Middle East 21
Hormuz
Tehran
Aleppo
Sana’a
Berenike
SAUDIA ARABIA
YEMEN
OMAN
IRAQ
SYRIA
TURKEY
IRAN
Baghdad
Baghdad became the
premier city on the Silk
Road after 770 CE.
On to
China
Muscat
Muscat was a popular
stopping point for spice ships
en route between the Indian
Ocean and the Middle East.
Basra
LEBANON
ISRAEL
BLACK LIMES
Fresh limes are dried
“black” in the heat of
the Arabian desert.
POMEGRANATE
Pomegranates are grown
in the fertile crescent,
from Israel to Iraq.
BARBERRY
Dried, sour barberries
are a distinctively
Iranian speciality.
SAFFRON
Northeast Iran is
famous for its fields
of saffron flowers.
CHILLIES
Mild Aleppo chillies
from Syria are prized
across the world.
Road to China
Active from 114 BCE, this
overland trade route from
China was a conduit for
East Asian spices, notably
ginger and star anise. Now
essential to Turkish and
Persian cuisine, rose petals
were first brought to the
region by Chinese traders.
KEY
Historical spice trade routes
Ancient Silk Road
020-021_Map_middle_east.indd 21 04/06/2018 17:07