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("{| border="1" |- | The term “silk road” thus refers to more than just trade in silk between China and Rome over a few cent..." içeriğiyle yeni sayfa oluşturdu) |
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| − | The term “[[ipek yolu|silk road]]” thus refers to more than just trade in silk between [[Çin|China]] and [[Roma|Rome]] over a few centuries. It stands for the exchanges of things and ideas, both intended and accidental, through [[ticaret|trade]], [[diplomasi|diplomacy]], conquest, [[göç|migration]], and [[hac|pilgrimage]] that intensified integration of the Afro-[[Avrasya|Eurasian]] continent from the [[Neolitik | + | The term “[[ipek yolu|silk road]]” thus refers to more than just trade in silk between [[Çin|China]] and [[Roma|Rome]] over a few centuries. It stands for the exchanges of things and ideas, both intended and accidental, through [[ticaret|trade]], [[diplomasi|diplomacy]], [[fetih|conquest]], [[göç|migration]], and [[hac|pilgrimage]] that intensified integration of the Afro-[[Avrasya|Eurasian]] continent from the [[Neolitik|Neolithic]] through [[modern]] times. Warriors, missionaries, nomads, emissaries, and artisans as well as merchants contributed to this ongoing cross-fertilization, which thrived under imperial and religious unifications. |
<ref>{{:RefMillward001}} s. 28.</ref> | <ref>{{:RefMillward001}} s. 28.</ref> | ||
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06.55, 24 Eylül 2021 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli
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The term “silk road” thus refers to more than just trade in silk between China and Rome over a few centuries. It stands for the exchanges of things and ideas, both intended and accidental, through trade, diplomacy, conquest, migration, and pilgrimage that intensified integration of the Afro-Eurasian continent from the Neolithic through modern times. Warriors, missionaries, nomads, emissaries, and artisans as well as merchants contributed to this ongoing cross-fertilization, which thrived under imperial and religious unifications. [1] |
- ↑ Millward, James A. (2013). The Silk Road. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. s. 28.