Back to Results
First PageMeta Content
Biodiversity hotspots / Eurasian nomads / Silk / Eurasian Steppe / Central Asia / Pastoralism / Mongol Empire / Trade route / Nomad / Asia / Eurasia / Silk Road


READING 3 David Christian, “Silk Roads or Steppe Roads? The Silk Roads in World History.” Journal of World History 11, no[removed]): 1–26.
Add to Reading List

Document Date: 2013-06-27 04:19:34


Open Document

File Size: 234,30 KB

Share Result on Facebook

City

Tashkent / Kazan / Rome / Beijing / Ushmunayn / /

Company

Fars / /

Continent

Africa / Asia / Europe / /

Country

Mongolia / Iran / Kazakhstan / Egypt / Russia / Afghanistan / United Kingdom / China / Ukraine / India / /

Event

Person Travel / Environmental Issue / /

Facility

David M. Brownstone / /

IndustryTerm

transportation / transEurasian network / widespread systems / metal-using zone / ancient systems / oil / woodland products / metal-producing areas / livestock products / /

MusicGroup

B.C. / /

NaturalFeature

river Syr-Darya / Caucasus / Black sea / Volga / Caspian sea / Yenisei / /

Organization

Annenberg Foundation / /

Person

Barry Gills / Philip Curtin / Marco Polo / Jerry Bentley / E. Jerry Bentley / Han Wudi / Aurel Stein / Ferdinand von Richthofen / Zhang Qian / Silk Roads / Sima Qian / Irene M. Franck / Sven Hedin / Peter Hopkirk / Andrew Sherratt / William McNeill / /

Position

geographer / Emperor / historian / envoy / But Marshall / Wudi’s envoy / /

ProvinceOrState

British Columbia / Kashmir / /

PublishedMedium

Journal of World History / /

Region

northern India / sub-Saharan Africa / eastern Kazakhstan / north Kazakhstan / northern Asia / east Ukraine / eastern Mediterranean / North Africa / south Russia / northern China / central Asia / west Kazakhstan / southeast Asia / north China / Black Sea / Mediterranean / /

TVShow

Tirmidh / /

Technology

far west.27 Chariot technology / /

SocialTag