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Spices, gems and other
exotic cargo excavated from an ancient port on Egypt's Red Sea show that
the sea trade 2,000 years ago between the Roman Empire and India was
more extensive than previously thought and even rivaled the legendary
Silk Road, archaeologists say.
"We talk today about globalism as
if it were the latest thing, but trade was going on in antiquity at a
scale and scope that is truly impressive," said the co-director of
the dig, Willeke Wendrich of the University of California at Los
Angeles.
Wendrich and Steven Sidebotham of the University of Delaware report
their findings in the July issue of the journal Sahara. Historians
have long known that Egypt and India traded by land and sea during the
Roman era, in part because of texts detailing the commercial exchange of
luxury goods, including fabrics, spices and wine.
Now, archaeologists who have spent the last nine years excavating the
town of Berenike say they have recovered artifacts that are the best
physical evidence yet of the extent of sea trade between the Roman
Empire and India.
They say the evidence indicates that trade between the Roman Empire and
India was as extensive as that of the Silk Road, the trade route that
stretched from Venice to Japan. Silk, spices, perfume, glass and
other goods moved along the Silk Road between about 100 B.C. and the
15th century.
"The Silk Road gets a lot of attention as a trade route, but we've
found a wealth of evidence indicating that sea trade between Egypt and
India was also important for transporting exotic cargo, and it may have
even served as a link with the Far East," Sidebotham said.
Among their finds at the site near
Egypt's border with Sudan included more than 16 pounds (7 kilograms0 of
black peppercorns, the largest stash of the prized Indian spice ever
recovered from a Roman archaeological site. Bernike
lies at what was the southeastern extreme of the Roman Empire and
probably functioned as a transfer port for goods shipped through the Red
Sea. Trade activity at the port peaked twice, in the first century
and again around 500, before it ceased altogether, possibly after a
plague.
Ships would sail between Berenike and India during the summer, when
monsoon winds were strongest, Wendrich said. From Berenike, camel
caravans probably carried the goods 240 miles (386 kilometers) west to
the Nile, where they were shipped by boat to the Mediterranean port of
Alexandria, she said. From there, they could have moved by ship
through the rest of the Roman world.
(Los Angeles AP) |