Showing posts with label Silk Road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silk Road. Show all posts

Monday, 26 November 2007

Road Map of the Roman Empire - the Silk Road


The Tabula Peutingeriana is one of the Austrian National Library's greatest treasures.

Some months ago I wrote some articles with maps and photos on my travels along the Silk Road in Central Asia. Recently I discovered a magnificent story on the BBC website with a photo of a parchment scroll with a road map of the Roman Empire.

The parchment scroll, made in the Middle Ages, is the only surviving copy of a road map from the late Roman Empire.

The document, which is almost seven metres long, shows the network of main Roman roads from Spain to India.

It is normally never shown to the public. The parchment is extremely fragile, and reacts badly to daylight.

But it has been on display for one day to celebrate its inclusion in Unesco's Memory of the World Register.

Practical guide


At first sight, it looks very unlike a modern map.

Every so often there is a pictogram of a building to show you that there was a hotel or a spa where you could stay

Andreas Fingernagel
Austrian National Library


Both the landmass and the seas have been stretched and flattened. The Mediterranean has been reduced to a thin strip of water, more like a river than a sea.


Instead of being oriented from north to south, the map, which is only 34 centimetres wide, works from west to east.


But despite its unfamiliar appearance, the director of the Department of Manuscripts, Autographs and Closed Collections at the Austrian National Library, Andreas Fingernagel, says it is an intensely practical document, more like a plan of the London Underground than a map.

"The red lines are the main roads. Every so often there is a little hook along the red lines which represents a rest stop - and the distance between hooks was one day's travel."

"Every so often there is a pictogram of a building to show you that there was a hotel or a spa where you could stay," he said.

"It was meant for the civil servants of the late Roman Empire, for couriers and travellers," he added.


Some of the buildings have large courtyards - a sign of more luxurious accommodation.

Clue to ancient world

At the centre of the Tabula Peutingeriana is Rome. The city, represented by a crowned figure on a throne, has numerous roads leading to and from the metropolis. Some, such as the Via Appia and the Via Aurelia, still exist today.


The Tabula Peutingeriana scroll dates from the late 12th or the early 13th century and was made in Southern Germany or Austria.

But Mr Fingernagel says it is very different from other medieval maps and is clearly a copy of a much earlier document, dating back to the 5th century.

"In maps from the 12th or 13th century, Jerusalem, not Rome, was in the centre," he said.

"The interests of map makers in the Middle Ages were quite different. They don't show roads or rest stations, instead they show the holy places of Christianity."


And the map contains other details which indicate the original probably dates back to the 5th century, including the city of Aquileia, which was destroyed in 452 by the Huns.


The scroll was named after one of its earlier owners, the Renaissance German humanist Konrad Peutinger.

Later it was obtained by the Imperial Library in Vienna - now the Austrian National Library.

"It's unique," said Mr Fingernagel. "It's the only map of the ancient world - although it's a copy - that gives us an impression of how things used to be."


The Tabula Peutingeriana was included in the Unesco Memory of the World Register this year, and was on limited view in Vienna on 26 November 2007.

Sunday, 15 July 2007

The most beautiful women in the world - Kazakhstan

The most beautiful women in the world - Kazakhstan
My holiday is drawing to an close in Kazakhstan and I leave with a sense of completion and a greater understanding of the Silk Road (Route) and the people of this hospitable land. We are having a big party and picnic this afternoon in the foothills of the Tienshans to celebrate.

Yesterday, I went for a stroll through Arbat with my wife. It was 35oC and the snow capped Tienshan mountains ringed the southern horizon. Buskers were singing, artists displaying hundreds of their paintings, and people promenading with joy. Ice cream and drink sellers were doing a roaring trade. The view of the snow somehow cooled my mind. Almaty must be one of the most beautiful cities in the world. In my biased opinion, Almaty has the most beautiful women in the world. I have been saying that for ten years now and yesterday, Friday 13 July, Black Friday, was a lucky day for me. The temperature and the bright blue sky, encouraged everyone to wear their briefest and most comfortable clothing. Men strolling without shirts drinking beer, women enjoying showing their beauty and gorgeous bodies that the Maker bestowed in abundance. I try to be detached and look at this wonder as a result of the Silk Route keeping the Kazakhstani people from in-breeding. Some countries are penalised for their geographic location such as Afghanistan and Iraq, others such as Kazakhstan are rewarded by their geography. I quote a noted woman writer on Kazakhstan, Dagmar Schreiber from her book Exploring Kazakhstan. She refers to Kazakhstan as having 126 different nationalities.

“ Both the migration movements and conquest campaigns in which the history of Central Asia is so rich, and wheeling and dealing along the Silk Route have lead to a situation, already in place at the time of Soviet power was established, in which the Kazakh territory was already home to a kaleidoscopic range of peoples; Kazakhs, Uzbeks,Turkmens, Kyrgyz, Persians, Chinese, Uygur, Dungan,Russians, Ukranians, tartars and many others already dwelt here, when Stalin started his deportation campaign. Forced migration following the outbreak the second World War caused the influ of over a million Koreans, Germans, Chechans, Ingush, Poles, Crimea tartars, Turks, Greeks and other nationalities sent across the Urals……
It is thus that Kazakhstan today represents a true melting pot of nations…. "

The 1999 census showed that the population is 15 Million, 52% Kazakhs, 31 % Russian, 4 % Ukranians, with Germans and Tartars making up 2 %. The remaining 9% consists of the 121 other nationalities.

