but is still a major city and so is constantinople/istanbul and so much more

  • @aryaa.6487
    @aryaa.6487 Před 2 lety +17

    Glad someone finally gave credit to the Persians. Thank you

    • @DeezzzzzzNuts12
      @DeezzzzzzNuts12 Před 2 dny

      Alexander spanked the Persians and took their lands 😂😂😂

  • @philmathieu1017
    @philmathieu1017 Před 8 měsíci +8

    For anyone interested, I heartily recommend Peter Frankopan's 2015 book, The Silk Roads, I read it just before visiting Uzbekistan and it provided superb context to the visit.

  • @Sejara1528
    @Sejara1528 Před 2 lety +54

    How did silk road work?
    Chinese trader: *sell items to Turkic trader*
    Turkic trader: *sell items to Persian trader*
    Persian trader: *sell items to Levantine trader*
    Levantine trader: *sell items to Greek trader*
    And that's how terracotta was made.

  • @mbm8690
    @mbm8690 Před rokem +20

    Stunning and great piece of history: My teacher didn't mention how early the silk road started to exist, so I learned something new to me and am able to understand a bit more about the world we're living in today. Good job 👍.

  • @nash.p9781
    @nash.p9781 Před 2 lety +15

    brilliant, you painted the whole picture and the history including the details around inns and accommodation. It probably goes to show that business, explorers and travelers have been in touch between east and west much longer than the regular population understands it to be.

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety

      He totally missed the caliphate though.

  • @derderrr7220
    @derderrr7220 Před rokem +3

    a truely remarkable demonstration of ingenuity and a reminder of how important principles are

  • @yodheyvavhey9525
    @yodheyvavhey9525 Před 2 lety +96

    As a world-traveler I've been halfway around the planet 11 times and finally made it completely around back in 2011. I lived and worked in half a dozen cultures, done educational tours around the US/Central America/Middle East and some in Asia. But living at the time of Marco Polo seems to me a much more fresher, adventurous and real time experience than anywhere I've been. Nice presentation!

    • @ZacLowing
      @ZacLowing Před rokem +2

      Half way around 11 times? So, like 5 times and a bit? Or each time you made it halfway and then turned back? 2011 you said, wow, not making that mistake 12 times, nosirree.

    • @yodheyvavhey9525
      @yodheyvavhey9525 Před rokem +3

      @@ZacLowing Sorry its been awhile since I've been back here- re: Halfway 'round'- well my goal my first time traveling seemed to circle the globe was a worthy endeavor. But as one 'learns' as you go- you soon Discover much of the planet was nicer where you had just come from i.e. jobs, opportunities- women (The latter will really turn your head!) Through the years going and returning to the US my local friends that essentially know nada about culture or travel just didn't want to hear about my travels and adventures! Today, as I am married I had to obviously STOP the many female connections I've made through the years and my only real friends are somewhat like myself- well traveled and quietly go about their biz as we all have more of a world-view of how we fit in it all! Hope this helps you!

    • @ArtilleryAffictionado1648
      @ArtilleryAffictionado1648 Před rokem +5

      That is because due to westernization most places often feel the same.

    • @marusdod3685
      @marusdod3685 Před rokem +3

      @@ArtilleryAffictionado1648 yep modernism killed travelling. everywhere has the same soulless look

    • @ArtilleryAffictionado1648
      @ArtilleryAffictionado1648 Před rokem

      @@marusdod3685 thats why when i get money to travel i go to Europe. At least they have pretty Buildings i can look at.

  • @depekthegreat359
    @depekthegreat359 Před 2 lety +154

    An extremely so fascinating story of how the Silk Road was being built for mainly the trading of almost all the sectors to be exported and imported via China to some of the respective European countries and I am extremely so happy to see the construction workers to build that road of variety routes to save cost,good friends!!!:-D

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +4

      It was not made to reach europe. It spread first to central asia, then india and muddle east. At last middle east took it to europe.

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +4

      Roads were only built in the roman empire. Because camels are far more efficient in middle east africa central asia west india.

    • @vidarodinson5246
      @vidarodinson5246 Před rokem +1

      It was made to reach Europe, and other regions. China knows about the Romans and rich people in thr West.

    • @JKTProductionzIncNCo
      @JKTProductionzIncNCo Před rokem +6

      @@vidarodinson5246 pretty much E. Europe. W. Europe wasn't such a good place to be at the time.

  • @geckoman1011
    @geckoman1011 Před 2 lety +17

    Ive found the best way to describe the silk road and how it works is by comparing it to a good old fashioned bucket brigade. Nobody moves very far but they still do their part passing their goods from one person to the next in the long chain.

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Před 2 lety +26

    Correction: Before the formation of the Franco-Ottoman Alliance and England turned away fro mthe Catholic Church to Anglicanism, the Ottoman Empire was willing to trade with Venice only.

  • @myradioon
    @myradioon Před 8 měsíci +2

    Jews were heavily involved with the silk road having a near monopoly on Indigo Dye and Silk Dyeing in the Mediterranean and having merchants in every port to receive the goods from the east (merchant of Venice). They were also some of the few permitted to bring goods straight to the Frankish Kingdoms in Central Europe. Many terms for weights and exchange come from Hebrew or various Jewish dialects as they had a strict law guided by the Torah on transactions and how they should be handled. They could also generally read, write and calculate numbers because of the tradition of reading and writing the Torah.

