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Who of the following was not a traveller on the Silk Routes?1 pointZheng HeChristopher ColumbusMarco Polo

Question

Who of the following was not a traveller on the Silk Routes?1 pointZheng HeChristopher ColumbusMarco Polo

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Solution

Christopher Columbus was not a traveller on the Silk Routes. While Zheng He and Marco Polo are known for their travels along these routes, Columbus is more famously known for his voyage across the Atlantic Ocean.

Similar Questions

The so-called 'silk road' began during the Han Dynasty in ancient China. It was the nickname given to any route that went through China to Europe. It linked trade in the East to the West, and vice versa. It was not even a single route, but a complex network of land and sea routes, covering over 6,400 kilometres and lasting for approximately 1,400 years. Needless to say, the 'silk road' played a central role in economic, cultural, political and religious exchanges during this time.The European explorer, Marco Polo (1254-1324) is known to have travelled on and talked about these routes, but it was the German geographer and traveller, Fernando von Richthofen in 1877 who first referred to them as the 'silk road'.(1) The purpose of his trip was to establish diplomatic and commercial relations with China, Japan and Siam and it was the first of many trips that Von Richthofen made to this region of the world.A range of different goods were transported along the 'silk road'. From East to West, this included silk, tea, precious stones, spices, medicine and paper, and from West to East, glassware, honey, fruits, textiles, gold and silver.(2) This was one of the most popular goods exchanged between the two empires at the time. The 'silk road' itself stretched from China to Africa, Greece, Italy and even Great Britain. The network of 'silk road' routes was huge.One of the greatest values of the 'silk road', in addition to its trade value, was the opportunities it offered for an exchange of beliefs and values between different cultures.(3) This also applied to architecture. How many times can we still see the influence of other cultures and history in the buildings that we visit today?Unfortunately, the 'silk road' also became the carrier of more than one deadly disease.(4) No one can ever be sure of this, but it is believed that the illness first had its origins in the Himalayan mountains of South Asia the 1200s, and by means of the 'silk road' eventually reached other empires, including China, the Mediterranean, North Africa and Europe by the early to mid-1300s.In addition to extensive silk trade with countries such as Egypt, Greece and Italy, the 'silk road' was also responsible for the transportation of paper and gunpowder across the continents.(5) The use of paper and gunpowder became key to many civilisations, as did the international exchange of spices. Even today, these still influence how we cook and prepare food across the world!Despite its survival for well over 1,400 years, trading along the 'silk road' ended suddenly with the rise of the Ottoman Empire in 1453.(6) The result of this change led European traders to look for, and explore, alternative trade routes and the 'Age of Discovery', from the 15th to 17th century was born.

Through which country did the historic Silk Road trading route not run?

Explain what caravans were like along the silk road and trans-saharan trade route 1200-1450?

What was the Silk Road?

The Silk Routes were an intricate network of land and sea routes for trade that existed from the second century BCE to the 15th century CE. During their 15,000 years of existence, traders on the Silk Routes ------- the Black Death, Mongol conquests, and many falls of various empires. Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?avoidedeliminateprocuredeliminatepatronizedeliminateendured

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