Part A Survey Plan This survey will analyze the impact of Silk Road on cultural communication. Silk Road is a trade route connecting eastern China and the Mediterranean Sea. This is very important as it makes it possible to trade in Europe, Asia and the Middle East to trade products and ideas. Parameters are the east and west cultural spreads and the spread of religion. The study area is west (composed of Europe and Middle East) and east (in this survey, see most of Asia). It focuses primarily on China)
The Silk Road is known as the main trade route of the "Old World" and has caused many conflicts in its existence. It brings merchandise and disadvantages such as plague, cultural communication, introduction of new technology and brings new religions to various parts of the world. The Silk Road formed the world we have today, when it ended at 1440 AD, it affected the majority of Europe and Asia.
Since the concept of "Seidenstrassen" or "Silk Road" was originally invented by German geologist and explorer Baron Ferdinand von Richthofen in 1877, "Silk Road" is used as a metaphor of cultural exchange between Europe and Asia I was wrong. Although primarily commercialized, Silk Road provides tools for creative communication between a wide variety of people and culture. Given the symbolic significance of sharing and exchanging the Silk Road, the desire to manage the silk of the same name is very strong and somewhat contradicting. Over the centuries, ancient Chinese have kept secrets of silk production. Ottoman Turks and Persians waged war on this. The UK and France are competing to limit the market. Nevertheless, silk is very easy to cross the globe, and wherever you go you are a person who is responsible for cultural creativity. The extent of borrowing, technology and model selection, inventions, and discovery of usage and style are incredible.