Central Asia

Central Asia was once a very rich part of the world. Because Central Asia was in the middle of Asia, they could sell things west on the Silk Road to Mesopotamia, south to India, and east to China.

First, Central Asia was the home of herders. People rode horses and herded cattle across huge grasslands. They ate yogurt and cheese and steak. They hunted and fought with bows and arrows. Sometimes people left Central Asia and moved to other places: first the Yamnaya, the Indo-Europeans, then in the Middle Ages the Turks and the Mongols. But by that time, many of them were farmers. They grew peaches and melons and apples, and sold them to their neighbors. They invented bowed instruments like violins. They built big cities – Samarkand and Merv and Tashkent and Kandahar. They manufactured and exported high quality steel and carpets. They were very rich.

But then things changed. New kinds of ships, compasses and clocks made it safer to travel on the oceans than it had been before. Ships moved steel and cotton and sugar much cheaper than camels and donkeys did, so more and more trade went by ship. Central Asia’s position in the middle of the land was a disadvantage now. And they were much poorer than they had been before.

30 05, 2017

Who were the Manchu? Central Asian History

By |2019-11-25T13:12:45-08:00May 30th, 2017|Central Asia, History|Comments Off on Who were the Manchu? Central Asian History

The Manchu leader Nurhaci (1600s AD) Where did the Manchu come from? The Manchu people were descended from the Jurchens. They spoke a language probably closely related to Turkic and [...]

30 05, 2017

The Silk Road to the Great Game – Central Asian History

By |2017-05-30T17:31:17-07:00May 30th, 2017|Central Asia, History|Comments Off on The Silk Road to the Great Game – Central Asian History

A melon stall in Central Asia After Tamerlane died in 1405, his Altaic people kept on ruling Central Asia, but not as one big empire. There were lots of little [...]

30 05, 2017

Modern Afghanistan – Central Asian History

By |2019-08-05T09:25:09-07:00May 30th, 2017|Central Asia, History|Comments Off on Modern Afghanistan – Central Asian History

Modern Afghanistan: the Dar-ul-Aman Palace outside Kabul (1920s) World War I From 1880 until the end of World War I, the British controlled Afghanistan along with British India. Afghanistan mostly [...]

30 05, 2017

Sher Ali Khan and Afghanistan – Central Asian History

By |2017-05-30T16:53:58-07:00May 30th, 2017|Central Asia, History|Comments Off on Sher Ali Khan and Afghanistan – Central Asian History

Dost Mohammed Khan In 1834 AD Dost Mohammed Kahn pushed aside Ahmed Shah Durrani's grandson to become the ruler of Afghanistan. He found himself caught ruling a small, poor country [...]

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