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Freer | Sackler Galleries: Luxury Arts of the Silk Route Empires WebsiteFreer | Sackler Galleries: Luxury Arts of the Silk Route Empires Website
Publisher
Smithsonian Institution
Resource Details
Curator Rating
Educator Rating
Not yet Rated
Grade
9th - 10th
Subjects
Social Studies & History
2 more...
Resource Type
Websites
Audiences
For Administrator Use
2 more...
Lexile Measures
1460L
Website

Freer | Sackler Galleries: Luxury Arts of the Silk Route Empires

Curated by ACT

Two thousand years before today's "global economy," an exchange network linked the continent of Asia via the Silk Route. Between the first and eighth centuries of the common era, the empires and states of Asia often came into conflict as they competed for territory and other resources or sought to dominate their neighbors in religious and political arenas. Yet the sea and overland routes between China and the eastern Mediterranean-the Silk Route, or Silk Road-also fostered peaceful interaction, both cultural and commercial. Merchants, ambassadors, and pilgrims transported crafted goods and raw materials acquired from distant realms: spices, precious metals, musical instruments, rare medicinal herbs, objects used in worship and ritual. Silk, the most famous of these long-distance luxuries, reached southwest Asia by the first century B.C.E. from production centers in China.

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Additional Tags

ohio g.hs.14, ohio h.fga.8, silk road art, smithsonian: luxury arts of the silk route empires, art of the silk road, silk road

Classroom Considerations

  • Knovation Readability Score: 5 (1 low difficulty, 5 high difficulty)
  • This resource is only available on an unencrypted HTTP website.It should be fine for general use, but don’t use it to share any personally identifiable information

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