Silk Road Empires: Trade Routes That Built Civilization — Fexingo History

The Anxi Protectorate: Rome and China's Missed Encounter

12 min · 29 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Anxi Protectorate: Rome and China's Missed Encounter

Descripción

In 97 CE, a Chinese general named Ban Chao sent an envoy named Gan Ying on an extraordinary mission: reach the Roman Empire and establish direct diplomatic contact. Gan Ying got as far as the Persian Gulf, where Parthian merchants convinced him that the voyage would take years—a story that may have been a deliberate lie to protect their monopoly on silk trade. This episode traces the Han dynasty's westward push through the Anxi Protectorate, the military command that controlled the Tarim Basin and kept the Silk Road open. We explore Ban Chao's campaigns against the Xiongnu, the thirty-six kingdoms of the Western Regions, and the tantalizing near-miss of Sino-Roman contact that wouldn't happen for another 600 years. What if Gan Ying had reached Rome? How different would Eurasian history have been? We also examine the Parthian role as middlemen, the overland route from Luoyang to the Mediterranean, and the diplomatic letters that almost bridged two empires. #AnxiProtectorate #BanChao #GanYing #HanDynasty #ParthianEmpire #RomanEmpire #SilkRoad #WesternRegions #Xiongnu #TarimBasin #Kashgar #Dayuan #Sogdians #PaxRomana #AncientDiplomacy #History #FexingoHistory #MissedConnections Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Silk Road Empires: Trade Routes That Built Civilization — Fexingo History!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

158 episodios

Portada del episodio The Sogdian Couriers Who Outran Empires on the Silk Road

The Sogdian Couriers Who Outran Empires on the Silk Road

Before the Pony Express, before the Yam, there were the Sogdian couriers — mounted messengers who sprinted across the deserts and passes of Central Asia, linking the courts of Persia, India, and Tang China. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the relay system that carried diplomatic letters, trade secrets, and military orders across thousands of miles at speeds that shocked even the Romans. They explore the network of caravanserais, the use of fire signals and horse relays, the famous Sogdian Ancient Letters that survive as evidence, and the couriers who risked bandits, sandstorms, and war zones to deliver their cargo. Along the way, they discuss how the Sogdian system influenced the Mongol Yam and the later Silk Road postal networks, and why the couriers were often more powerful than the merchants they served. A story of speed, trust, and the hidden backbone of trans-Eurasian trade. #SogdianCouriers #SilkRoad #SogdianAncientLetters #CentralAsia #Caravanserai #Yam #MongolEmpire #TangDynasty #PonyExpress #PersianEmpire #Sogdiana #Samarkand #Dunhuang #TarimBasin #History #FexingoHistory #TradeRoutes #PostalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16 de jul de 20265 min
Portada del episodio The Sogdian Who Sold Heaven: Manichaean Merchants on the Silk Road

The Sogdian Who Sold Heaven: Manichaean Merchants on the Silk Road

Long before Manichaeism became the official religion of the Uyghur Khaganate in 763, Sogdian merchants were already carrying its scriptures from Mesopotamia to the Tarim Basin. This episode follows the Sogdian expatriate community in Chang'an who built a Manichaean temple in the 620s, decades before the faith reached the steppe. We explore how a dualist religion founded by a third-century Persian prophet named Mani became the faith of choice for Sogdian traders — not just as a personal belief but as a business network. The same Sogdian letters that recorded debts and caravan routes also contained Manichaean hymns. Lucas and Luna discuss the 731 imperial inquiry into Manichaeism that nearly shut it down, the role of Sogdian translators in adapting Mani's writings into Middle Persian and Sogdian, and why the religion's fall in China began with a massacre of Uyghur merchants in 843. They also consider the irony that the most peaceful of Silk Road faiths — which preached that light and darkness were eternally separate — was spread by the most commercially aggressive people in Central Asia. #Manichaeism #SogdianMerchants #SilkRoadReligion #Mani #UyghurKhaganate #ChangAn #TangDynasty #TarimBasin #Dualism #PersianProphet #SogdianScript #ManichaeanTemple #ChineseManichaeism #HuichangPersecution #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #ReligiousHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
Portada del episodio The Sogdian City That Defied the Caliphate Twice: Bukhara's Revolt of 806