  • @Warmaker01
    @Warmaker01 Před 2 lety +109

    It's because of this network that Han China and the Roman Empire were aware of each other's existence. Still, the distance and time between the two powers was too great for anything substantial to come about. Communication was just too difficult over such vast distances.
    Also, for those powers that straddled the Silk Road, it gave them a large amount of wealth. While this network existed, a number of Middle Eastern and Central Asian kingdoms were large and extremely rich. You see this throughout the video with large empires like the Achaemenid Empire, Seleucid, Parthia, Bactria. The Sassanid Empire would straddle a lot of the network in the center, would get rich from it, so rich that it made them a major power strong enough to be mortal enemies with the Eastern Roman Empire. Genghis Khan would lead his Mongols here eventually, campaigning even in the Middle East causing devastation. Eventually the Mongols would keep the Silk Road going. From what I've gathered, with the Mongols there, traders were very safe because the Mongols were determined to keep the trade going for taxation.

    • @playerbruv9329
      @playerbruv9329 Před 2 lety +16

      Now here we are in the modern day, me replying to your comment despite being in Australia. How far we've come from this is bloody amazing dont ya think mate

    • @Amen-Magi
      @Amen-Magi Před 2 lety +14

      Before the Romans, the Sassanids began trading with China

    • @FormerPessitheRobberfan
      @FormerPessitheRobberfan Před 2 lety +9

      @@Amen-Magi yeah no shit. They were closer

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Amen-Magi first it spread from china to central asia, then to india and middle east, then to europe. Also the video totally missed the time of caliphate.

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Amen-Magi caliphate was one the best empires the world has seen. But never spoken of because they defeated byzantines and took half of the whole roman empire's territory it had at its peak. They just totally removed it.

  • @fips711
    @fips711 Před 2 lety +107

    Why do you perpetuate the myth that the Ottomans cut off trade to Europe?
    They kept constantly trading with the Italian city states.
    The Spaniards and Portuguese sought new trade routes because the Italians hat a monopoly on the trade and hiked up the prices.

    • @sleepyjoe4529
      @sleepyjoe4529 Před 2 lety +3

      because white people always demonize other cultures that aren't european

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Před 2 lety +79

    "Qian was drawn to the horses"
    Genghis Khan: Ah I see you're a man of culture as well

    • @jodintlz5491
      @jodintlz5491 Před 2 lety +4

      Pharaoh Piankhi say hi too
      When the Kushite king Piankhi put down a rebellion in northern Egypt he was said to be enraged that his horses there had been starved in his absence.'His complaint was not that they had rebelled against him, but they had mistreated his horses,' he said.

    • @phillipwright7022
      @phillipwright7022 Před 2 lety +1

      Hey it’s rocket man!

    • @TheTeKuZa
      @TheTeKuZa Před 2 lety

      It is called a horsepower

  • @Exotic3000
    @Exotic3000 Před 2 lety +2

    I learned a lot. Thanks for posting!

  • @dragosstanciu9866
    @dragosstanciu9866 Před 2 lety +90

    And today China has the Belt and Road initiative, a new "Silk Road".

    • @user-zq2td4rr3k
      @user-zq2td4rr3k Před rokem +3

      若干年后,一带一路蔚然壮观,人们对它将有更正面的评价,包括西方人

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Před 2 lety +25

    Wow :0 Best video you have ever made!

    • @furkanerdem601
      @furkanerdem601 Před 2 lety +1

      abim seni dışişleri bakanlığı mı yolluyor

    • @scourgeofgodattila579
      @scourgeofgodattila579 Před 2 lety

      @Gigachad Biz sadece Bulgar videolarında değil hemen hemen tüm yabancı videolarda varız

    • @scourgeofgodattila579
      @scourgeofgodattila579 Před 2 lety

      Knk ben trol avlayacağım

    • @sktt1488
      @sktt1488 Před 2 lety

      @@scourgeofgodattila579 niye böyle yapıyorsunuz. Bence gereksiz bir şey. Bulgarlardan bize ne.

    • @scourgeofgodattila579
      @scourgeofgodattila579 Před 2 lety

      @@sktt1488 böyle bir şey yapmazsak,gelen gidene eyvallah dersek ortada tarihimiz falan kalmaz,adamlar göktürklerden Osmanlıya kadar hepsini çalıyorlar

  • @andreienea3132
    @andreienea3132 Před 2 lety

    i just love this type of vids on these subjects, realy makes some sence of things

  • @a.x.l1287
    @a.x.l1287 Před rokem

    this really helped, i needed to do a project the silk road and i added this video at the end and got a great grade!

  • @HoofHearted88
    @HoofHearted88 Před 2 lety +349

    Question: how many days (approximately) did it take for a trader to travel over land from Southern Song to, say, Amsterdam, Paris or Madrid? Surely it can't be that long if the reverse path is used to trade fruit?

