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Central and northern asia 0 to a.d. 100, college study notes - northern asia, Study notes of History

Study Guide. The Silk Road trade reached its peak in this century, sustaining a string of states extending along the caravan roads from Roman Syria to the northwest border of China. In Bactria, a union of ve Yue-chi tribes took the Kabut Valley, driving out the Pahlavas and soon establishing an empire which comprised all of Afghanistan as well as northwestern India. Central and Northern Asia: 0 to A.D. 100, Connexions Web site. http://cnx.org/content/m17811/1.2/, Oct 14, 200

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Download Central and northern asia 0 to a.d. 100, college study notes - northern asia and more Study notes History in PDF only on Docsity! Connexions module: m17811 1 Central and Northern Asia: 0 to A.D. 100 ∗ Jack E. Maxeld This work is produced by The Connexions Project and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License † 1 CENTRAL AND NORTHERN ASIA Back to Central and Northern Asia: 100 to B.C.1 The Silk Road trade reached its peak in this century, sustaining a string of states extending along the caravan roads from Roman Syria to the northwest border of China. In Bactria, a union of ve Yue-chi tribes took the Kabut Valley, driving out the Pahlavas and soon establishing an empire which comprised all of Afghanistan as well as northwestern India. The Kushans were apparently one clan of the Yue-chi which included or was synonymous with the Tocharians, but they were dominant in this expansionist drive and the entire empire soon bore their name only. These Kushans even sent an embassy across the Caspian Sea and into Armenia to meet with the Romans in A.D. 58. The empire was a melting pot, with Indian, Chinese, central Asian and Helleno-Roman culture and their coins showed a wide range of deities, some Hellenistic (Heliols, Hephaistos), Iranian (Mithra, Nana) and Indian (Siva, Buddha). (Ref. 1402, 83, 194) The Kushans pushed their administration on into India subjugating the Surens and Sakas. They then reversed their armies and turned northward toward China, but were defeated by the great Chinese General Pan Ch'ao who was on a campaign to control Sinkiang (Tarim Basin) in A.D. 90. Pan Ch'ao then led his army across the Pamir Mountains to reach the Caspian Sea. In the meantime, the Tibetians had attacked northwest China without much success. In the far north, the northern Hsuing-nu (Huns) were defeated by the southern Hsuing-nu in A.D. 85 and then were further beaten by the Mongol Sien-pi in 87 and by the Chinese General Tou Hsien in 89. It is no wonder that although part of them submitted to overlords, a great part of the survivors migrated westward, leaving their lands to the Mongols. This westward migration of the Huns was furthered by famine and anthrax among their cattle and horses. Along the steppe adjacent to China they were joined by Iranian herdsmen, Mongols from the forests of Siberia and even Chinese renegades and captive Europoids of various tribes, all of them subsequently called "Huns" as they gradually headed toward Europe. A great part of the Hsuing-nu confederacy, however, consisted of Mongoloids of the Baikal type, but this does not mean that ∗Version 1.2: Oct 14, 2008 9:41 pm GMT-5 †http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ 1"Central and Northern Asia: 100 B.C. to 0" <http://cnx.org/content/m17809/latest/> 2"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [140] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#onefourzero> 3"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [8] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#eight> 4"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [19] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#onenine> http://cnx.org/content/m17811/1.2/
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