Silk Road Empires: Trade Routes That Built Civilization — Fexingo History
Before the Silk Road had paper, before the Abbasids built Baghdad, the Sogdians had letters. Their script, adapted from Aramaic, became the foundation for the Uyghur, Mongolian, and even Manchu alphabets. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace how a network of merchants from Samarkand turned a borrowed writing system into a tool of cultural influence that outlasted their empire. They examine the Sogdian Ancient Letters — not just for their spy content, but as evidence of a literate diaspora. They discuss how Sogdian scribes adapted the script to write Buddhist sutras, Manichaean hymns, and Christian texts, making it the most versatile writing system on the Silk Road. And they ask: why did a commercial script endure, while the empires that used it crumbled? Featuring the Sogdian script, its Aramaic origins, the role of Sogdian scribes in Turkic courts, and the script's legacy in Central Asia. #SogdianScript #SilkRoad #Aramaic #UyghurAlphabet #MongolianScript #ManchuAlphabet #SogdianAncientLetters #Samarkand #TarimBasin #Manichaeism #Buddhism #Nestorianism #CentralAsia #Linguistics #WritingSystems #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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