    • @utsavjha7915
      @utsavjha7915 Před 2 lety +121

      It took years. I don't know exact number

    • @leadharsh0616
      @leadharsh0616 Před 2 lety +51

      @@utsavjha7915 yeah most likely. They probably used fruits that might not rot easily, not that I can think of a example right now.

    • @albanoimapping6064
      @albanoimapping6064 Před 2 lety +204

      @@leadharsh0616 Or maybe they used seeds and planted them in Asian soil when reached the destination. I think it’s more logical…

    • @OutnBacker
      @OutnBacker Před 2 lety +172

      Dried or otherwise preserved fruit. Long lasting preserves were common foods. Also, seeds.

    • @Bejaardenbus
      @Bejaardenbus Před 2 lety +65

      Well, it doesn't mean that fruit grown in China would end up in Europe, or vise versa. They traded it along the route, so it could be relatively close to them.

  • @rexarnold3950
    @rexarnold3950 Před 2 lety +14

    The Silk Road was far from being the first trade route, but it did have the greatest impact cultural impact on our species

  • @Senzawa69
    @Senzawa69 Před 2 lety

    I like how your channel seems to be growing in 2021. I remembered subbing this channel not too long ago with 200k sub. I hope you will do about Italy of How they maintain their Geography

  • @juliamacdonald3767
    @juliamacdonald3767 Před měsícem

    This is a really good video. Good pace, good script, good voicing. Just the right level of information for me, and very good maps and images to support the text. Tying in the balance of payment issues, the obtaining of the silk worms and the age of discovery made it next level in expanding my understanding of history. Thank you.

  • @panda-crux.165
    @panda-crux.165 Před 2 lety +4

    I Really Really love your Videos knowledgia when ever I Open CZcams I always first see the Notification Just to see if you already Upload New Videos🤗.Love Your Channel from Philippines😘🇵🇭. I wish you can make more video about like this About trade and Economy.

    • @Knowledgia
      @Knowledgia  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for the kind words and support!

  • @ahmedkeremsayar
    @ahmedkeremsayar Před 2 lety +51

    ottomans made alliance with venice. and venetians asked for exclusive trading rights which ottomans gave them. basically only venetians were able to trade with ottomans

    • @DeezzzzzzNuts12
      @DeezzzzzzNuts12 Před 2 dny

      The allies took your empire and gave you turkey 😂😂😂

  • @cindyhoffman5547
    @cindyhoffman5547 Před 2 lety

    I am learning a lot from your channel. Thank you!

  • @TheDanrach
    @TheDanrach Před 5 měsíci

    Loved this concise history that packs a lots of information and perspective!

  • @alexat62
    @alexat62 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Very well done documentary! PBS and BBC could learn a lot! Succinct, good visualization, no repetition, decent narration. Best of all no narcissistic presenter 😀.

  • @gustavalfzickermann99
    @gustavalfzickermann99 Před 2 lety +56

    I would have said that the silk road went all the way from China to England. Navigation on the Russian Rivers and then on the Baltic and North Sea was an important part of the silk road. English wool played an important role in this trade.

    • @DaGizza
      @DaGizza Před 2 lety +6

      It also went as southeast as Java in modern-day Indonesia. The trade routes were longer and more complicated than what most people think.

    • @abdiabdi3225
      @abdiabdi3225 Před 2 lety +6

      @@DaGizza indonesia is the indian ocean trade route the sea variant of the silk road they're similar and always connected but not the same.

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +4

      @@abdiabdi3225 its still part of the silk route. Arabs traders discovered during the time of silk route under caliphate's order for better routes.

    • @dekippiesip
      @dekippiesip Před rokem +5

      It's actually more of a spoke-hub network, what is shown are more like the major arteries of the silk road. But at each point their are more localized routes, and at their centres again a further outward movement.
      I guess the main route went to Italy, and from there several smaller networks distributed the goods all over Europe.

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 Před rokem

    I love your channel keep up the great stuff

  • @andzzcage4253
    @andzzcage4253 Před rokem

    Great video man. Respect !

  • @willgarris7955
    @willgarris7955 Před 2 lety +7

    The silk road, and in general Central Asia has always fascinated me. As an American you never hear of how it impacted the world and you never really hear about the countries and cultures that Central Asia is made of. You hear of the Greeks, the Romans, the Middle East, and of Europe, but all you hear about Central Asia is trade with the east. Nothing else. That’s why it feels like I found a missing puzzle piece watching these videos and studying about Central Asia.

    • @strongbrain3128
      @strongbrain3128 Před 2 lety +7

      Many rich Bostonian families became rich by involving (silk, tea, opium) trades with China, then used the money to found a few prestigious Ivy universities, and later invested in building railroads in the US.

    • @samalaimukhametova7290
      @samalaimukhametova7290 Před rokem

      Там обитали воинственные народы, кочевники тюрки.Как я слышала мало иследовано прошлое даже сейчас.

    • @mbayatab4326
      @mbayatab4326 Před rokem +2

      A Turkmen city of Merv located along the Silk Road in Western part of Central Asia was in 12th century the capital of the Turkmen-Seljuk empire and the largest city in the world. It was later destroyed by the Mongols and Tamerlane.

