26 China in World History
Yarkand
Kashgar Khotan
Bukhara Tashkent
Taxila
Merv
Barbarikon
AralSea
Caspian
Sea
Arabian Sea
Persian
Gulf
Ga
nge
sR
iver
Ind
us
Riv
er
PARTHIAN
EMPIRE
KUSHAN
PERSIA EMPIRE
BACTRIA
TURKESTAN
Him
alay
anM
ount
ains
Kun
lunM
ount
ains
To Rome
To Egypt
To Egypt
To S. India
and Ceylon
ARABIA
INDIA
0
0 200 km
200 mi
THEHANEMPIRE
(206BCE to 220 CE)
Han protectorates
Additions to the Han Empire until 220 CE
The Han Empire, 140 BCE
Principal trade routes
Cities
Great Wall
pursued a policy of “peace and kinship” (heqin), attempting to avoid
war with the Xiongnu by sending lavish gifts of silk, gold, and grain and
offering Xiongnu leaders Han princesses in marriage.
In their treaties with the Xiongnu, the Han recognized the nomadic
state as its equal (despite the internal court rhetoric of universal
imperial sovereignty). During the early Han, the dynasty functioned
more as a tributary vassal of the Xiongnu Empire rather than vice versa.
But unlike the Han dynasty, the Xiongnu Empire remained a loose