Contents
- 1 How were the Silk Road and the Indian Ocean trade different?
- 2 Is the Indian Ocean part of the Silk Road?
- 3 What religion did the Silk Road spread?
- 4 What were some effects of trade on the Indian Ocean?
- 5 What were the problems with the Silk Road?
- 6 What are the disadvantages of trade on the Silk Road?
- 7 What was traded along the Silk Road into China?
How were the Silk Road and the Indian Ocean trade different?
The Silk Road route was predominantly on land and crossed water ways at the Mediterranean Sea while the Indian Ocean trade route moved predominantly on water (Indian Ocean) between ports. The products that went across both routes included silk and spices from the East and processed textiles from the West.
Is the Indian Ocean part of the Silk Road?
The Maritime Silk Road or Maritime Silk Route refers to the maritime section of the historic Silk Road that connected China, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, Arabian peninsula, Somalia, Egypt and Europe.
What is unique about the Indian Ocean trade route?
The Indian Ocean trade routes connected Southeast Asia, India, Arabia, and East Africa, beginning at least as early as the third century BCE. Domestication of the camel helped bring coastal trade goods such as silk, porcelain, spices, incense, and ivory to inland empires, as well. Enslaved people were also traded.
Why did trade develop along the Silk Road and the Indian Ocean?
The early Middle Ages saw an expansion of this network, as sailors from the Arabian Peninsula forged new trading routes across the Arabian Sea and into the Indian Ocean. The Silk Roads were dynamic and porous; goods were traded with local populations throughout, and local products were added into merchants’ cargos.
What religion did the Silk Road spread?
Buddhism. The Silk Road provided a network for the spread of the teachings of the Buddha, enabling Buddhism to become a world religion and to develop into a sophisticated and diverse system of belief and practice.
What were some effects of trade on the Indian Ocean?
Contact: As all trade networks did, the Indian Ocean trade fostered the exchange of ideas, such as Buddhism to Southeast Asia, and Islam across Eurasia.
What 3 Seas did the Silk Road Cross?
Answer and Explanation: There were actually many bodies of water that the Silk Road crossed. Among these were: the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea, and the Arabian Sea. Other bodies of water include: the South China Sea, Indian Ocean, and the Persian Gulf.
What was the impact of the Indian Ocean trade?
What were the problems with the Silk Road?
There were a few difficulties of traveling on the Silk Road. First, the geography of the route was sometimes difficult. Animals could slip of cliffs, and mountain passages were very narrow and dangerous to pass through.
What are the disadvantages of trade on the Silk Road?
One major disadvantage of the Silk Road was its’ role in increasing the spread of epidemic disease such as the Bubonic Plague that spread like wildfire throughout much of Asia and Europe and led to the deaths of countless individuals that exacerbated tensions and bureaucratic inefficiency in locations like China and Rome, leading to the fall of once-great civilizations.
How did India benefit from the Silk Road?
India benefited from the Silk Road because it gave them new customers and new trade connections for their most valuable goods, especially spices.
Why did the Silk Road trade end?
With the change of geographical environment, the merchants on the silk road stopped their steps slowly because of the cold, water shortage, wind and sand. The northwest land silk road also disappeared with the wind and sand, only remained in the historical sites.
What was traded along the Silk Road into China?
Trade along the so-called Silk Road economic belt included fruits and vegetables, livestock, grain, leather and hides, tools, religious objects, artwork, precious stones and metals and-perhaps more importantly-language, culture, religious beliefs, philosophy and science .