• Caravanserais were roadside inns along major trade routes like the Silk Road

    From a425couple@a425couple@hotmail.com to soc.history.medieval on Mon Jan 22 16:43:44 2024
    From Newsgroup: soc.history.medieval

    Achaeological Discovery -+ Follow
    5 days ago

    Efo+Caravanserais were roadside inns along major trade routes like the
    ancient Silk Road, that doubled as hubs for the exchange of goods, ideas
    and culture.
    The journeys of merchants and their caravans along the Silk Road through
    the Middle East, Central Asia, and North Africa would have been much
    more difficult if not for caravanserais, that dotted those ancient
    routes. Variously described as rCLguest houses,rCY rCLroadside inns,rCY and rCLhostels,rCY caravanserais were buildings designed to provide overnight housing to travelers. Merchants and their caravans were the most
    frequent visitors. In furnishing, safe respite for guests from near and
    far, caravanserais also became centers for exchange of goods and culture.
    As traffic along the Silk Road increased, so did the construction of caravanserais. They were needed as safe havens, not just from extreme
    climates and weather, but also from bandits who targeted caravans
    loaded with silks, spices, and other expensive goods. In fact,
    caravanserais were built at regular intervals so that merchants would
    not have to spend the night exposed to the dangers of the road. They
    appeared roughly 32-40km apart, about a dayrCOs journey on the busiest
    Silk Road routes.
    The design of these buildings also reflected their protective purpose.
    Often built just outside the nearest town or village, they were
    encircled by immense walls resembling those of a fort. Caravans entered through a high, massive gate that could be secured from within at night
    with heavy chains. A porter stood guard just past the gate, charged
    with safeguarding the persons, goods, and animals inside.
    The interior of a caravanserai looked more like an inn than a
    fortress, however. A large ground-floor courtyard ringed with storerooms
    and stables for camels, donkeys, and horses would often have a corner
    for cook fires as well. Small, unfurnished rooms for lodgers were found
    on the second floor. Some larger caravanserais also featured a
    bathhouse and prayer room.
    Most of the old caravanserais still in existence today are crumbling
    stone ruins, of interest only to historians and tour groups. In
    contrast, medieval caravanserais were lively seedbeds for
    globalization, resembling the modern city in the variety of people,
    languages, goods, and customs found within their walls. Travelers from
    East and West, speaking many different languages, traded stories, news, merchandise, and ideas while they mingled at these trade hubs. They
    sampled local cuisine and observed foreign etiquette. They learned more
    about Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Buddhism from missionaries and scholars passing through. When they traveled on, they took much that was
    new and different along with them. The economic and cultural exchanges caravanserais made possible had far-reaching effects still seen today in
    the variety of languages, faiths, and cultures co-existing in this
    region of the world.

    Efo+ : Obruk K-#z||ren Obruk Han, a 13th Century CE, Seljuk Caravanserai, located within borders of Karatay district, T|+rkiye.
    Do visit our Merch collection;

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    See more: Efae https://instagram50.vercel.app/

    see also
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caravanserai

    and try images Caravanserai

    Last year we saw the one at Khan al-Umdan, Acre, Israel.
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