The Mongols and the Black Sea Trade in the 13th and 14th Centuries

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preliminary remarks 23

while it also commanded the Southern corridor via Kabul and Kandahar

in afghanistan and along the valley of the Indus into India; tabriz had two

northern channels, either through Derbent in the caucasus or through

erzurum, trebizond and the Black Sea, and also a Southern route through

to the persian Gulf and the Indian ocean; Baghdad had the river route

down to Basra and thence, again, to the Gulf, while it could also reach the

eastern Mediterranean via Mosul, Damascus and aleppo. constantinople

was similarly well-placed.

the value of a market-place depends, of course, on the quantity of goods

exchanged but also on their variety and how well the goods on offer com-

plement other wares. thus every one of the major metropolitan centres

mentioned—Samarkand, tabriz, Baghdad and constantinople—collected

and redistributed wares from four major eurasian areas, each offering a

specific range of goods: the Far east, europe in the Western reaches, the

steppe and taiga in the north, and in the South the Indian ocean.

another “unwritten law” dictated the position of these major markets,

which were always optimally placed to serve as meeting-points for mer-

chants from all four of the major zones. From this perspective, Samarkand,

tabriz and Baghdad satisfied the requirement, and their geographical

position made them true commercial centres. thus the east-West trade

route which has gained wider fame as the Silk road also served, through

its lateral branches and supply chains, as the backbone of a whole net-

work of eurasian commerce.

as a result, although it was entirely land-locked, this principal axis of

long-distance trade was able to compete with the parallel sea route via the

Indian ocean both in classical times and in the Middle ages, even though

sea transport was at least ten times cheaper: the Silk road owed this com-

petitive advantage to its central position par excellence. all the determin-

ing factors, geographical and economic, worked to assure its continuing

good health: whenever the political circumstances were also favourable,

the Silk road was reborn from its own ashes, with only the minimum of

diversions and new routes.

1.1.4 The Nomads and the Silk Road

the Mongol expansion was essentially nothing more than another nomad

incursion into settled lands. the most characteristic feature of chinggis

Khan’s deeds, and those of his followers, was the sheer scale. here the

Mongol achievements can be compared to those of the arab nomads who

set out, in the early years of Islam, to conquer the world. the similarities
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