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Commerce and Culture 500-1500

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Title: Commerce and Culture 500-1500


1
Commerce and Culture500-1500
  • AP World History Notes
  • Chapter 8

2
Why Trade?
  • Different ecological zones natural uneven
    distribution of goods and resources
  • Early monopolization of certain goods
  • Silk in China
  • Spices in Southeast Asia
  • I want what you have! Do you want what I have?
    Lets trade!

3
Trade 500-1500
  • Long-distance trade developed
  • This trade shaped culture and society
  • Trade mostly indirect
  • Chain of separate transactions
  • Goods traveled father than merchants

4
Significance of Trade Economic
  • Altered consumption
  • Ex West Africans now able to get salt to flavor
    and preserve their food
  • Changed the day-to-day lives of individuals
  • Ex trade specialization --gt led to less
    self-sufficiency and more dependency

5
Significance of TradeSocial
  • Traders became their own social group
  • Sometimes viewed suspiciously --gt why are they
    making money without making the goods?
  • Trade became a means of social mobility
  • Money land power and status
  • Trade used by elite groups to distinguish
    themselves from commoners
  • Only they could afford luxury goods from far away
    like silk or ivory

6
Significance of TradePolitical
  • Controlling and taxing trade motivated the
    creation of states and kingdoms
  • Wealth from trade sustained these states and
    kingdoms and facilitated their growth

7
What Else Was Traded?
  • Religious ideas
  • Technological innovations
  • Disease-bearing germs
  • Plants and animals

8
The Silk Roads
9
The Silk Roads Growth
  • Eurasia often divided into inner and outer
    zones with different ecologies
  • Outer Eurasia relatively warm and well-watered
  • China, India, Middle East, Mediterranean
  • Inner Eurasia harsher, drier climate
  • Eastern Russia, Central Asia

10
The Silk Roads Growth
  • Result steppe products traded for agricultural
    products and manufactured goods from inner
    Eurasia
  • Birth of the Silk Roads trade network

Hides, furs, livestock, wool, amber, horses,
saddles
11
The Silk Roads Growth
  • Construction of classical civilizations and
    empires added major players to this trade network
  • Persian Empire, Greek Empire, Roman Empire, Han
    dynasty, Gupta Empire
  • Result Silk Roads continued to grow

12
The Silk Roads Goods
  • Most goods traded luxury goods rather than
    staple goods
  • Destined for an elite and wealthy market
  • Only goods worth transporting with such high
    transportation costs

13
The Silk Roads Goods
  • Silk major product in high demand
  • China had a silk monopoly until the 500s --gt then
    others gained knowledge of silk production
  • Increased the supply of silk along the Silk Roads

14
Silk Makes the WorldGo Round
  • Used as currency in Central Asia
  • Became a symbol of high status in both China and
    the Byzantine Empire
  • Used in the expanding religions of Buddhism and
    Christianity
  • Ex worn by Buddhist monks
  • Ex silk altar covers in Christian churches

15
The Silk Roads Goods
  • Volume of trade small
  • But social and economic impact of trade big
  • Ex peasant in China produced luxury goods
    instead of crops
  • Ex merchants could make enormous profits

16
The Silk Roads Cultures
  • Major result of trade along the Silk Roads the
    spread of Buddhism
  • From India to Central East Asia
  • Spread by Indian traders and Buddhist monks

17
The Silk Roads Buddhism
  • Spread to oases cities in Central Asia
  • Voluntarily converted
  • Buddhism gave these small cities a link to the
    larger, wealthy, and prestigious civilization of
    India
  • Many of these cities became centers of learning
    and commerce

Buddhist temple in Dunhuang (an oases city)
18
The Silk Roads Buddhism
  • Transformation of Buddhism
  • Original faith shunned the material world
  • Now Buddhism filled with wealthy monks,
    elaborate and expensive monasteries, and so on

Buddhist monastery in China
19
The Silk Roads Buddhism
  • What type of Buddhism spread? MAHAYANA!
  • Buddha a deity
  • Many bodhisattvas
  • Emphasis on compassion

20
The Silk Roads Diseases
  • Long-distance trade resulted in exposure to
    unfamiliar diseases

21
The Silk Roads Disease
  • Athens (430-429 BCE) widespread epidemic
    killed 25 of the army
  • Roman Han Empires measles and smallpox
    devastated both populations
  • Mediterranean World (534-750 CE) devastated by
    bubonic plague from India

22
The Black Death
  • Spread due to the Mongol Empires unification of
    most of Eurasia (13th-14th centuries)
  • Could have been bubonic plague, anthrax, or
    collection of epidemic diseases
  • 1346-1350 killed 1/3 of European population
  • Similar death toll in China parts of Islamic
    world
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