What type of goods were most commonly traded on the Silk Roads?
Luxury goods like silk, porcelain, spices, and precious metals.
Why was marinetime trade better than trade on land?
It allowed items to be able to be shipped in bulk allowing further diffusion of raw materials.
What was the Pax Mongolica?
A period of stability and safety across Eurasia that boosted trade.
What religion spread widely through trade in Southeast Asia?
Explain how the expansion of empires influenced trade and communication over time.
The expansion of empires—including Mali in West Africa–facilitated Afro-Eurasian trade and communication as new people were drawn into the economies and trade networks.
How did the Silk Roads contribute to cultural diffusion?What religions and technologies were spread?
They spread religions (Buddhism, Islam), technologies (paper, gunpowder), and artistic styles across Eurasia.
What type of goods were traded in the Indian Ocean that were NOT traded on the Silk Roads?
Bulk goods like timber, rice, and textiles.
How did the Mongols improve communication across their empire?
With the Yam system, a relay network of messengers and stations.
What Chinese technology spread westward and changed warfare and how?
Gunpowder
through trade routes
Explain how the Mongol Empire unintentionally reshaped global demographics.
Their empire connected trade routes, which accelerated the spread of the Black Death.
The plague caused massive population decline in China, the Middle East, and Europe, weakening states and shifting labor systems. The Mongols’ integration of Eurasia made the pandemic far more widespread.
Explain how Trans‑Saharan trade contributed to the rise of Mali.
Mali controlled trade routes, taxed merchants, and gained wealth from gold, allowing rulers like Mansa Musa to expand political and cultural influence.
Why did Swahili city‑states become wealthy?
They acted as middlemen between African interior goods (gold, ivory) and Indian Ocean merchants.
How did the Mongols influence trade and cultural exchange?
They protected trade routes, standardized laws, and moved skilled workers across the empire.
How did trade networks spread scientific knowledge?
Islamic scholars shared astronomy, medicine, and mathematics across Afro‑Eurasia.
Compare how the Silk Roads and Indian Ocean networks each supported the spread of religion.
Silk Roads: Spread Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity through monks, missionaries, and merchants.
Indian Ocean: Spread Islam more widely through merchant communities and port cities. Both networks moved ideas, not just goods, but the Indian Ocean spread Islam more extensively.
Why was Timbuktu an important city?
It became a center of learning, trade, and Islamic scholarship.
Explain how diasporic merchant communities formed along the Indian Ocean.
Merchants from places like Arabia, India, and China stayed in foreign ports for months waiting for monsoons, creating permanent communities that blended cultures and spread religion.
Explain how the Mongols both unified and disrupted Eurasia.
Unified: Stabilized trade, spread technologies, connected regions.
Disrupted: Destroyed cities, spread the Black Death, and caused political collapse in some regions.
Explain how cross‑cultural interactions led to syncretic religions or cultural blends.
Swahili culture blended Bantu + Arab influences.
Neo‑Confucianism blended Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist ideas.
Islam in Indonesia blended with local traditions. Trade created hybrid cultures across regions.
Explain the causes and effects of growth of networks of exchange after 1200.
Improved commercial practices led to an increased volume of trade and expanded the geographical range of existing trade routes— including the Silk Roads—promoting the growth of powerful new trading cities
Trading cities:
Kashgar
Samarkand
The growth of interregional trade in luxury goods was encouraged by innovations in previously existing transportation and commercial technologies, including the caravanserai, forms of credit, and the development of money economies.
New forms of credit and money economies:
Bills of exchange
Banking houses
Use of paper money
Demand for luxury goods increased in AfroEurasia. Chinese, Persian, and Indian artisans and merchants expanded their production of textiles and porcelains for export; manufacture of iron and steel expanded in China.
Explain how the Silk Roads encouraged the growth of cities like Kashgar and Samarkand.
Their strategic locations made them commercial hubs, offering food, water, lodging, and markets, which attracted merchants and promoted cultural blending.
Explain the environmental effects of the various networks of exchange in Afro-Eurasia in this time period.
- Bubonic Plaque was spread
- Diffusion of crops (Banana in Africa, New Rice in East Asia, Citrus in Mediterranean)
- Epidemic diseases
Explain the process of state building and decline in Eurasia over time.
Empires collapsed in different regions of the world and in some areas were replaced by new imperial states, including the Mongol Khanates.
Explain the intellectual and cultural effects of the various networks of exchange in Afro-Eurasia in this time period.
Increased cross-cultural interactions resulted in the diffusion of literary, artistic, and cultural traditions, as well as scientific and technological innovations
Diffusion of cultural traditions:
The influence of Buddhism in East Asia
The spread of Hinduism and Buddhism into Southeast Asia
The spread of Islam in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia
Diffusion of scientific or technological innovations:
Gunpowder from China
Paper from China
The fate of cities varied greatly, with periods of significant decline and periods of increased urbanization, buoyed by rising productivity and expanding trade networks.
As exchange networks intensified, an increasing number of travelers within AfroEurasia wrote about their travels.
Travelers:
Ibn Battuta
Margery Kempe
Marco Polo
Explain the significance of the Mongol Empire in larger patterns of continuity and change.
nterregional contacts and conflicts between states and empires, including the Mongols, encouraged significant technological and cultural transfers
Technological and cultural transfers:
Transfer of Greco– Islamic medical knowledge to western Europe
Transfer of numbering systems to Europe
Adoption of Uyghur script