    • @willgarris7955
      @willgarris7955 Před rokem

      @@mbayatab4326 see I had no idea this city existed, and I just read about it for an hour.

    • @ardadmrc6710
      @ardadmrc6710 Před rokem

      You couldnt hear due to Turkofobia of western world

  • @otherpatrickgill
    @otherpatrickgill Před 2 lety +50

    from this I have learnt that the greatest work of the Chinese people in ancient times was not the great wall, but the great road and trade networks associated with it.
    From this I infer that the Chinese people shine most brightly not when they cut themselves off from the world, but when they expand through peaceful sharing and free trade.
    I also infer that the greatest degree of progress in Europe happened when the Europeans benefited from this peaceful and prosperous Chinese expansion.
    Sadly it seems that in modern times neither east, nor west has much interest in anything other than walls

    • @strongbrain3128
      @strongbrain3128 Před 2 lety +12

      Even worse, nowadays China is considered to be a threat to the West civilization by the West media. But it was the armed fleets of Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, British, and the USA that disturbed and killed the lives of the East Asian people in history, not the other way around.

    • @rickr9435
      @rickr9435 Před 2 lety +11

      well, the romans stole the silk worms and the british stole the tea plants.

    • @jaytee4482
      @jaytee4482 Před 2 lety +3

      There is the new silk road called Belt and Road Initiative or OBOR, One Belt One Road.

    • @texajp1946
      @texajp1946 Před 2 lety +10

      china is in the process of reform and opening up, they are committed to a peaceful rise, shared future for humanity, and common prosperity
      the usa led west is stuck in cold war mentality, zero sum games, and will do anything to maintain global hegemony
      the difference is striking

    • @idemandabetterfuture
      @idemandabetterfuture Před 2 lety +1

      @@strongbrain3128 You're forgetting China's repeated expansionary attacks on the various peoples to the northwest. Many of them genocidal attacks. The list is long when emperor Wu attacked the XiongNu that lead to the Avars and Tokharians to move west, this has repeated up to the present. The repeated waves of influx of nomads into the Danube basin and Hungary typically trace back to Chinese expansion into the steppes and Tarim Basin. The current Uighuars, a generic term for muslim turkic speaking turko/mongols in Xinjiang were named by the Soviets for an historical actual turkic ethnic group slaughtered to near extinction in the 800's AD by the late Tang.

  • @Jakob.Hamburg
    @Jakob.Hamburg Před rokem

    Thank you for the video, good content!

  • @khuderdoyod4070
    @khuderdoyod4070 Před 2 lety

    amazing video appreciated for your hard work!!!

  • @Thvndar
    @Thvndar Před 2 lety +22

    8:05 Myth busters: The Ottomans didn't shut down trade, it was a very pro-commerce empire, they increased tax rates to a point that many Europeans found unprofitable.

    • @robfromvan
      @robfromvan Před rokem

      Increasing taxes shuts down a lot of trade even today.

    • @Thvndar
      @Thvndar Před rokem

      @@robfromvan lol too bad Arthur Laffer wasn't around then*
      * That's a joke, trickle down economics is just modern day feudalism

    • @robfromvan
      @robfromvan Před rokem

      @@Thvndar myth busters: trickle-down economics is just a political term and is based on a misunderstanding of supply-side economics. There is no such theory or term as trickle-down economics used in economics

  • @sirsnydes
    @sirsnydes Před rokem +10

    Very cool graphics! Historically, however, the Persian "royal road" was more like the American pony express. It had a series of stations and rest houses, and was directly funded by the state. The silk road was a much more informal set of trade routes, not really a "road" at all in the modern sense.

  • @lordemed1
    @lordemed1 Před 8 měsíci +2

    The Indian Ocean served as the main highway connecting East and West for 1000's of years .

  • @borisdjordjepetrovic
    @borisdjordjepetrovic Před 2 lety

    excellent video, thanks for making it

  • @samsohn
    @samsohn Před 2 lety +3

    Great video. Always thought a route went over the Caspian Sea along the north side.

    • @JohnnyLodge2
      @JohnnyLodge2 Před 2 lety +1

      Genoa had a trading outpost in Kaffa which is north of black sea (roughly same latitude as caspian sea northernmost point) so it makes sense that there would have been a northern route too

    • @samsohn
      @samsohn Před 2 lety +5

      @@JohnnyLodge2 yeah, an immensely famous trading post where the black plague perhaps originated. That may have been a way to trade with the traditional sycthian people's of Siberia and the Asian steppes rather than from China per se, but of course there'd be some form of a corresponding land route connecting the port to the silk road, no doubt

  • @sethbartley2212
    @sethbartley2212 Před 2 lety +57

    "bought horses" just skipped the entire war fought over those horses when the owners refused to sell.

    • @426mak
      @426mak Před 2 lety +13

      Let's be fair, the Greco-Bactrians did kill the Han emissaries.

    • @saladbruh2625
      @saladbruh2625 Před 2 lety +7

      I remember that episode of Kings and Generals , gotta rewatch it

    • @sethbartley2212
      @sethbartley2212 Před 2 lety +2

      @@426mak that is a good point. This video said it was a central asian civilization, not the greeks who had the horses.
      I wonder why.

