Euroazjatycka późna starożytność czy Jedwabne Szlaki? Polityczne, kulturowe i ekonomiczne konstrukty pojęciowe w studiach nad historią i kulturą Orientu
- Institution: Akademia Kujawsko-Pomorska, Polska
- ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9186-5162
- Year of publication: 2024
- Source: Show
- Pages: 30-42
- DOI Address: https://doi.org/10.15804/so2024103
- PDF: so/29/so2903.pdf
Eurasian Late Antiquity or the Silk Roads? Political, Cultural, and Economic Conceptual Constructs in the Study of Oriental History and Culture
In contemporary historiography, there is a growing interest in interactions between nomadic peoples and the empires of sedentary peoples in antiquity, with particular emphasis on late antiquity. Differences in the perception of nomadic communities’ impact on the economy cause a conceptual confusion. It is largely due to differences in the perception of the influence that nomadic communities had in shaping the functioning of trade routes leading from one part of Eurasia to another. This article organises and indicates the origin of concepts, such as the Silk Road, the cultural complex of central Eurasia, the first story, and Eurasian Late Antiquity from specific researchers. At the same time, the author compares and presents perceiving trade routes and the influence of nomads on sedentary peoples in two opposing concepts: a metanarrative of the nomad history as the main catalyst for the continent’s economic development and presenting the history of the Silk Road and nomads as part of the multi-vector interaction of various communities in Eurasia during the late antiquity, at the same time indicating a certain advantage of the latter.