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

The Sogdian Whispers That Built an Empire

6 min · 30. touko 2026
jakson The Sogdian Whispers That Built an Empire kansikuva

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They were the merchants, diplomats, and translators who made the Silk Road work. The Sogdians, from the heart of Central Asia, didn't just trade goods—they traded ideas. In this episode, we trace the Sogdian network from their homeland in Samarkand to the courts of Tang China and the Abbasid Caliphate. We explore how their language became the lingua franca of the Silk Road, how they spread Buddhism and Manichaeism, and how their fall to Arab conquests reshaped Eurasia. Featuring the Sogdian Ancient Letters, the ruins of Panjakent, and the legacy of a people who vanished but whose influence persists. #Sogdians #Sogdiana #SilkRoad #CentralAsia #Samarkand #Panjakent #SogdianAncientLetters #Manichaeism #Nestorian #TangDynasty #AbbasidCaliphate #Zoroastrianism #Buddhism #Transoxiana #PaxSogdiana #History #FexingoHistory #TradeRoutes Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Sogdian Diplomat Who Made Tang China and the Caliphate Neighbors kansikuva

The Sogdian Diplomat Who Made Tang China and the Caliphate Neighbors

In 723 CE, a Sogdian merchant named Tashkent Sogdian (unclear) arrived in Chang'an carrying gifts from the Umayyad Caliph. But a Tang official turned him away, igniting a diplomatic crisis between Asia's two greatest empires. This episode unpacks the Sogdian role as middlemen between the Tang Dynasty and the Abbasid Caliphate before the Battle of Talas. We explore the politics of gift-giving, the arrogance of protocol, and how one stubborn Tang courtier reshaped Central Asian diplomacy. Plus: the forgotten Sogdian language that served as Eurasia's diplomatic tongue. #SilkRoad #TangDynasty #UmayyadCaliphate #AbbasidCaliphate #Sogdian #Diplomacy #BattleOfTalas #ChangAn #CentralAsia #GiftGiving #LiDongshan #Samarkand #Merv #History #FexingoHistory #Eurasia #DiplomaticHistory #SogdianLanguage Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. heinä 20266 min
jakson The Sogdian Merchant Who Funded the Tang Army kansikuva

The Sogdian Merchant Who Funded the Tang Army

In this episode, Lucas and Luna follow the remarkable story of Shi Sini, a Sogdian merchant from Samarkand who became one of the Tang Dynasty's most vital financiers during the An Lushan rebellion. Using his vast trade network stretching from the Zeravshan Valley to Chang'an, Sini provided horses, grain, and silver that kept the Tang army in the field. We explore how Sogdian merchants leveraged Silk Road connections to become creditors to emperors, the risks of lending to a desperate crown, and the shadowy world of Sogdian banking practices like the 'flying money' system. Did Shi Sini ever get repaid? What happened to his family after the rebellion? And how did this one merchant's gamble reshape Tang fiscal policy for centuries? We visit the war-torn streets of Chang'an, the horse markets of the Hexi Corridor, and the counting houses of Samarkand to find out. #ShiSini #Sogdian #TangDynasty #AnLushanRebellion #SilkRoad #Samarkand #ChangAn #HexiCorridor #FlyingMoney #TangFinance #Zeravshan #SogdianMerchants #HorseTrade #GrainSupply #TangMilitary #SilkRoadCommerce #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. heinä 20265 min
jakson The Sogdian Buddha of Kizil: Silk Road Art Lost and Found kansikuva

The Sogdian Buddha of Kizil: Silk Road Art Lost and Found

In the Taklamakan Desert, the Kizil Caves once held hundreds of Buddhist cave temples, adorned with vibrant murals painted by Sogdian and Tocharian artists between the 3rd and 8th centuries. This episode follows the story of a single mural — the 'Sogdian Buddha' — a masterpiece that blended Indian, Persian, and Chinese styles. We trace how German explorer Albert von Le Coq cut it from the cave wall in 1914 and shipped it to Berlin, where it survived WWII only to be lost again during the Cold War. Along the way, we explore the Sogdians' role as Buddhist patrons, the Kuchean kingdom's Silk Road wealth, and the controversial legacy of early 20th-century archaeology in Central Asia. Featuring the Tarim Basin, the Murtuq Caves, the Indus Valley, Gandhara, and the debates over repatriation today. #KizilCaves #SogdianBuddha #AlbertvonLeCoq #BuddhistArt #SilkRoad #TarimBasin #Tocharian #Kuchean #Gandhara #Repatriation #Murtuq #GermanTurfanExpedition #CentralAsianArchaeology #LostMurals #History #FexingoHistory #Archaeology #CulturalHeritage Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen6 min
jakson The Sogdian Silver Coin That Funded the Silk Road Revival kansikuva

The Sogdian Silver Coin That Funded the Silk Road Revival

In 751 CE, the Abbasid victory at the Battle of Talas reshaped Central Asia—but what happened to the Sogdian merchants who survived? This episode follows the journey of a single silver coin minted in Samarkand under the Samanid dynasty, tracing how Sogdian moneylenders and their dirhams bankrolled the Tang restoration after the An Lushan rebellion. We explore the bimetallic system of silver and silk, the rise of the Samanid silver mines at Panjshir, and how a coin struck in a Sogdian city could pay for a camel in Kashgar, a horse in Khotan, or a bribe in Chang'an. Along the way, we meet the dihqan landowners who kept Sogdian culture alive under Islamic rule, and learn why the dirham became the de facto currency of the Silk Road for nearly three centuries. This is a story of resilience, trade, and the small objects that moved empires. #Sogdian #Samanid #Dirham #SilkRoad #Sogdiana #Samarkand #TangChina #AnLushan #Coinage #Bimetallic #Panjshir #Kashgar #Khotan #Dihqan #Abbasid #Talas #Numismatics #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen6 min
jakson The Forgotten Silk Road Currency: Cowrie Shells in Eurasia kansikuva

The Forgotten Silk Road Currency: Cowrie Shells in Eurasia

Episode 159 of Silk Road Empires turns away from the usual gold and silver to explore the most widespread currency on the ancient trade routes: the cowrie shell. Lucas and Luna trace how these small, glossy sea shells from the Maldives traveled across India, Central Asia, and China, becoming the preferred medium of exchange from the Shang dynasty to the Tang era. They discuss the logistical marvel of moving millions of shells overland, the role of Bengali pirates in disrupting supply, and the fascinating parallel with the Yapese stone money on the other side of the world. Along the way, they touch on the Wu Zhu coinage, the economic policies of the Tang, and the surprising durability of shell money in areas where minted coins were scarce. A story of value, logistics, and the strange ways humans agree on what is worth something. #CowrieShells #SilkRoadEconomy #Maldives #ShellMoney #TangDynasty #AncientTrade #Numismatics #WuZhu #ShangDynasty #YapStoneMoney #BengalPirates #CurrencyHistory #IndianOceanTrade #CaravanRoutes #FexingoHistory #History #EurasianTrade #MaritimeSilkRoad Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. heinä 20266 min