    • @426mak
      @426mak Před 2 lety +1

      @@sethbartley2212 Strictly speaking the area is right, I think the video makers just did not bother going into too much details.

    • @harbl99
      @harbl99 Před 2 lety +1

      @@426mak In the Greco-Bactrians defence, the Han emissaries didn't speak Greek like any civilised person of their experience. They wanted to negotiate in some barbarian jabber. Absolutely uncivilised!

  • @Wesssss84
    @Wesssss84 Před rokem

    Absolutely excellent
    So well explained

  • @elenafoleyfoley168
    @elenafoleyfoley168 Před rokem

    Love this channel ❤ Just subscribed thankyou 🙏

  • @SanHecox
    @SanHecox Před 2 lety +9

    Silk road 100bc : 🥰🌱🍂🍃🌾
    Silk road 2000 : 💀

  • @jacob4920
    @jacob4920 Před 2 lety +7

    The Muslims pinching off the Silk Road, after conquering Byzantium, probably doomed the entire rest of the world to the "Age of Colonialism" and Imperial assertion by Europe. This is the fact that almost nobody points to, as the triggering event that saw the rise of the West.
    The Portuguese sailing around Africa, to find way to China by Sea, led to the European realization of the continent of Africa's vast potential, and probably started the Slave Trade that would come to define the West, for the next four centuries.
    Columbus discovering the Western Hemisphere was entirely motivated by a desire to find "an alternate route" to Chinese goods, without having to go through "Istanbul". The discovery was an accident, that would kill millions of Native Americans through disease transfer, and lead to Spanish, French, and British domination that defines the entire hemisphere's existence today.
    India was only imperialized, and basically subjugated by the Dutch, and later the British, after Byzantium fell. Not before. Why? Because the Silk Road was off-limits.
    If the Silk Road had been allowed to remain open, by the Ottoman Turks, it's a good bet that none of this, or at least most of this, would not have happened in the first place. And the things that did would not have happened until much later in history.

  • @ScribaeEducantum
    @ScribaeEducantum Před 2 lety +1

    Hey 👋
    Wonderful channel and wonderful content!

  • @Thatmilkdude
    @Thatmilkdude Před 2 lety

    Man, I love these videos

  • @Justiceforall3799
    @Justiceforall3799 Před 2 lety +73

    The silk road sort of ended when the Roman empire fell. Then silk became a valued commodity when the Spanish empire, the French empire and British empire came about. The Chinese only accepted silver as payment for trade, which may have indirectly led to the search for silver mines by the Spaniard.

    • @h.i7544
      @h.i7544 Před 2 lety +2

      why did they for only silver

    • @Justiceforall3799
      @Justiceforall3799 Před 2 lety +24

      @@h.i7544 because gold and silver were used as currency. They probably would rather have gold. But Gold is more scarce than silver.

    • @Justiceforall3799
      @Justiceforall3799 Před 2 lety

      @@vatsalsrivastav5195 why?

    • @jsgwam
      @jsgwam Před 2 lety +1

      @@Justiceforall3799 idk. They prob had a f*cking abundance and thus the less common one was more valuable

    • @jsgwam
      @jsgwam Před 2 lety

      @@vatsalsrivastav5195 sounds like asia or east Asia at least has less silver to me

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Před 2 lety +11

    The Silk Road was great in it's day and will continue to capture the popular imagination for generations to come.

    • @strongbrain3128
      @strongbrain3128 Před 2 lety +2

      The China's belts and roads initiative nowadays continues this tradition to maintain trades globally.

  • @Sportsr4lyfe93
    @Sportsr4lyfe93 Před 2 lety

    Great video! Very well done thank you

  • @yasufang9379
    @yasufang9379 Před 23 dny

    All I remember about the Silk Road is that it was a central trade route over several areas pertaining to the trade of silk and other items, mainly silk. This was done through the usage of silk worms turning into silk moths which had its own effect on silk cloth, which was considered a rare gem in this time period. I'm interested in seeing this topic again, it's been a while.

  • @autumn3333
    @autumn3333 Před 2 lety +11

    It is a lovely and informative video. Well done!
    A few suggestions:
    6:40 - 7:38 - I would suggest putting the name of the purple area above the 'Byzantine' empire for historical and chronological accuracy - Bulgaria, while Hungary - can be replaced with its original endonym - Magyar
    Thank you in advance.

  • @andreramos4511
    @andreramos4511 Před 2 lety +20

    The idea that the Silk Road was cutted by the Ottoman Empire is quite an eurocentric point of view, considering the large portion of it inside Asia and the amount of trading that would still be possible just in that part of the original route.

    • @SwingAxleLover
      @SwingAxleLover Před rokem +3

      Well... this video is produced in a European language by someone who is descendent of Europeans. Why shouldn't it be Eurocentric?

    • @KHANSTER1029
      @KHANSTER1029 Před rokem +11

      @@SwingAxleLover Because as a history channel, it shouldn't be eurocentric but try to be as neutral and stick as close to the facts as possible?