The Sogdian City That Defied the Caliphate Twice: Bukhara's Revolt of 806

In 806 CE, the Sogdian merchants and nobles of Bukhara rose against the Abbasid Caliphate in a rebellion led by Rafi ibn al-Layth, a descendant of the last Sogdian kings. This episode explores how the revolt spread across Transoxiana, drawing support from Sogdian dihqans (landed gentry), Turkic tribes, and even the Uyghur Khaganate. We trace the rebellion's roots in Abbasid exploitation, the role of Samarkand and the Zarafshan Valley, and how Caliph Harun al-Rashid's response—sending the general al-Ma'mun—reshaped the province. The revolt's failure led to the decline of Sogdian autonomy and the consolidation of Islamic rule, but it also forced the Abbasids to moderate their tax policies. We also touch on the Sogdian cultural revival that followed, including the construction of the Samanid mausoleum in Bukhara decades later. This is a story of resistance, adaptation, and the last gasp of Sogdian political identity on the Silk Road. #Sogdians #Bukhara #AbbasidCaliphate #RafiiibnLayth #Transoxiana #ZarafshanValley #HarunAlRashid #AlMamun #Dihqans #SamanidMausoleum #SilkRoad #CentralAsia #SogdianRebellion #UyghurKhaganate #Umayyad #Zoroastrian #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio The Silk Road Treaty That Stopped a War: Tang-Tibet Alliance of 821

The Silk Road Treaty That Stopped a War: Tang-Tibet Alliance of 821

In 821 CE, the Tang emperor and the Tibetan king signed a peace treaty carved in stone at a temple in Lhasa. This episode tells the story of that treaty: the decades of warfare along the Silk Road that preceded it, the diplomatic missions that negotiated it, and the multilingual stele that still stands in the Jokhang Temple. We look at how the treaty defined borders between two empires, how it involved Uyghur mediators, and how the alliance broke down. Along the way, we explore the role of Buddhist monks as diplomats, the strategic importance of the Hexi Corridor, and the forgotten Battle of Dafei River. This is not just a treaty—it's a window into the fragile peace that made the Silk Road possible. #TangTibetTreaty821 #SilkRoad #TangDynasty #TibetanEmpire #HexiCorridor #JokhangTemple #Lhasa #Chang'an #UyghurKhaganate #DafeiRiver #BuddhistDiplomacy #Tuyuhun #TangDynastyHistory #TibetanHistory #SilkRoadHistory #MedievalDiplomacy #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20266 min
Portada del episodio Silk Road Epidemics: How Disease Shaped Eurasia

Silk Road Epidemics: How Disease Shaped Eurasia

The Silk Road didn't just move silk and spices — it moved germs. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the forgotten role of disease in shaping Eurasian history, from the Antonine Plague that hit Rome after Roman soldiers returned from the east, to the Justinian Plague that weakened the Byzantine Empire just as its rival Sassanid Persia was also reeling from epidemics. They discuss how smallpox and measles may have traveled the same routes as Sogdian merchants, and how the Mongol conquests inadvertently spread the Black Death along the very trade routes they had secured. The hosts also touch on the little-known 'Plague of Cyprian' and the Cambridge microbiological study that mapped ancient pathogen DNA from Silk Road skeletons. A sobering look at how pandemics, not just armies, changed the course of history. #SilkRoad #History #Epidemics #AntoninePlague #JustinianPlague #BlackDeath #Smallpox #Measles #MongolEmpire #ByzantineEmpire #SassanidPersia #RomanEmpire #PlagueOfCyprian #AncientDNA #DiseaseHistory #EurasianHistory #FexingoHistory #Pandemics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20267 min