It was a need to find sea routes for easy transport of trades like black pepper
Yes, after 1453, Europeans increasingly sought to travel to India and China by sea rather than overland routes. The fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Empire disrupted traditional land trade routes, prompting European powers to explore maritime paths for direct access to lucrative spices and goods. This led to significant advancements in navigation and the eventual establishment of sea routes around Africa and across the Atlantic. The desire for wealth and trade drove this shift in exploration strategies.
There are no seas IN India. The largest sea bordering India is the Indian Ocean.
1) By Land Across China Through The Middle East. 2) By Water Across The Mediterranean; By Land To The Red Sea Or Persian Gulf; By Water To India And China.
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.
The Arabian Sea, the largest arm of the Indian Ocean, stretches from India to Oman in Africa.
write about alluvial soil.
yes
The land routes were supplemented by sea routes which extended from the Red Sea to East Africa, India, China, and Southeast Asia. In the late Middle Ages, transcontinental trade over the land routes of the Silk Road declined as sea trade increased.
The Arabian Sea
To find a route to Asia.
Trade routes to India avoiding the Middle East.Europeans wanted a cheaper way to import goods from Asia.
You can find the Deep Sea Scale and the Deep Sea Tooth on Routes 13 and 17.
Trade routes to India avoiding the Middle East.Europeans wanted a cheaper way to import goods from Asia.
The Romans' trade routes reached all corners of the Roman Empire. There were sea routes around the Mediterranean and on the Black Sea. There were overland routes through Arabia, Syria, Turkey, Thrace and Greece and though Illryria and Dacia in the east and through Gaul, and Hispania and Mauritiania (northern Morocco) in the west. There were the amber roads which reached Poland via Germany. There was the network of the silk road which connected China and India to the eastern Mediterranean via Persia. The Red Sea was a route for trade with Ethiopia, Arabia and India.
To find a sea route to India
The most important reason was to cut out the middle man. They want to find the spices or gems and buy directly and not have to buy second hand or even third hand. That cost more.
Spain and Portugal were the two main countries that sought to explore new sea routes during the Age of Exploration in the 15th and 16th centuries. They were driven by a desire to find faster and more efficient trade routes to Asia.