1 / 19

Desert Bloom

Desert Bloom. A Desert Oasis, the Holy City of Mecca and Caravan Cities. By Mike Zhang, Perry Liao, Casper Hsu Block 1-3. Desert Bloom – a Desert Oasis. A desert oasis of trades In the Sahara Desert In the Saudi Arabian area. Caravans. Caravan cities surround Mecca

shalom
Download Presentation

Desert Bloom

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Desert Bloom A Desert Oasis, the Holy City of Mecca and Caravan Cities By Mike Zhang, Perry Liao, Casper Hsu Block 1-3

  2. Desert Bloom – a Desert Oasis • A desert oasis of trades • In the Sahara Desert • In the Saudi Arabian area

  3. Caravans • Caravan cities surround Mecca • Caravans carried supplies through the Sahara Desert to Egypt, Syria, Mesopotamia and others • More materials added to the international trade route after the caliphs moved capital city eg. metal (gold)

  4. Mecca • Mecca is located in central western of Arabia • Mecca is surrounded by mountains • Formerly an oasis • About 150,000 sq. mi (388,500 sq. km) • Contains the holy cites of Medina and Mecca • The most important caravan city because it was visited by Arabs all over Peninsula • Center of medieval Saudi Arabia trades • Caravan cities surround Mecca

  5. Mecca (Cont.) • The heart of trade routes • Mecca was an important religious center, all Arabs come to worship god • Arabs go to Mecca for religious reasons, such as Hijaz fair • Trading was a huge part in daily life • Long distance trading is one of main feats in Islamic life • Muhammad effected economic expansion greatly ( was merchant once)

  6. Mecca (Cont.) • Contacts with outside world: Persians and Romans • It became a major caravan city after the Abbasid caliphs moved

  7. Mecca (Cont.) Mecca in 1850 Mecca in 1910 (As you can see, Mecca is surrounded by mountains.)

  8. Trade • The Quraysh, a local tribe eager to increase Mecca’s trade • The Quraysh tribe had treaties with neighbours to ensure a safe passage • The Quraysh tribe took over control of Mecca in 5th century

  9. Trade (cont.) • China: silk, peacocks, ink, porecelain, saddles, spices • India: stones, rare hardwoods, dyes • Scandinavia: furs, amber, ivory, swords • Africa: Slaves, gold, salt, herbs • Arabia: Perfumes, spices • Persain Gulf: Pearls

  10. Abbasid caliphs • Really important in the economic world back then • Moved capital city from Damascus to Baghdad (moved East) • Huge change to the trade routes and its surrounding countries/cities • Moved for greater efficiency • Baghdad: in the crossroads of both the major land and sea trade routes

  11. Abbasid caliphs (Cont.) • Trade route reached from China to the Mediterranean • Hosted many monthly trading fairs • Baghdad quickly became wealthy due to trading – caliphs made a good decision • Benefitted neighboring cities economically • Muslim Abbasids were the firsts to take advantage of the burgeoning trades

  12. Abbasid caliphs (Cont.) • Also effected the international trade cycle • Many caravans went to trade • Muslim dinar quickly became prevailing currency along with the Byzantine nomisma • Most of the change happened in the late 8th century • Muslims were well situated in the sudden exploit in trade • Traders were well engaged in trading

  13. Travel Camels vs Wagons Camels • Camels were the most effective way of transportation through deserts • Camels were critical in all caravan cities • Fully loaded camels can cover 20-25 miles a day • They can carry over 600 pounds • Can cross shallow waters easily

  14. Travel (Cont.) • Did not need paved roads • Single driver can manage sever camels at once • Can eat almost anything • Long periods without water (1 month in winter) Wagons • Paved roads required • Wagon is expensive itself

  15. Travel (Cont.) • Need to carry the weight of the wagon as well (Cannot use the full potential of the mule) • One animal managed by one person • Camels were critical in all caravan cities • Replaced nearly all wheeled transportations in Middle East and North Africa • Were very efficient and cheap

  16. Travel (Cont.) • 137 C.E. : Palmyrenes set law telling all merchants to provide a list of excessive goods that arrived on wheels • They wanted to protect their economic position in caravan trades within their city • Also for efficiency and for economic viability

  17. Financial System • Islam’s economic world divided into 2 parts: East and West • East currency: Persian silver dirham • West currency: Byzantine gold denarius • Coin value was really flexible • Were based on amount of money-changers in each market

  18. Financial System • New profession introduced shortly after the rise of caravans - banking • Money-changers became Islamic bankers • All started with being in the middle of the international traffic of goods (Trading cycle) • Lots of impact on the Western financial system eg. check came from Arabian word sakk, and both share the same meaning

  19. The End Applause will be appreciated

More Related