The age of the silk roads
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The age of the silk roads
(The history of Central Asia / Christoph Baumer, v. 2)
I.B. Tauris, 2014
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Age of the Silk Roads (c 200 BC- c 900 AD) shaped the course of the future. The foundation by the Han dynasty of an extensive network of interlinking trade routes, collectively known as the Silk Road, led to an explosion of cultural and commercial transactions across Central Asia that had a profound impact on civilization. In this second volume of his authoritative history of the region, Christoph Baumer explores the unique flow of goods, peoples and ideas along the dusty tracks and wandering caravan routes that brought European and Mediterranean orbits into contact with Asia. The Silk Roads, the author shows, enabled the spread across the known world of Christianity, Manichaeism, Buddhism and Islam, just as earlier they had caused Roman citizens to crave the exotic silk goods of the mysterious Far East. Tracing the rise and fall of empires, this richly illustrated book charts the ebb and flow of epic history: the bitter rivalry of Rome and Parthia; the lucrative mercantile empire of the Sogdians; the founding of Samarkand; and Chinese defeat at the Battle of Talas (751 AD) by the forces of Islam.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Early Empires and Kingdoms in East Central Asia
2. Early Buddhism in Central Asia and the Gandhara School
3. The Migration of Hunnic Peoples to Northern China, Central Asia and Eastern Europe
4. The Kingdoms of the Tarim Basin and their Schools of Buddhist Art
5. The First Turkic Khaganate
6. Turkic Kingdoms of Eastern Europe
7. The Sogdians
8.The Second Turkic Khaganate and the Turgesh
9. China, Tibet and the Arabs: The Struggle for Supremacy in Central Asia
10. The Uyghurs
11. Outlook
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
List of Maps
Photo Credits
Acknowledgements
Index
Concepts
People
Places
by "Nielsen BookData"