What has this got to do with the abnormally high percentage of beautiful women ? With such a strong gene pool from the strongest and fittest surviving 90 years of famine, war, forced migration and collectivisation, you have a country where inter-marriage was common, and coincidentally the outcome is a race of very beautiful women. I’ll get labelled sexist but I make similar bold statements about the mountains, the landscape and culture, and in the past, poverty in this country..

SOME REFLECTION AND CONNECTIONS

Having now visited all places mentioned below and connected the road from Calcutta (Kolkotta) through Benares, Bodgaya, Delhi. Agra. Amritsar, Lahore, Taxilla, Peshawar, Kabul, Bamiyan, Herat, Balkh, Termez, Samakand, Tashkent, Shymkent, Turkestan, Ak Su, Taraz, Talass, Tokmak, Bishkek, Issyk Kul, Naryn, Kara Ssuu through to the Chinese border at Torugat, following fairly much the route and, places made famous by Hsuan Tsan the Chinese Buddhist Monk who travelled this way on his marathon journeys from 627 -643 AD.

I had earlier travelled and connected the above route from Herat to Meshad, Bukhara, and from Tashkent the more southern route through Khokand, Feghana, Andijan, Osh to Kashgar, The other from Kabul, through the Khyber Pass to Gilgit and Karakoram pass into China, or the more difficult one from Kabul to Faizabad, Ishkashim, cross the Amu Darya to Khorog, Murghab, and over the 4,655 metre pass of the Pamirs, down to Lake Karakul at 3,914 metre, and then into China.

It was also a pleasure on this trip to connect the route from Taskkent, Shymkent, Turkestan and to discover that the road from Turkestan to Kyzl Orda, where I spent time in 1997, ‘is a strategic place where the caravan roads from Tashkent, Bukhara and Khiva along Atbasar to Western Sberia and over Torgay to Troizk and Orenberg came together’. (Exploring Kazakhstan, Dagmar Schreiber, Caspian Publishing House, Almaty 2006)

Having crossed the Pamirs, Tienshan, Karakoram, Himalaya, Pir Panjal, Dhaula Dhar mountain ranges and crossed and recrossed countless times the great rivers of Syr Daria (Jaxartes), Amu Daris (Oxus),and the Zevershan, Ili, Chu, Ganges, Brahmaputra, Megna, the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej, Beas, Indus ( the rivers of the Punjab) and camped by Lakes Issyk Kul, Karakul, Dal, Kagar and the Aral Sea, it helps somewhat to understand the hardship and deprivations the early conquerors, explorers, pilgrims and traders endured. Alexander the Great lost over 30,000 men on a surprise winter crossing of the Hindu Kush by the Khawak Pass. In summer the ascent from the Panjsher Valley is a grind, but to foot soldiers carrying armour it is inconceivable a mighty army crossed this pass in winter. Similarly, the Khardun La at over 18,200 feet in Ladakh,, a salt route from Lahdak in India to Tibet is a daunting challenge by car today, but a crossing by mule, horse or on foot makes the mind boggle.

When I worked in Pakistan, Afghanistan and India, I was fascinated by the mountain river systems. With partition, these mighty rivers had international boundaries pushed on them. Punjab - the land of five rivers were originally referred to as the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej and Beas, but with partition, the Beas flows only in India, so to keep the name Punjab correct, Pakistan added a fifth river to replace the Beas, the Indus.

Many trips I have set out on, have been to connect ranges, rivers, passes and valleys that don’t quite make sense on the map. I spent many months in a place named Sidhbari, under the Daula Dhar mountains and close to Dharamsala. Somehow, the town down the road, Kangra, was the most fascinating as it appears on many ancient maps and later became an important feeder to the Silk Road and, some centuries on, to players in the Great Game.,

From Kangra. in 2004, I was able to connect the Kangra valley, with the Kullu, Lahaul and Spiti valleys.

The Dhaular Dhar and the magnificent Pir Panjal, both
ranges are the two lesser ranges either protecting, or enticing you to the greater Himalayas

Crossing the two great passes crossed by Alexander Gardiner and Moorcroft, the Kunzum La and the Rohtang La and seeing the mighty Himalayas and the majestic Pir Panjal was inspiring and to note that virtually all the people are of Tibetan stock, and they have preserved the Tibetan way of life remarkably well.

So during the last 30 years, one by one these famous places trod by Alexander the Great, Hsuan Tsang,Timur (Tamerlane) Chengis Khan, Admiral Raisa Ali (the 16th century Turkish Admiral, Marco Polo, and later all those great, and many notorious players in the Great Game, has been a fascinating experience. My next Silk Route trip is to China to make some final connecting journeys there.

Thanks to my guides and brothers in law, Erlan and Suin, who took me to Turkestan and brought the Kazakh culture alive.