I suppose the financial returns and the opportunities for acquiring knowledge and disseminating religion made the risks worthwhile.
It did help that there were watch towers, forts and beacons along the Silk Road, as well as oasis settlements.
It's interesting that it's known as the Silk Road, because to me this always seems to imply or give the impression of one-way traffic, which certainly wasn't the case- the various Chinese dynasties were avid consumers of novelties and rare Western and Iranian derived products and artefacts, such as Tyrian dyed woollen cloth, Roman glassware and coral, Iranian metalwork and so forth.
Of course the silver bullion from Rome, Byzantium and the Iranian empires helped too....
It did help that there were watch towers, forts and beacons along the Silk Road, as well as oasis settlements.
It's interesting that it's known as the Silk Road, because to me this always seems to imply or give the impression of one-way traffic, which certainly wasn't the case- the various Chinese dynasties were avid consumers of novelties and rare Western and Iranian derived products and artefacts, such as Tyrian dyed woollen cloth, Roman glassware and coral, Iranian metalwork and so forth.
Of course the silver bullion from Rome, Byzantium and the Iranian empires helped too....
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