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Religions of the Silk Road: Overland Trade and Cultural Exchange from Antiquity to the Fifteenth Century
Richard C. Foltz

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Religions of the Silk Road: Overland Trade and Cultural Exchange from Antiquity to the Fifteenth Century

Palgrave Macmillan (Sep 02, 2000)
#2480
9780312233389
| Paperback
208 pages | 137 x 315 mm | English
Dewey 200
LC Classification BL1050 .F65 1999
LC Control No. 98043092

Genre

  • Philosophy And Literature

Plot

Ever since the label was coined in the late 19th century, the idea of the Silk Road has captivated the Western imagination with images of fabled cities and exotic peoples. Religions of the Silk Road looks behind the romantic notions of the colonial era and tells the story of how cultural traditions, especially in the form of religious ideas, accompanied merchants and their goods along the overland Asian trade routes in pre-modern times. As early as three thousand years ago Hebraic and Iranian religious ideas and practices traveled eastwards in this way, to be followed centuries later by the great missionary traditions of Buddhism, Christianity, Manichaeism, and Islam. But the Silk Road was more than just a conduit along which these religions hitched rides East; it was a formative and transformative rite of passage, and no religion emerged unchanged at the end of the journey.

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Added Date Oct 06, 2010 19:11:15
Modified Date Oct 04, 2013 20:20:36