Trade Routes of Eurasia
Silk Roads: Eurasia was the starting place of one of the world's biggest and sustained trade networks. This network was named the Silk Roads after Eurasia's most famous product. The Silk Roads linked pastoral and agricultural peoples alike, as well as large civilizations of Eurasia's outer rim.
Sea Roads: The start of oceanic commerce offered transformation to all members, but the greatest appeared in Southeast Asia and East Africa. Both regions experienced political change and aspiring rulers used incoming wealth to build larger, centrally governed states or cities.
Sand Roads: These trade routes linked North Africa and the Mediterranean with interior West Africa. The North African costal regions created cloth, glassware, weapons, books, and other goods of manufacture. African commercial life saw a major turning point in trade with the introduction of the camel. The animal could go ten days without water and made the long trek across the Sahara finally possible.



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