    • @SwingAxleLover
      @SwingAxleLover Před rokem +4

      @@KHANSTER1029 But it does stick to facts. It's a fact that the silk road was mostly closed to Europeans. Just because something is eurocentric doesn't mean it isn't true

    • @The_Art_of_AI_888
      @The_Art_of_AI_888 Před rokem

      They are even trying to brainwash the viewers that the Black Death plague came from Asia where it literally originated from Europe.

  • @Jack-vh5km
    @Jack-vh5km Před rokem +1

    Excellent video, especially map, animations and narration. All history fact are true, you are one and only❤😂. Silk Road is one of the grestest “things” that have shaped the world that we know today. Because of impact that has on world in history, nowdays, building of Second Silk road creates a lot of pressure and controvery, in fact Trade war between China and USA. Thanks for great video🎉❤

  • @rajitharanvijayasekaram5862
    @rajitharanvijayasekaram5862 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Beautiful documentary. Thank you.

  • @stc2828
    @stc2828 Před 2 lety +7

    China, running massive trade surplus for the last 2000 years...

    • @stc2828
      @stc2828 Před 2 lety

      @@user-pf4tn2rl9n Massive doesn't have to be the largest, never said China was the largest all the time. Now stop dreaming and go build more toilets.

  • @blackfrost3581
    @blackfrost3581 Před 2 lety +16

    Love the channel but had to dislike the video, sorry. Ottomans didn't "shut off" trade. Sea voyages of Portuguese started way before 1453(Azores was settled in 1439!) And none of sea voyages references "lack of spices".
    Constantinopole wasn't that important in silk road trade anyway, the real deal egypt and syria was only become a part of ottomans in 1517.
    In fact Ottomans tried its best to give capitulations and trade agreements to many European states only to be remembered as "trade blockers" centuries later...
    Edit: Also every comment talks about ottomans demanded too much tax but this has no record neither. CZcams does not allow links but other than ottoman-portuegese wars of indian ocean spice prices didn't even change that much.

  • @akostorma3930
    @akostorma3930 Před 2 lety +2

    I had an exam about this subject last week. Could have made good use of this video.

  • @Mybpeterson
    @Mybpeterson Před 8 měsíci

    Great video with a wealth of information about a fascinating topic. Aside from all that, I now know where the term "middle man" came from.

  • @TheScottEF
    @TheScottEF Před 2 lety +18

    Very interesting and well done. One important clarification: Kublai Khan was not Chinese but Mongolian, an entirely different ethnic group.

    • @cgz5658
      @cgz5658 Před 2 lety +13

      It is an interesting question. The Chinese in your thinking is only Han ethnic. In Kublai's time, he is a Mongolian and the king of China, most subjects in his kingdom is Han ethnic, so is he only Mongolian or both Mongolian and Chinese. There are 56 ethnics in China. Besides Han, are the other 55 ethnics Chinese? Nowadays, Kublai's lineal descendants is living in Inner Mongolia, China. Are they Chinese or not? All I want to say is that imposing the present national system on ancient times is wrong.

    • @eloy618
      @eloy618 Před 2 lety +3

      As the founder of Yuan Dynasty, the government structure of which was modelled after previous dynasties, he proclaimed the Mandates of Heaven and became a Chinese emperor. He is considered a Chinese emperor by himself, by Chinese people, and by historians. He did not rule other parts of the Mongol Empire.

    • @user-fs9kc1vo4o
      @user-fs9kc1vo4o Před 2 lety +1

      His national titles come from ancient Chinese books

    • @The_Art_of_AI_888
      @The_Art_of_AI_888 Před rokem +1

      You should learn more about the world. Chinese are made up of many ethnicities Han Chinese, Manchurian Chinese, Mongolian Chinese...Outer Mongolia was part of China for hundreds of years but broke away in the 20th century.

  • @elkoikan5993
    @elkoikan5993 Před 2 lety +4

    I wish there were more details about all the stuff traided on silk road. Like for example how chickens and charry trees got to europe from China. Also there were other travelers that made the journey. And Marko polo stories are very iffy as he talks about half human half fogs living in China lol. I was also hopping to hear how it impact europe African trade and Viking settlements.

  • @Solo.416
    @Solo.416 Před 2 lety

    WHAT A VIDEO !! THANK YOU

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Před 2 lety

    Nicely informative video.

  • @jamesmeppler6375
    @jamesmeppler6375 Před 2 lety +9

    Wicked cool, thanks for sharing!! Why were the Chinese interested in trade so early on, but they refused to deal directly, saying they didn't want anything western except silver

    • @thechloromancer3310
      @thechloromancer3310 Před 2 lety +16

      Keep in mind that the Silk Road was running for well over a thousand years. Quite a few Chinese dynasties rose and fell during that time, and each dynasty had their own foreign and trade policies. The last dynasty - the Qing - was not as open to trade and foreign influence as the earlier dynasties that had created and expanded the Silk Road.

    • @strongbrain3128
      @strongbrain3128 Před 2 lety +18

      Because the European countries at that time did not produce anything that Chinese wanted because Chinese were self sufficient and had everything they needed for daily life. So Chinese only accepted silver as currency for trading.
      Can you name something that Europe could produce and China wanted at that time?

