Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
by John Major
Good ideas and innovation travel easily--and far. Historically, these ideas spread along trade routes. This essay looks at the great Eurasian Silk Roads as a transmitter of people, goods, ideas, beliefs and inventions.
Good ideas travel easilyand
far along trade routes, and the Silk Road was no exception to that
rule. A famous example of a Chinese invention that helped to transform
the world is paper. Paper was invented during the Han dynasty, probably
just at the time the Silk Road trade was beginning to flourish. (Many
accounts ascribe the invention of paper to a Latter Han official at the
beginning of the 2nd century CE, but actual paper at least two
centuries older than that has been archaeologically excavated from Han
tombs.) Far superior to the narrow wooden strips or hard-to-handle
rolls of silk that the Chinese had previously used for writing, paper
soon became the writing material of choice throughout China and East
Asia. It was found also in the Buddhist temples of China’s northwest,
but seemed not to make inroads beyond that for a long time, perhaps in
part because the Chinese tried to protect the secret of its
manufacture, and perhaps in part also because other writing materials,
such as parchment and papyrus, were well established in the west.
But under the Mongols in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, a
group of Chinese workmen set up a papermaking establishment in
Samarkand. Their product quickly spread by trade and imitation, and
paper soon supplanted other writing materials in most of western
Eurasia.
In China, the invention of paper stimulated the invention of printing,
sometime during the 6th century CE—a development energetically
supported by Buddhism, according to which the duplication of sacred
texts was an act of religious merit. The re-invention of printing in
Europe centuries later did not employ East Asian-style printing
technology, but it may have been stimulated by accounts of Chinese
printing that could have circulated in the Middle East.
Another invention that spread entirely across Eurasia was the noria, or
irrigation waterwheel. This simple, ingenious device, invented in Roman
Syria, consists of a vertical waterwheel to the rim of which are
attached a series of pots or tubes. As the current of a river rotates
the wheel, the pots fill with water at the bottom of the cycle and
empty into a chute at the top; a large noria can lift water as much as
forty feet with no input of human or animal energy. This inspired
invention was obviously a good idea, and rapidly spread along the Silk
Road and its tributaries. There is a famous example in Toledo, Spain,
others along the upper reaches of the Yellow River in China, and many
more in between.
Foodstuffs also count in this category of the travel of ideas and
techniques Apples spread, in prehistoric times via the steppe belt, in
both directions from the region of modern-day Kazakhstan; oranges went
(via the maritime route) from China to the Mediterranean world; grapes
went from the western reaches of the Silk Road to China.
These examples and dozens more that could be mentioned make the point
clear: ideas, inventions, devices and techniques spread readily and far
along the Silk Road, and the traffic was very much a two way, or
perhaps one should say a multi-way, street. In the process the Silk
Road enriched not just the merchants who carried and exchanged goods,
but the people of countries and cultures all across Eurasia.
It is perhaps worth noting, however, that long-distance trade can have
unexpectedly bad side effects as well as direct beneficial effects. For
example, the Black Death plague that devastated Europe in the 14th
century is believed to have come via the Silk Road from Central Asia,
where plague is endemic among local rodents. One theory holds that a
load of marmot pelts (destined to be used on fur-trimmed garments),
contaminated with plague-bearing flea eggs, was brought from somewhere
in Central Asia to a Middle Eastern port. There the eggs hatched into
fleas that infested some local rats; some of the rats eventually went
on shipboard and were carried to port cities in Italy. There the plague
spread, via fleas, to other rats, and then to people; and a disaster
was in the making.
EXCELLENT! I learned a ton from this article.
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