Religions of the Silk Road

by Shalonda Fogel, June 2014

300 words

1 page

essay

The Silk Road was a known trade route for numerous goods. Ideas were also crucial commodities for trading during this period. Religious ideas pervaded all aspects of the road. The religious concerns dominated philosophical thinking and helped in deciding the perspectives in life. This guided people in exchanging and spending their material wealth. Along the Silk Road, Buddhism was a common religion (Foltz, 2000). Other religions began spreading after the introduction of Christian and Islam traders and users of the roads. Buddhist beliefs began transmitting along the roads after the forces of the Buddhist missionaries in the region. Christian missionaries began travelling along these regions, but they met an already entrenched Buddhism religion. Around 432 A.D, Christianity began to make appearances. The Roman Catholic Church during this time forbids the Nestorian sect in Europe. As a result, the Nestorian sects and beliefs moved towards the east. Nestorian emerged as a breakout of Christianity following differences with the Roman Catholic. The Nestorians believed in duo natures of Christ. Their distinguished their nature and affirmed their union. ConclusionAccording to Foltz, opposition to Christianity thoughts began following the representatives of Antioch and Byzantium, which resulted to the emergence of schisms. The rejection of the Greek language and schisms awakened nationalism. The Syrian spirit began asserting against Greek dominance. The Syrian people became alienated because of their ideological and religious differences. The Christian Byzantines increased their autocracy and oppressed the people with heavy taxations (Foltz, 2000). They expanded to Eastern Central Asia and Sogdiana because of the sporadic exiling and persecutions of Christians. The emergence of Islam in the region inhibited their progressive expansion. ReferenceFoltz, R. (2000). Religions of the Silk Road: Overland Trade and Cultural Exchange from Antiquity to the Fifteenth Century. Palgrave …

Download will start in 20 seconds

Disclaimer

Note that all papers are meant for inspiration and reference purposes only! Do not copy papers in full or in part. Papers are provided by other students, who hold the copyright for the content of those papers. All papers were submitted to TurnItIn and will show up as plagiarism if you try to submit any part of them as your own work. Assignment Lab can not guarantee the quality of the user generated content such as sample papers above.