    • @jackzhou4813
      @jackzhou4813 Před 2 lety +8

      @@strongbrain3128 The Chinese at that time were very interested in glass,However, glass is not suitable for transportation, and cannot be popularized and satisfied at all.

    • @jackgoodnight2
      @jackgoodnight2 Před rokem +2

      @@jackzhou4813 "Interested" but still the transparent glass is useless for the chinese people at that time.

  • @aidanwotherspoon905
    @aidanwotherspoon905 Před 2 lety +9

    4:32 So Justinian's envoy just marched across the entirety of the silk road, stole some worms, and marched all the way back, centuries before Marco Polo and you're just gonna skate over it?!

    • @cjyoung4080
      @cjyoung4080 Před 2 lety

      world's first spies

    • @jayantlingamaneni4358
      @jayantlingamaneni4358 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cjyoung4080 spies existed much before as well, it was probably the first recorded act of corporate espionage.

  • @alparslankorkmaz2964
    @alparslankorkmaz2964 Před 2 lety +1

    Nicely explained.

  • @jesusbermudez6775
    @jesusbermudez6775 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the general knowledge

  • @wheresmyeyebrow1608
    @wheresmyeyebrow1608 Před 2 lety +3

    Damn this map is so cool-looking. Is it possible to get a full image of it?

    • @hhjk9901
      @hhjk9901 Před rokem +1

      This map is wrong. In the era of the Silk Road, the Han Dynasty had defeated the Xiongnu and established the Western Province. If the Western Province was not part of the Han Dynasty, but was close to the Xiongnu, or the territory of the Xiongnu, then the trade route would be difficult to pass. After all, the Huns were the enemies of the Han Dynasty.

  • @wkk7124
    @wkk7124 Před rokem +19

    Xiongnu blocked the access from East to West at BC200. The slik road was unblocked, after Han Chinese defeated Xiongnu around BC100 and Han Empire fully control the western reign (i.e. today Xinjiang). Actually, after BC100, Han Empire territory should include today Xinjiang, Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujin.

  • @tamaveirene
    @tamaveirene Před rokem

    Bravo and thank you...very informative...we need your Channel as the world becomes more screen bound and stay at home in Cyber Reality!!!

  • @sambidhrai127
    @sambidhrai127 Před 2 lety

    Great video. I loved it. 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @jimch
    @jimch Před 2 lety +5

    Great presentation, but very incomplete. For instance, there is almost no hint of the coastal silk road (silk routes, rather) that quite efficiently connected the Far East to Africa/Middle-East/Persia and then to Europe, through the Malay-speaking world (present day Indonesia, Malaysia etc.) and India.
    The maritime trading was quite established and especially the Chinese had really large ships (in particular, during the times of the famous admiral Zheng He), so much larger and effective than the 15th/16th century Portuguese ships.

  • @wallacesmith7032
    @wallacesmith7032 Před 8 měsíci +3

    It just sat there and people walked up and down it.

  • @filiphlupic1582
    @filiphlupic1582 Před rokem

    Very interesting and well made video

  • @patriciapalmer4215
    @patriciapalmer4215 Před rokem

    Just when you think you know so much, and along comes Persia and that wild and crazy kid Darius as an initial road creator. Surprise ! Thanks !

  • @subutaibaghatur4329
    @subutaibaghatur4329 Před 2 lety +19

    Not much different than today, China is the hottest destination always.

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Před 2 lety +3

      Disappointed that he hardly mentioned India despite it being one of the biggest centres of International Trade. India exported the finest cotton, textiles, wootz steel, jewelry, ceramics, ivory, diamonds, pearls etc, not just spices. It was the Roman Senate that complained about how much Roman Gold was being sent to India. India was where Roman merchants purchased Chinese Silks. India also imported Roman Glassware, ceramics from China and Middle Eastern Horses. It was Hinduism and Buddhism that travelled along the Silk Road to become dominant forces in Central Asia and China. Along with these religions, Indian Architecture and Art travelled too. Students and Monks from across the world to visit Ancient Indian Universities like at Takshashila, Nalanda, Somapura, Vikramshila, Sharada and Odantapuri etc. Finally, he missed Marco Polo's travels in India where he describes the Kakatiya Kingdom, its Queen Rudramadevi and its capital at Warangal full of beautiful architectural splendours like the Rudreshwara Temple.

    • @RockSmithStudio
      @RockSmithStudio Před rokem

      They still fans of opium?

    • @o.c.g.m9426
      @o.c.g.m9426 Před rokem

      ​@@RockSmithStudio Not much more than the West is of sloth & drugs

    • @kimjong-un8361
      @kimjong-un8361 Před 7 měsíci

      @@RockSmithStudio no,but American seems...

  • @RamtinHG
    @RamtinHG Před rokem +2

    Darius invented the Royal road for trading and made them safe also as you said created the post organization also he ordered to Persian engineers to dig the Suez canal

  • @leeklammer
    @leeklammer Před rokem +1

    That map background is a nice, clean view. Is there a site where I could get that map? Great video as well!

