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È universalmente noto che le prime grandi civiltà ebbero origine nella regione che si estende fra le coste orientali del Mediterraneo e l'Himalaya: qui, nella valle dell'Indo e in Mesopotamia, vennero fondate le prime grandi metropoli e edificati i primi vasti imperi. Non altrettanto noto, invece, è che questa stessa regione ha costituito per millenni il crocevia della civiltà. Lungo il suo fitto reticolo di strade che collegavano città costiere e remote località dell'interno, e che già a fine Ottocento prese il nome di «Vie della Seta», battute da mercanti, conquistatori, pellegrini e nomadi provenienti da ogni dove, si sono scambiate materie prime, merci e manufatti, ma anche morte, violenza e malattie, e soprattutto idee nei campi più disparati, dalla scienza alla filosofia; e lungo le sue rotte commerciali hanno visto la luce le grandi religioni (giudaismo, cristianesimo, islam, buddhismo e induismo), che, in paradossale antitesi con quanto accadde più tardi e continua ad accadere oggi, hanno convissuto a lungo in pace e armonia.
In contrasto con la narrazione dominante che celebra il trionfo politico, culturale e morale dell'Occidente quale artefice e custode della «vera» civiltà, con il suo monumentale affresco Peter Frankopan ci invita a guardare alla storia con occhi diversi e a riconsiderare il ruolo cruciale svolto in passato da popoli e luoghi finora pressoché ignorati o relegati sullo sfondo, e in procinto di tornare prepotentemente alla ribalta. Se infatti nei secoli dell'età moderna le nuove vie d'acqua che hanno messo in contatto il Vecchio e il Nuovo Mondo hanno mutato gli schemi di interazione globale, spostando sull'Europa occidentale il baricentro politico ed economico mondiale, oggi risulta sempre più evidente che le Vie della Seta stanno per rinascere a nuova vita. Questa volta a percorrerle non saranno i tessuti, l'oro, il grano, i cavalli, gli schiavi, ma le immense ricchezze minerarie - petrolio, gas naturale e altre risorse energetiche - che hanno costituito la posta in gioco nel confronto fra le potenze nel corso del Novecento. E le drammatiche turbolenze che negli ultimi decenni hanno scosso la «spina dorsale dell'Asia», irradiando morte e smarrimento nel resto del pianeta, devono essere lette come i segnali dell'imminente ritorno del centro di gravità del mondo in quella che è stata per millenni la sua sede naturale.
Se, come sostiene Frankopan, l'età dell'Occidente volge al termine, diventa più urgente che mai un radicale cambiamento di prospettiva che ci aiuti a comprendere la storia di queste popolazioni e di queste terre, per affrontare in modo consapevole e senza isterismi un processo che sembra ormai irreversibile.
1032 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2015


Remarkably a copy of the khagan's reply to this letter survives with the Kazar ruler explaining his tribes conversation to Judaism. The decision to convert, wrote the Khagan was the result of the great wisdom of the one of his predecessors, who had brought delegations representing different faiths to present the case for each. Having pondered how best to establish the facts the rule had asked the Christians whether Islam or Judaism was the better faith. When they replied that the former was certainly worse than the later, he asked the Muslims whether Judaism or Christianity was preferable. When they lambasted Christianity and also replied that Judaism was the less bad of the two, the Khazar ruler announced that he had reached a conclusion: both had admitted that "the religion of the Israelites was better," he declared, so "trusting in the mercies of God and the power of the Almighty, I choose the religion of Israel, that is, the religion of Abraham. (p109)Slavery was endemic in Islamic society during the zenith of its culture in the medieval years—much the same as it had been in the Roman Empire during its heyday. The following excerpt from the book provides a discussion of the extent of slavery in Islamic lands:
Recent research suggests that at the height of its power the Roman Empire required 250,000—400,000 new slaves each year to maintain slave population. The size of the market in the Islamic lands was considerably larger—assuming the demand for slaves was analogous—stretching from Spain through to Afghanistan, which would suggest that the number of slaves being sold may have been far greater even than those for Rome. Although the limitations of the source material are frustrating, some idea of the likely scale comes from the fact that one account talks of a caliph and his wife owning a thousand slave girls each, while another was said to own no fewer than four thousand. Slaves in the Muslim world were as ubiquitous—and silent—as they were in Rome. (p116)The book mentions that much of the gold and silver taken by Spain from the newly found mines of North and South America ended up in the far east in payment for luxury goods such things as spices, silks and fine china. China in particular had a preference for silver relative to gold, thus a large portion of the silver ended up in China. The following excerpt discusses the economic consequences of such an accumulation of silver in China:
Much of the silver that flooded into China was spent in a series of major reforms, not the least of which were the monetisation of the economy, the encouragement of free labour markets and a deliberate program to stimulate foreign trade. Ironically, China's love of silver and the premium it placed on this particular precious metal became its Achilles heel. With such great quantities of silver reaching China, above all through Manila, it was inevitable that its value would start to fall, which over time caused price inflation. the net result was that the value of silver, and above all its value in relation to gold, was forced into line with other regions and continents. Unlike India, where the impact of the opening up of the world produced new wonder of the world, in China it was to lead to a serious economic and political crisis in the seventeenth century. Globalisation was no less problematic five centuries ago than it is today. (p235)This book provides a history written from an intentionally non-Western point of view. This difference in perspective is what makes it unique and worth reading.

