Greece, Egypt, and India
They interacted and developed trade that increased the economy.
In the 1500s, Europe, Africa, and Asia were linked through trade routes, known as the Silk Road and the Spice Route. These trade networks facilitated the exchange of goods, ideas, and cultures between continents. Additionally, the Americas were also connected through the Columbian Exchange, which brought new crops and resources to Europe, Africa, and Asia.
through tradeThrough trade
Bartholomeu Dias did not find a trade route through Africa to get to Asia. He did, however, establish a trade route by sailing around the southern tip of Africa to get to Asia.
Through trade with Africa.
There was an incredible amount of trade and cultural exchange, punctuated by occassional wars.
In general, the people of the continents interacted with each other through trade and exploration during the 1400s. Traders took ships from one continent to the next in search of valuables.
In West African cultures, slaves were allowed to own slaves of their own, while those in the Atlantic slave trade were not.
The Indian Ocean trade involved the Swahili Coast (along Eastern Africa), the Spice Islands (Southeastern Asia), India, China, and the Middle East. The Trans-Saharan trade involved the Western Africa empires of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai, in that order, and Northern Africa. They also interacted with the Arabs. The Indian Ocean traded mainly traded cotton cloth, textiles, and spices like pepper, cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg. Trans-Saharan trade exchanged mostly gold from Northern Africa for salt in Western Africa. It also traded ivory, slaves, and exotic animals.
Pre-hispanic Filipinos interacted with their neighbors through trade, intermarriage, cultural exchanges, and alliances. They established trading networks that reached as far as China, India, and other parts of Southeast Asia, which facilitated the exchange of goods, ideas, and beliefs. Intermarriages between different ethnic groups were also common, leading to the fusion of cultures and the creation of new traditions.
The Romans interacted with many cultures. They interacted with and later conquered all of the cultures bordering the Mediterranean Sea, including Greece (which had the greatest influence on Roman civilization), Egypt, the Jews, the Carthaginians (seafaring people from North Africa), and the Gauls (the tribe from what is now France). They fought and traded with the Persians, and through this the trade they acquired goods from as far away as India and China, although it was very rare that a Roman would go directly to the Far East. Toward the end of the Roman Empire, the Romans fought and made peace with various so-called "Barbarian" tribes, including the Franks, Goths, and Vandals (who conquered Rome), and also with the Huns.