During the years 500 B.C.E to 1450 C.E trade impacted Afro-Eurasia heavily. There are many things that a person could talk about I am going to pick out the 3 important ones that stand out to me. The first is religion I think that this had the biggest impact on cities on the different trade routes. The second is new technologies that it brought. And the third is how these trade routes fell due to the spread of disease. The 3 main religions are Buddhism, Islam and Christianity. As trade started to become a trend in cities s did religion as missionaries and merchants would travel in search for new products they would often be faced with an entire new way of looking at life through religion and they would bring it back with them to their home
The three major religious of Southwest Asia are Christianity, Judaism and Islamic. Christianity was born first from the Jews. Then Islamic developed from both Christianity and Jewish. All three of these religions were born in the Middle East and even though they are different they all are connected to one another.
3. How might trade have affected the culture of people living in the areas shown along the trade routes?
“No nation was ever ruined by trade.” This quote was said by Benjamin Franklin in the late 1700s. These words are so simple, and it seems like anyone could have said them. However, this quote has a bigger meaning in that throughout world history, trade has been so important to so many countries and it has led to many empires successes. It has occurred for a very long time, and it has progressed dramatically. Trade has changed a lot, but some parts of trade stayed the same over a long periods of time. In the era between 300 CE and 1450 CE, trade between Eurasia and Africa changed because the empires and kingdoms in power were replaced and their control over trade differed;
There are plenty of changes yet some no changes in the trade works between Africa and Eurasia from 300CE-1450CE. The motives for creating trade relations was to get the necessary goods to live on as well as becoming richer despite of living in different regions. However the goods that were traded changed like gold, salt, indigo, and Persian rugs. As well as the trading of ideas that changed technology and religion.
The Afro-Eurasia long distance trade brought many new changes to the world, and strengthened some old life styles. Changes such as the spread of Empires and Religions, the innovation of technologies, and new trade routes brought new and challenging adventures to the Afro-Eurasia world. Some continuities were, the use of the multiple trade routes, and mass produce.
Trade is one of the key necessities to building a prosperous empire. This is shown through the empires located in Africa, the Middle East, and in China. Trade causes either negative or positive effects based on what is being traded or who it affects. There are many circumstances that can affect the trade outcome, such as location. Trade is very important to most kingdoms because it causes a good economy and government.
Although key elements of the trade between Africa and Eurasia changed during the era of 300-1450, a few factors stayed the same. In 300 C.E., trade routes were primarily between Europe and North Africa. The way that they changed by the time of 1450 was that they expanded southward and westward. By 1450, these trade routes went through West Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Indian Ocean. One factor that stayed the same during this time period was that the northern coast of Africa was always involved in the trade between Africa and the rest of Eurasia.
Sites of encounter are an important part of our history and present-day life with the factors that affected Afro-Eurasia. These locations are used for trade and were the major trading locations during the Medieval World. Major locations within the sites of encounter include Sicily, Quanzhou, and Cairo. They each impacted the world in some way. New trading goods like porcelain, better laws, better ships, and sharing of good ideas made trading and life more easy. Sicily, Quanzhou, and Cairo were the most important cities of the Sites of Encounter in Afro-Eurasia. Trading, sharing of ideas/unity, and technology, which suggests these locations grew, prospered, and innovated a better world.
The three religions that stem from Abraham, the Father of nations is “Christianity,” “Islam,” and “Judaism,” three of the most popular religions in the world.
Analyze the impacts of interregional trade in either Africa or the Americas during the period 600 BCE - 1200 CE.
In this class we have learn about five different religion, which are Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Judaism and Christianity. We discussed the beliefs/doctrines,ituals/practices, Ethics and Social Formations/Institutions of every region.
Long distance trading had made it possible for people from different cultures to interact. Silk roads were one of the famous trade routes that were used in the ancient time. It stretched from China to central Asia and westward. It merged into one big series of routes. Traders traveled segments of the route, passing their goods on to others who took them further along the road, and in turn, passed them on again. The effect of long-distance exchanges altered the political geography of Afro-Eurasia. The Middle East became a commercial middle ground between the Mediterranean and Indian. The horse-riding nomads of Inner Eurasia made long-distance trade possible. Kushan empire in Afghanistan and the Indus River basin embraced a large and diverse
If there was ever an important period historians, and people could put a finger on, this would be it. This is the important period where the world’s countries, kingdoms, and dynasties established trade routes. This is the period where countries were made and countries were destroyed because of the importance of trade and the importance of building a fundamental, religious, and economical way of life. This paper will discuss the goals and functions of trades, and traders, and a historical analysis of world trade. This paper will also get into world trade patterns, of The Americas, Sub-Saharan Africa, The Indian Ocean, The Silk routes, China and The South China Sea, Europe and The Mediterranean, and The Atlantic Exploration.
How did trades became a huge factor to the postclassical era. Trades were popular in different regions throughout the globe but major trades were happening in Eurasia, (1000-1500) “From the earliest time of Eurasia trading became extremely popular, like the trading patterns that were used like the silk road for many luxuries, good that were considered high value at its time, and where some of the bigger items or commodities that were heavy to travel with were shipped to sail in the sea of the Indian ocean.” – Journal 15 the trades era wasn’t the safest time either, they were many incidents where different states would try to conquest another to build trade advantage in the thirteenth century the Mongols were one of the perpetrator to take over cities for trade
Trade and conquest both had their impacts, but looking closer one impact was more significant than the other. Trade was a way for people to obtain goods they didn’t have or couldn’t make by giving away an item they had a surplus amount of. Trade, in my opinion, didn’t have much of an impact as conquest. Trade was only small development, whereas conquest was the process of gaining territory by the use of subjugation and military forces. Early civilizations developed from conquest because without conquest the same civilization would own the same territory. There were multiple early civilizations, and if they had never conquest for more land, other civilizations would overrule them and take their territory. Further spread of civilization happened directly through conquest, the spread of how much land they had and could acquire was due to conquest and military forces. Because conflict and conquest exists, they realized they had to defend their civilization and build military forces to keep enemies out.