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

The Sogdian Merchant Who Funded the Tang Dynasty

6 min · I går
episode The Sogdian Merchant Who Funded the Tang Dynasty cover

Beskrivelse

This episode uncovers the story of the Sogdian merchant network that bankrolled the Tang dynasty's expansion into Central Asia. Lucas and Luna explore how Sogdian traders from Samarkand controlled the main branches of the Silk Road, acting as financiers, tax farmers, and intelligence agents for the Tang court. They examine the role of the Sogdian sabao (merchant-chieftains) in Chang'an, the massive silver flows that funded Tang armies, and the pivotal Battle of Talas (751 CE) where Sogdian merchants switched sides. The episode also delves into the Sogdian diaspora in China, including the famous tomb of An Jia (ancestor of An Lushan) unearthed in Xi'an in 2000, and how Sogdian business practices shaped Tang commercial law. No prior knowledge needed beyond basic Silk Road context. #Sogdian #TangDynasty #SilkRoad #Samarkand #ChangAn #BattleOfTalas #AnJia #Sabao #SogdianDiaspora #CentralAsia #EurasianTrade #Zoroastrianism #ChineseHistory #MedievalTrade #AnLushan #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

142 Episoder

episode The Sogdian Who Wrote the Tang Dynasty's Epic cover

The Sogdian Who Wrote the Tang Dynasty's Epic

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the forgotten literary genius of the Sogdian diaspora in Tang China: the poet Li Bai (also known as Li Bo), whose family hailed from the Silk Road trading networks of Central Asia. Born in 701 CE in Suiye (modern-day Tokmok, Kyrgyzstan) — a Sogdian outpost of the Western Regions — Li Bai's lineage may have been Sogdian or closely connected to Sogdian merchant clans. His poetry captures the spirit of the Silk Road: images of jade, horses, wine, and distant lands, woven into the classical Chinese tradition. The hosts discuss his most famous poems, like 'Drinking Alone by Moonlight' and 'The Road to Shu Is Hard,' and how his outsider status shaped his romantic, wandering persona. They also touch on the Tang dynasty's cosmopolitan culture, where foreign-born poets could rise to fame, and the later attempts to 'Sinicize' Li Bai's origins. Along the way, they reveal how Sogdian influences — from music to cuisine to language — permeated Tang daily life, and why Li Bai's legacy remains a bridge between the steppe and the capital. #LiBai #TangDynasty #Sogdian #SilkRoad #ChinesePoetry #ChangAn #CentralAsia #Tokmok #Suiye #DrinkingAloneByMoonlight #Cosmopolitanism #FexingoHistory #History #Literature #Eurasia #CuiHao #DuFu #Buddhism Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

8. juli 20266 min
episode The Sogdian Merchant Who Funded the Tang Dynasty cover

The Sogdian Merchant Who Funded the Tang Dynasty

This episode uncovers the story of the Sogdian merchant network that bankrolled the Tang dynasty's expansion into Central Asia. Lucas and Luna explore how Sogdian traders from Samarkand controlled the main branches of the Silk Road, acting as financiers, tax farmers, and intelligence agents for the Tang court. They examine the role of the Sogdian sabao (merchant-chieftains) in Chang'an, the massive silver flows that funded Tang armies, and the pivotal Battle of Talas (751 CE) where Sogdian merchants switched sides. The episode also delves into the Sogdian diaspora in China, including the famous tomb of An Jia (ancestor of An Lushan) unearthed in Xi'an in 2000, and how Sogdian business practices shaped Tang commercial law. No prior knowledge needed beyond basic Silk Road context. #Sogdian #TangDynasty #SilkRoad #Samarkand #ChangAn #BattleOfTalas #AnJia #Sabao #SogdianDiaspora #CentralAsia #EurasianTrade #Zoroastrianism #ChineseHistory #MedievalTrade #AnLushan #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går6 min
episode The Sogdian Alphabet: How Merchants Wrote Their Way to Power cover

The Sogdian Alphabet: How Merchants Wrote Their Way to Power

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]

I går6 min
episode The Tocharian Mummies: Bronze Age Ghosts of the Tarim cover

The Tocharian Mummies: Bronze Age Ghosts of the Tarim

Long before the Sogdian caravans and Han dynasty diplomats, the Tarim Basin was home to a mysterious people who left behind the eerily preserved mummies of their dead—blond-haired, fair-skinned, and wrapped in woven fabrics that challenge our assumptions about ancient migration. This episode follows the discovery of the Tarim mummies at sites like Xiaohe and Qäwrighul, the debate over their origins (were they Tocharian speakers, Indo-European migrants, or local desert foragers?), and what their genetics reveal about a lost world where East and West met long before the Silk Road officially began. We also explore the controversy over repatriation and reburial, and what the mummies' wool twill textiles and cannabis offerings tell us about Bronze Age trade routes that preceded the Silk Road by two millennia. No prior knowledge of the Tocharians is assumed. #TarimMummies #Tocharians #BronzeAgeSilkRoad #XiaoheCemetery #Qäwrighul #Xinjiang #IndoEuropean #TocharianLanguages #AncientDNA #CannabisHistory #TextileHistory #Repatriation #SilkRoadOrigins #EurasianSteppe #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory #TarimBasin Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6. juli 202611 min
episode The Sogdian Caravan That Defied an Empire: Gurak's Rebellion cover

The Sogdian Caravan That Defied an Empire: Gurak's Rebellion

In 722 CE, a Sogdian prince named Gurak led a desperate rebellion against the Umayyad Caliphate from the fortress of Mount Mugh. When the Arabs besieged his stronghold, Gurak's caravan of refugees—nobles, merchants, and Zoroastrian priests—fled across the Pamir Mountains into China, carrying with them a trove of Sogdian documents that would be discovered a thousand years later. This episode follows Gurak's flight, the siege of Mugh, and the fate of the Sogdian diaspora under Tang protection. We examine the Sogdian Ancient Letters from Mount Mugh, the politics of the Arab conquest of Transoxiana, and how one caravan's escape reshaped the Silk Road's cultural landscape. Along the way, we meet the enigmatic Divashtich, the Sogdian king who chose fire over submission, and explore the Zoroastrian rituals that sustained Sogdian identity in exile. A story of resistance, faith, and the fragile threads of communication that held the Silk Road together. #Sogdian #MountMugh #Gurak #Divashtich #Umayyad #Transoxiana #Zoroastrian #PamirMountains #TangDynasty #SilkRoad #SogdianAncientLetters #Caravan #Rebellion #722CE #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #Sogdiana Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6. juli 20268 min