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Silk routes: 2000 years of trading

The history of the silk routes with Bridget Kendall, Valerie Hansen, Susan Whitfield and Tamara Chin.

China, Iran, Afghanistan, Syria, Uzbekistan and India: if you went to any of these places a thousand years ago, you would find goods and produce from the others. But how did they get there and why? This week’s Forum explores the ancient pattern of trading networks which criss-crossed the plains, deserts and mountains of China, Central Asia and points further West, and which encouraged not just the exchange of commodities such as silk, paper and horses but ideas and people too.
Bridget Kendall talks to Valerie Hansen, professor of history at Yale University who has a particular interest in trade and exchanges across Eurasia; historian Dr. Susan Whitfield, former curator of the Central Asian collections at the British Library in London; and Tamara Chin, professor of comparative literature at Brown University whose work focuses on ancient China.

(Photo: A man rides a horse at Band-e-Amir lake, central Afghanistan, on a former Silk Route that once linked China with Central Asia and beyond. Credit: Getty Images)

Available now

44 minutes

Last on

Mon 29 Jun 2020 02:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 25 Jun 2020 09:06GMT
  • Thu 25 Jun 2020 23:06GMT
  • Sat 27 Jun 2020 13:06GMT
  • Mon 29 Jun 2020 02:06GMT

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