Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Silk: Trade and Exchange along the Silk Roads between Rome and China in Antiquity

Editor:
Berit Hildebrandt

Publisher:
Oxbow Books

Publication Date:
2017


Abstract:

Already in Greek and Roman antiquity a vibrant series of exchange relationships existed between the Mediterranean regions and China, including the Indian subcontinent, along well-defined routes we call the Silk Roads. Among the many goods that found their way from East to West and vice versa were glass, wine spices, metals and precious stones as well as textile raw materials and fabrics of wool and silk, a precious fibre that was highly appreciated in many of the cultures along the roads that were named after it by modern scholars.

These collected papers bring together current historical, philological and archaeological research from different areas and disciplines in order highlight the use, circulation and meaning of silk as a commodity, gift, tribute , booty, and status symbol in varying cultural and chronological contexts between East and West, including technological aspects of silk production. Rome and China in antiquity provide the geographical and chronological frame for this volume (c. from the third century BCE to the fifth century CE), but also earlier and later epochs and cultures in between these empires are considered in order to build and intercultural and diachronic understanding of long-distance relations that involved silk.


Table of Contents:

Preface
Introduction: Silk on the Silk Roads. Exchange between East and West in Antiquity.
Berit Hildebrandt

1. Looking towards the West – how the Chinese viewed the Romans
Liu Xinru

2. Textiles and Trade in South Asia during the Proto-Historic and Early Historic Period
J. Mark Kenoyer

3. Word migration on the Silk Road: the etymology of English silk and its congeners
Adam Hyllested

4. Silk production and trade in the Roman Empire
Berit Hildebrandt

5. Perspectives on the wide world of luxury in later Antiquity: silk and other exotic textiles found in Syria and Egypt
Thelma K. Thomas

6. Decoration, astrology and empire: inscribed silk from Niya in the Taklamakan Desert
Lillian Lan-ying Tseng

7. Domestic, wild or unravelled? A study on tabby, taqueté and jin with spun silk from Yingpan, Xinjiand, thierd-fourth centuries
Zhao Feng

8. Chinese silks that circulated among people north and west: implications for technological exchanges in early times?
Angela Sheng

Dr. Irene Lee Good (April 24 1958 – February 3 2013). An appreciation

Robert E. Murowchick, Angela Sheng and Kaoru Ueda

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