Title: ENCOUNTERS
1ENCOUNTERS IN CENTRAL ASIA
2MODERN CENTRAL ASIA
3VEGETATION ZONES
4TOPOGRAPHY
5THE STEPPE
6THE STEPPE AND HUT
7THE DESERTS
8THE MOUNTAINS
9THE OASIS
10TIMELINE
- TO 1500 BCE RISE OF PASTORAL NOMADS
- 1500 BCE-200 BCE INDO-EUROPEAN AGE
- 200 BCE-1380 CE SILK ROAD EXCHANGES
- 200 BCE-1250 CE XIONG-NU TO TURKS
- 1250 CE-1470 CE THE MONGOL AGE
- 1470 CE-1640 CE THE LAST NOMADS
11NOMADIC ANIMALS
12NOMADIC WARRIOR
13INDO-EUROPEANS
14CHARIOT PEOPLES
INDO-EUROPEANS INDO-IRANIANS INDO-ARYANS THE
SHANG ?
15CYCLE OF CIVILIZATION
1. Nomads invade, conquer sedentary civilization
2. Nomads settled down, adopt many
aspects of conquered civilization.
4. Nomadic culture weakens, loses all
elements of old culture, falls to new
nomadic threat.
3. New syncretic culture thrives, reaches heights.
161000 - 200 B.C.E.
Later Indo-Europeans especially the Sakas,
Kushans, Bactrians, Parthians Sassanids
migrated into South and Southwest Asian their
movements blended Hellenistic, Persian, and
Buddhist elements in a unique culture. Persians
became very active in Central Asian settlement
and trade
17PARTHIANS, KUSHANS
18SASSANIDS
19HAN DYNASTY
20THE HAN, ZHANG QIANS EMBASSIES, HORSES SILK
21THE SILK ROAD
There were many Silk Roads across Central Asia
beginning in China and ending on the shores of
the Eastern Mediterranean.
22THE SILK ROAD
Han China and the Xiong-Nu battled for control
of the Eastern Steppe. In the process, China
sought allies Central Asian horses, which they
exchanged for silk. The nomadic peoples exchanged
the silk with civilizations in Southwest Asia
and the Silk Road was born.
23RELIGIOUS EXCHANGES
SYNCRETISM
24INTERCULTURAL EXCHANGES
Trade and/or Tribute?
25INTERCULTURAL EXCHANGES
Art and Architecture
26THE XIONG-NU
27XIONG-NU, HUNS,BLACK WHITE HUNS
Tribute Empire Confederacy Hostages Political
Marriages Allies, Mercenaries Destroyed Rome,
India Invaded Sassanid Persia Threatened China,
Germans
28UIGHURS (TURKS)
The branches ruled in Mongolia, Inner Mongolia,
Sinkiang parts migrated into Kazakh steppes
river valleys called Sogdiana.
- Manichaen and Buddhist
- Supported merchants
- Developed art, literature
- Allies, Enemies, Saviors of Tang
29TURKSINCENTRALASIA
30ISLAM IN CENTRAL ASIA
Arab Nomads 600 CE Muhammad 622
CE Sasanids Overrun 637 CE Umayyads
7th c. Abbassids 8th c. Battle of
Talas 751 CE
Religion Technology Paper Products!
31TURKS IN SOUTH AND SOUTHWEST ASIA
- Seljuk Turks 9th c.
- Seljuk Turks invade Southwest Asia and defeat
both the Abbassids and Byzantines. - Create sultanates and military states rule as
mercenaries throughout region. - Khwarazm Empire 12th c.
32THE MONGOLS
Chinggis Khan ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Yuan
Dynasty (China, Mongolia) Golden Horde (Russia,
Ukraine) Ilkhanids (Persia, Iraq) Chagatayids
(Central Asia) Pax Mongolica
33EXTENT OF MONGOL EMPIRE
34EXCHANGES UNDER THE MONGOLS
Technology, Diseases, Peoples, Tribute
35TAMERLANE
Central Asia and Afghanistan -
devastating raids into
India, Persia,
Iraq, Caucasus Mts. and Turkey. Built
mounds of skulls following conquests and
sieges.
36RELATED TOPICS
- The Pandemic called the Black Death
- Travels of Polo, Ibn Battuta, Bar Sauma
- Exchanges of Technologies
- The Rise, Decline, Fall of Ming (China)
- The Mughal Dynasty (India)
- The Safavid and Qajar Dynasties (Persia)
- The Ottoman Empire
- The Rise of Moscovy (Russian Empire)
37WHAT ENDED THE AGE OF NOMADS?
Firearms Standing Armies High-yield
agriculture Strong, centralized
bureaucracies Pandemics devastated
nomads Acculturation Established
religions Sea-borne trade
38INTERNET LINKS
THE ART OF THE SILK ROAD depts.washington.edu/uwch
/silkroad/ exhibit/index.shtml SILK ROAD
ENCOUNTERS www.askasia.org/teachers/Instructional_
Resources/FEATURES/SilkRoad/ Intro.htm