The Silk Roads: Trading Routes That Connect Eastern China With Europe

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The Silk Roads were various trading routes that connected Eastern China with Europe, and every city in between. This network of roads made it possible for merchants to trade with other merchants from towns all over the continent. These roads were later named the Silk Road because silk was the highest regarded commodity and most often used as a form of payment. Roman coins and grains were also forms of payment along the Silk Road, but because grains could rot and coins were heavy, silk was considered the highest commodity. Silk was light, small and easy to carry as well as being durable and highly expensive. The Silk Roads allowed for the trade of goods as well as ideas, religions, and languages. Buddhism is known to have spread throughout Asia