
Contents
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Searching for Antiquity Searching for Antiquity
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Plotting for Continents Plotting for Continents
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Cite
Abstract
The first part of the book examines the processes and events by which the Silk Road gains its key attributes as a narrative of geocultural history in the five decades leading up to World War II. This first chapter begins by outlining the connections forged in nineteenth-century Europe between the nation, material culture, and ideas of civilization and East and West. An explanation of the geopolitical contexts within which histories of the Middle East are written by European scholars sets the scene for understanding the factors that led to Ferdinand von Richthofen describing historical trade routes in Central Asia as a road of silk. The circumstances of his trip meant that he combined surveys for a possible rail route to Europe with his broader interests in geography and history. This is fundamentally important to how the Silk Road narrative forms decades later.
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