Premodern Trade in World History

Front Cover
Routledge, Aug 18, 2008 - Business & Economics - 176 pages

Trade and commerce are among the oldest, most pervasive, and most important of human activities, serving as engines for change in many other human endeavors.

This far-reaching study examines the key theme of trading in world history, from the earliest signs of trade until the long-distance trade systems such as the famous Silk Road were firmly established. Beginning with a general background on the mechanism of trade, Richard L. Smith addresses such basic issues as how and why people trade, and what purpose trade serves. The book then traces the development of long-distance trade, from its beginnings in the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods through early river valley civilizations and the rise of great empires, to the evolution of vast trade systems that tied different zones together.

Topics covered include:

• products that were traded and why;

• the relationship between political authorities and trade;

• the rise and fall of Bronze Age commerce;

• the development of a maritime system centered on the Indian Ocean stretching from the Mediterranean to the South China Sea;

• the integration of China into the world system and the creation of the Silk Road;

• the transition to a modern commercial system.

Complete with maps for clear visual illustration, this vital contribution to the study of World History brings the story of trade in the premodern period vividly to life.

 

Contents

Some introductory musings
1
In the beginning
13
The first link
24
Land of gold
40
Into the Aegean and out of the Bronze Age
54
Of purple men and oil merchants
63
Shifting cores and peripheries in the Imperial West
75
When India was the center of the world
84
Following the Periplus
99
The allwater route
110
From the Jade Road to the Silk Road
121
The last link
130
Epilogue
137
Select bibliography in English
144
Index
150
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About the author (2008)

Richard L. Smith is Professor of History and Williams Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Humanities at Ferrum College, USA. His research interests are in North and West Africa and world history. He is the author of Ahmad al-Mansur: Islamic Visionary (2006) as well as numerous articles and book reviews in scholarly publications.

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