  • @jacentertainment3353
    @jacentertainment3353 Před 2 lety

    I love this channel

  • @vliu293
    @vliu293 Před 2 lety +35

    Let me, a Chinese, tell you the history of the Silk Road! After the establishment of the Han Dynasty, the XiongNu in the north had been the biggest threat to the Han Dynasty. After the governance of the previous Han Emperors, the Han Dynasty accumulated a lot of wealth and built up a strong army, so they started to attack the XiongNu during the period of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty (141 BC-87 BC) as a way to sweep out the threat on the northern frontier. It was a long war that lasted for 40 years and used millions of troops and people. In the last war, Emperor Wu used 100,000 cavalry and 500,000 infantry, eventually driving the XiongNu into Central Asia, the Middle East and even Europe. The passages you see between China and the Central Asian countries were also manned and protected by the Han army, so trade between East and West began to flow smoothly, which started the Silk Road for thousands of years thereafter.

    • @j.p.8595
      @j.p.8595 Před 2 lety +1

      These roads were also partly protected by some stretches of the Great Wall I believe

    • @idemandabetterfuture
      @idemandabetterfuture Před 2 lety +2

      There's also the view from the other side. Namely that the Han expanded into the steppe lands to their north, the Ordos region (Yellow River Loop to the north into steppes) where the the XiongNu and other steppe people lived and had traded with the locals to the South for centuries prior. When the Han occupied the steppe areas they forbade the locals from trading with the steppe nomads and treated the steppe nomads poorly. This led to the steppe nomads making retaliatory raids to re-establish their ability to trade with the steppe border locals. So "the threat to the Han by the XiongNu" was primarily the XiongNu retaliating for the Han expanding into their traditional pasture land and blocking trade with the local border land people. To sum, "the threat to the Han" was the Han perspective of the nomads' resistance to Han expansion north into their steppe pasture lands.

    • @herneyse11
      @herneyse11 Před 2 lety

      XiongNu were Turks who migrated west and became Ottomans.

    • @idemandabetterfuture
      @idemandabetterfuture Před 2 lety +2

      @@herneyse11 Ottomans were from a much later Turkish migration.
      XiongNu might have been Turks, but that's speculation. No one knows. Also, Turks tended to be pretty heterogeneous groups, there were various "flavors". You'd be closer in time if you said they were Khazars, but they're later as well.

    • @jackzhou4813
      @jackzhou4813 Před 2 lety

      @@herneyse11 The ancestors of today's Turks are the Huns?

  • @anzarm.a8547
    @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety +4

    This video totally missed the part where caliphate existed and how they were the main people in exchanging and collecting goods and ideas from india, europe, africa and central asia. Ibn battuta also travelled the whole thing. Caliphate's vast and wide amount of books and knowledge they collected and used and worked upon is because of silk route. How they became a superpower different from europe who focussed on couple things that they had or created is that they took a wider approach to everything. Creating studies such as biology, chemistry, optics, modern medicine. Etc. They completed trignometric maths started by indians(aryabhatta to be specific) and started using it.how they combined ayurvedic(indian) and chinese medicine along with the mediterranean communities(middle east, europe and africa). They also created algebra.

    • @anzarm.a8547
      @anzarm.a8547 Před 2 lety

      They also defeated byzantines and sassanids among their war accomplishments. They won due to their excellence in creating new tactics. Also appreciated for winning with no proper armour and bows.

  • @global1st1337
    @global1st1337 Před 2 lety

    fantastic video

  • @Forlfir
    @Forlfir Před 2 lety

    I live for these vidéos

  • @zoranznidaric4518
    @zoranznidaric4518 Před 2 lety +10

    Most problematic is part of the road that goes north from Tibet ... very harsh environment for travelers. It is full of sandy deserts.

    • @lamlam-bw7ev
      @lamlam-bw7ev Před 2 lety +2

      Better than the tropical rainforests through India and Southeast Asia

    • @zoranznidaric4518
      @zoranznidaric4518 Před 2 lety

      @@lamlam-bw7ev rain session there is a problem

    • @apink930
      @apink930 Před 2 lety +5

      @@lamlam-bw7ev environment of india was what everyone wanted,
      Food, water, shelter but as other invaded india for those things there wasn't peace

  • @Xardas131
    @Xardas131 Před 2 lety +4

    You have completely forgotten to mention the northern route of the silk road which was going via Atil, the capital of the Khazar Khaganate. Before its fall it was extremely important for the trade in eastern Europe.

    • @Houthiandtheblowfish
      @Houthiandtheblowfish Před rokem +1

      wow you have mentioned something really dangerous about history that opens up whole bag of worms the history that they have delibrately try to eliminate

    • @Houthiandtheblowfish
      @Houthiandtheblowfish Před rokem +1

      if you want to know more read matthew ehrets books or his youtube podcasts

    • @AhmadAhmad-mk8ot
      @AhmadAhmad-mk8ot Před rokem

      @@Houthiandtheblowfish before reaching the khazar khanate it also has to cross the the roads of Muslim turks

  • @singh_847
    @singh_847 Před 2 lety

    Superb Sir Ji
    Highly beneficial knowledgeable

  • @heinedenmark
    @heinedenmark Před 2 lety

    Good video 👍 thanks