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The Maritime Silk Road mainly includes the East China Sea Route and the South China Sea Route, the East China Sea Route is mainly to the Japanese archipelago and the Korean Peninsula, and the South China Sea Route is mainly to the southeast Tongchaya and the Indian Ocean Burning Mountain area. Before the Song Dynasty, the East China Sea route was mainly from Ningbo, and the South China Sea route was mainly from Guangzhou.
The South China Sea Route, also known as the South China Sea Silk Road, mainly starts in Guangzhou and Quanzhou. The South China Sea Silk Road passes from China through the Indochina Peninsula and the South China Sea countries, crosses the Indian Ocean, enters the Red Sea, and reaches East Africa and Europe.
The East China Sea Route is also known as the "Eastern Maritime Silk Road". During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, the State of Qi opened up a "coastal waterway" in the Jiaodong Peninsula to the Liaodong Peninsula, the Korean Peninsula, the Japanese archipelago and the first channel to Southeast Asia. In the Tang Dynasty, the Shandong Peninsula and the coastal areas of Jiangsu, Zhejiang and China, South Korea and Japan gradually emerged.
In the Song Dynasty, Ningbo became the main port on the sea between China, South Korea and Japan.
Import and export items:
Exports: Goods departing from China are mainly silk, tea, porcelain, gold, silver, books, etc.
Imports: Goods from abroad in the leather wheel include: glass, opal, pearl, ivory, spices, gold and silver, precious stones, crystals, agate, amber, camel skin, frankincense, myrrh, benzoin, agarwood, sandalwood, luhui, pepper, wennaqi, etc.
Safeguarding the World Heritage List:
On April 20, 2017, the State Administration of Cultural Heritage officially designated Guangzhou as the leading city for the Maritime Silk Road World Heritage Application, and joined Nanjing, Ningbo, Jiangmen, Yangjiang, Beihai, Fuzhou, Zhangzhou, Putian, Lishui and other cities to carry out the protection and application of the Maritime Silk Road.
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The Maritime Silk Road passed through Hainan Island.
Huan Kingdom, Gate Poison Kingdom, Gudi Kingdom, Longya Gate, Luo Yue Kingdom, Sri Buddha Death, Heling Kingdom, Guluo Kingdom, Gogu Luo Kingdom, Shengdeng Kingdom, Bolu Kingdom, Lion Kingdom, Nantianzhu.
Brahman, Sindu, Tirolu, Ulla, Great Food.
The kingdom of Mora and finally the kingdom of Sanlan.
The Maritime Silk Road is ancient China.
Sea lanes for foreign traffic** and cultural exchanges. The Maritime Silk Road sprouted in the Shang and Zhou dynasties, developed in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, formed in the Qin and Han dynasties, flourished in the Tang and Song dynasties, and changed in the Ming and Qing dynasties. China's Maritime Silk Road is divided into two routes: the East China Sea Route and the South China Sea Route.
The South China Sea route mainly starts from Guangzhou and Quanzhou. It was the earliest name of China's Maritime Silk Road, and it was the longest ocean route in the world at that time. It passes through more than 100 countries and regions, and has become a major maritime channel for exchanges and cultural exchanges between China and foreign countries.
The Maritime Silk Road in China is mainly composed of three main ports: Guangzhou, Quanzhou and Ningbo and other feeder ports.
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East Africa. The Southern Maritime Silk Road, the most well-known, has had its prototype since the Qin and Han dynasties, but the South China Sea Silk Road in the real sense flourished from the Tang Dynasty and was unprecedentedly prosperous during the Ming Dynasty.
For example, the famous "Zheng He went to the West", and this route in the Tang Dynasty started from Guangzhou, along the South China Sea to connect the Indochina Peninsula, to Sumatra, the Strait of Malacca and other places, and as far as the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea port, and even East Africa, is a veritable great route.
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The Maritime Silk Road starts from the Pearl River Basin, goes south from the Indochina Peninsula, circles the Malay Peninsula, crosses the Strait of Malacca, enters the Persian Gulf, and reaches the southernmost tip of the Indian Peninsula.
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From the Qin Dynasty to the Han, Tang, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, Guangzhou merchant ships traveled from neighboring Southeast Asia, to the Persian Gulf, Western Europe, North Africa, to Latin America, Mexico, New York, and finally to Russia: this is probably the "farthest road" in the world.
Collection of the Museum of the Nanyue King of the Western Han Dynasty, four-sided ornamental drawings of boat patterns, silver boxes, ivory and frankincense. Photo by Southern ** reporter Wu Weihong.
The journey to the sea began in the Han Dynasty. The Yuan Dynasty reached the east coast of Africa. In the Ming Dynasty, the route between Guangzhou and Latin America was opened, known as the "Silk Road in the Pacific".
In winter, it departs from Guangzhou, passes through Manila into the Pacific Ocean, travels northward by the southwest monsoon in mid to late June, crosses the Pacific Ocean by the northwest wind, and then uses the northwest wind that prevails on the coast to reach Acapulco, a natural port on the west coast of Mexico, and Lima Port in Peru.
The Silk Road was a historically significant international passage that facilitated the exchange of civilizations between the East and the West. The Silk Road not only introduced papermaking out of China, but also introduced grapes, peppers, walnuts and other fruits, sapphires, glass products and other ornaments, Buddhism from Central Asia, and Buddhist scriptures translated and monasteries built by visiting monks from the Western Regions during the reign of Emperor Ming of the Han Dynasty. Since 119 BC Zhang Qian's mission to the Western Regions, it has gradually appeared. >>>More
East China Sea Silk Road. When the East China Sea route was established in 1112 B.C., he sent a seal to Korea from the Bohai Bay harbor on the Shandong Peninsula to teach silkworm weaving. China's silkworm raising, silk reeling, and silk weaving techniques were first transmitted to Korea through the Yellow Sea. >>>More
The Silk Road, referred to as the Silk Road. It refers to the Western Han Dynasty (202 B.C.-8 A.D.), which was opened up by Zhang Qian's envoy to the Western Regions, starting from Chang'an (now Xi'an), passing through Gansu and Xinjiang, to Central Asia and West Asia, and connecting the Mediterranean countries (this road is also known as the "Northwest Silk Road" to distinguish it from the other two transportation routes with the name of "Silk Road" in the future). Silk products were the most influential of the goods transported west by this route (and a lot of silk was shipped from China). >>>More
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Singing: Huang Yingying. >>>More
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