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Earth and Its People Edition 3 Chapter 7 Outline

Good Essays

The Impact of the Silk Road

The Silk Road at first caused many pastoral groups to form. Eventually, rich families did settleand build large establishments.

The Silk Road allowed the spread of religions ( see chart above
) such as Nestorian Christianity,Manichaeism, Zoroastrianism, and Buddhism.

The stirrup spread though out the Silk Road. It allowed riders to be much more stable and thuscaused military innovation. i.e. the superiority of the Tang calvary in China.
The Indian Ocean Maritime System

The Indian Ocean Maritime System was a society of seafarers established across the IndianOcean and South China Sea.

This trade system linked a network of sea trade routes from Africa to China. The main playerswere …show more content…

and (2) the thirteenth through seventeenth centuries c.e.
2. The origins of the Silk Road trade may be located in the occasional trading of Central Asian nomads. Regular, large-scale trade was fostered by the Chinese demand for western products (particularly horses) and by the Parthian state in northeastern Iran and its control of the markets in Mesopotamia.
3. In addition to horses, China imported alfalfa, grapes, and a variety of other new crops as well as medicinal products, metals, and precious stones. China exported peaches and apricots, spices, and manufactured goods including silk, pottery, and paper.
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B. The Impact of the Silk Road
1. Turkic nomads, who became the dominant pastoralist group in Central Asia, benefited from the trade. Their elites constructed houses, lived settled lives, and became interested in foreign religions including Christianity, Manicheanism, Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, and (eventually) Islam.
2. Central Asian military technologies, particularly the stirrup, were exported both east and west, with significant consequences for the conduct of war.
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II. The Sasanid Empire, 224-600 CE
A. Politics and Society
1. The Sasanid kingdom was

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