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The Silk Road allowed the the Kushan empire to trade products from the Greco-Roman world, China and India.-----There is no specific number of routes in the Silk Road.It had many routes, some with more than one course, and many side routes. Counting them would probably require defining what constituted a route with more detail than is objectively possible. That having been said, a few of the important routes can be listed.Land routes included the following:Coastal China to MongoliaMongolia to Eastern IndiaDifferent routes from Mongolia to Persia via AfghanistanAfghanistan to Western IndiaPersia to PalestineThere were also sea routes, including the following:China to JavaChina to BurmaChina to IndiaBurma to IndiaEast coast of India to west coastIndia to ArabiaArabia to Coastal AfricaArabia to EgyptEgypt to PalestinePalestine to Egypt and the Upper NilePalestine to Constantinople and RomeThere were other routes as well, such as one that went to Armenia and north from there. And there were probably routes that are not really known or studied.There is a link below to a map showing these routes, and a link to an article on the Silk Road.
Routes by which silk is traded is one meaning of the English phrase "silk road."Specifically, the phrase calls to mind a network of trading routes. The routes actually involved both land and sea travel. They linked Java, China, India, Persia, Arabia, Somalia, and Egypt with the countries of Europe in ancient and recent times.
Longitudinal extension 74degree E to 135degree E Latitudinal extension from 18degree N to 54degree N
expanding the empire and extending trade routes to India and China. Also restoring peace and order to Rome.
Mexico
Mexico
Caesar never went to China. For all we know, he never heard of China.
No.
Mexico
no, from china to india
They extend toIndia in the west to China and South Asia in the east.
monkeys
Marco Polo
ii
100m