It went through the countries that made up Europe, the Middle East, Persia, Central Asia, and China. I could give you a more definite answer if you have a particular time in mind. The names of the countries have obviously changed over the last 2,000 years. If you want to know more about countries from a Chinese perspective, I highly recommend that you read the Records of the Grand Historian (c. 90 BCE). It includes the report of a Chinese envoy named Zhang Qian, who traveled from China to various areas of Central Asia during the 2nd-century BCE.
Roman and Han empires
Asia and Europe.
Silk cloth, Spices
The Taklamakan Desert which located in Mongol
it could actually take about 36 days to get to the silk road depending when you and how you get there
tea and spice
a lot. one or two daris. that is a lot in Chinese currency!
The silk road connected two major points which were huge trading posts, without it neither areas would be as prosperous.
silk
2 of the goods that traveled along the Silk Road were silk and Jade.
People traded Silk and spices on the Silk Road. Also, the Silk Road made traveling from one place to another easier.
Silk cloth, Spices
The Taklamakan Desert which located in Mongol
it could actually take about 36 days to get to the silk road depending when you and how you get there
tea and spice
Tanglin Road and Orchard Boulevard
The "silk road" was not an actual specific road. It was any path or trail that was used to transport silk from the Orient to Europe. So portions of it were man made, and portions of it were natural, and it might not even be the same for any two trips.
It connected to Baltimore.
you could trade and travel