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Maurya Empire & Formation of Silk Road I. Role of Alexander, Successor States & Hellenism II.Maurya Empire Connection III.Nomad Connection & Kushan Empire IV.Trade & Buddhism along Silk Road IDs: Asoka (r. 268-231bce), Kushan Empire, Xiongnu, bodhisattva, Mahayana Buddhism

Maurya Empire & Formation of Silk Road

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Maurya Empire & Formation of Silk Road. Role of Alexander, Successor States & Hellenism Maurya Empire Connection Nomad Connection & Kushan Empire Trade & Buddhism along Silk Road IDs: Asoka (r. 268-231bce), Kushan Empire, Xiongnu , bodhisattva, Mahayana Buddhism. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Maurya Empire & Formation of Silk Road

I. Role of Alexander, Successor States & HellenismII. Maurya Empire ConnectionIII. Nomad Connection & Kushan EmpireIV. Trade & Buddhism along Silk Road

IDs: Asoka (r. 268-231bce), Kushan Empire, Xiongnu, bodhisattva, Mahayana Buddhism

Page 2: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Major Shift from 336 BCE-50 CE: Afro-Eurasia becomes more connected

Page 3: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Argument

• Between 336 BCE and 50 CE, the Silk Road was formed by the collective actions of Alexander of Macedonia, the Hellenistic successor states, the Maurya Empire, the Central Asian nomads & the Chinese. Once formed, its east-west and north-south connections across Afro-Eurasia were never broken.

Page 4: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

A. Role of Alexander and Hellenistic Successor States

Page 5: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Foundation of Institutions supporting trade

Page 6: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Spread of Hellenistic Culture

Greek languageGymnasiums (education)TheatersAthletic gamesArtPoliticsPhilosophy Dress/Style

Page 7: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Hellenism/Hellenistic Culture

• Influences elites from Spain to India

• Cosmopolitanism

Page 8: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

“Indo-Greek” states: Graeco-Bactria

Page 9: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

II. Maurya Empire Connection, 321-184 BCE

First large-scale South Asian empire

Chandragupta MauryaSeleucid kingdom

Page 10: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Expanded into Persia & Central Asia

Exchange with Seleucid Empire

Page 11: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road
Page 12: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Asoka (reigned 268-231 BCE)

Third Mauryan king

1. Conqueror untilKalinga conquest

Page 13: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

2. Adopted Buddhism

Built stupasRule by dhamma (dharma)

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3. Rock & Pillar Edicts

Multicultural tolerance: hundreds of South Asian ethnic groups, Hindus, Buddhists, Greeks, Persians

Page 15: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

III. Nomad Connection

• steppe• Central Asia

Page 16: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

A. Nomad Invasions, 200 BCE – 50 CE

Page 17: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

1. Conquer Seleucid Empire “Persian” Empire (200 BCE)

Page 18: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

2. Xiongnu pressure Yuezhi & Qin & Han in China

Page 19: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

3. Yuezhi flee southeast, conquer Bactria & form Kushan Empire (50 CE)

Page 20: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

B. Nomads

• Supported trade networks already established• Extended trade • Adopted cultures of settled peoples they

conquered

Page 21: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Coin of Saka (nomad) king Maues

Image of Zeus“King of Kings, the

Great Maues” (Persian title written in Greek letters)

Greek goddess NikeSame inscription

written in S. Asian script

Page 22: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

C. Kushan Empire

1. Bridge to China: Formation of Silk Road, 50 CE

HorsesSilkAllies against Xiongnu

Page 23: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

III. The Silk Road

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A. Overland Route

SpicesLuxuriesSilkCaravansCommercial hubs:

Petra & Palmyra

Page 25: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

B. Sea Routes

Page 26: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

C. Spread & Transformation of Buddhism

1. Spread into Central Asia (Kushan Empire)

Page 27: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

2. Changes in Buddhism

• The Buddha becomes a god

• Nirvana becomes afterlife (Buddha lands)

Page 28: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

2. Creation of Mahayana Buddhism

Great Vehiclebodhisattva

Page 29: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

Question

• How did the successor states, the Maurya Empire, nomads & the Chinese contribute to the formation of the Silk Road and the exchanges which took place along it?

Page 30: Maurya  Empire & Formation of Silk Road

3. Effects of Alexander & Successor States

• Lasting connection between regions across Afro-Eurasia

• Silk Road & sea routes• Huge increase in trade• Cultural exchange– Hellenism– Buddhism