From the Bronze Age through the Middle Ages, a network of trade and
migration routes brought people from across Eurasia into contact. Their
commerce included political, social, and artistic ideas, as well as
material goods such as metals and textiles. Reconfiguring the Silk
Road offers new research on the earliest trade and cultural
interactions along these routes, mapping the spread and influence of
Silk Road economies and social structures over time. This volume
features contributions by renowned scholars uncovering new discoveries
related to populations that lived in the Tarim Basin, the advanced state
of textile manufacturing in the region, and the diffusion of
domesticated grains across Inner Asia. Other chapters include an
analysis of the dispersal of languages across the Eurasian Steppe and a
detailed examination of the domestication of the horse in the region.
Contextualized with a foreword by Colin Renfrew and introduction by
Victor Mair, Reconfiguring the Silk Road provides a new assessment of
the intercultural evolution along the steppes and beyond.
Contributors: David W. Anthony, Elizabeth Wayland Barber, Dorcas R.
Brown, Peter Brown, Michael D. Frachetti, Jane Hickman, Philip L. Kohl,
Victor H. Mair, J. P. Mallory, Joseph G. Manning, Colin Renfrew.