The Silk Road is an international road of historical
significance. It is this ancient passageway that has connected
the civilizations from China, India, Persia, and Arabia with those
from Greece and Rome, and thus promoted the interchange between
East and West. The ancient road has its start in Chang'an, an
ancient capital of China (now Xi'an), and its terminus on the
eastern coast of the Mediterranean, with nearly half of it running
across Xinjiang. Therefore, Xinjiang, situated in the center of
the Eurasian continent has been an important section of the ancient
Silk Road and a place of the economic and cultural interchange
between East and West , a place where many men of fame in history
have lift their footprints behind them and a place rich in highly
prized historic relics and sites.
China is one of the countries where sericulture started early.
In the years between 138 B.C. and 119 B.C., Zhang Qian, an outstanding
diplomat, opened the way to the Western Region, the way connecting
the East and West of the world. He and the mission headed by him
took gold and silk cloth with them and visited Loulan (now Qarkilik
and its neighborhood), Loopnurm Qiuci(now Kuqar), Shule (now Kashger),
Yutian (now Hotan), Wusun( now the Ili River Valley), Dawan, Kangju,
Dayuezhi and other places of Xinjiang and Central Asia..His deputies
even visited Anxi (now Iran) and countries he visited, in return,
also sent their envoys to pay visits to the Central plains of
China.. Besides, there was an endless stream of merchants and
businessmen on the road. What flowed into the Western Region,
India and Europe from China included silk, ironware, yellow and
white metals, brass mirrors, lacquered bamboo ware, medicine and
techniques of farming and metallurgy. And in return, things like
clover, grapes, flax, pomegranates, walnuts, cucumbers, carrots,
saffron, etc, and animals like lions, peacocks, elephants, camels,
"sweat and blood" horses, etc. Were brought in large
quantities to the Central Plains of China from the Western Region
and foreign countries.
In the year 73, China sent another delegation of 36 with Ban
chao as the head on a mission to the Western Region. Gan Ying,
Ban' s deputy, was dispatched to the Roman Empire and the Persian
Gulf(Arabian Gulf). The mission guaranteed the prosperity of the
Silk Road and made some extensions of the Road. In the year 67,
Jiayemoteng and Zhufalan, both Indian Buddhist monks of great
repute, accompanied by envoys of the Eastern Han Dynasty, arrived
in Luoyang, in Henan Province now, by way of Pakistan and Afghanistan.
An Shiguo, prince of Anxi, where Buddhism was most prosperous,
and Jiumoluoshi, a Buddhist monk of great repute of Qiuci, came
to the midland of China via the same road, respectively in the
years 147 and 401, for the translation of Buddhist Scriptures
and for preaching of Buddhism of thousands of disciples so that
their names were known to the entire world as well as to China.
Fa Xian of the Jin Dynasty and Xuan Zang of the Tang Dynasty,
both prestigious Buddhist monks, started their visiting and preaching
the Silk Road, over more than 30 countries and areas including
Kashmir, Pakistan, India and Sri lanka. The Notes of the Western
Region of the Tang Dynasty by X uan Zang are both important works
for the study and research of the Western Region, the history
of India and the Silk Road.
In 1222 and 1223, Yeluchucai, a great poet of the Yuan Dynasty,
and Qiu Chuji, the leader of all Taoists of the country at that
time, on their tours over the Western Region along the Silk Road,
gave their vivid descriptions of what they saw of the northern
territory of China and Central Asia in the verses and essays they
wrote as they were traveling here. Marco Polo, an Italian tourist,
who traveled to the capital of the Yuan Dynasty(now Beijing) via
the Silk Road in 1275, records truly what he saw of the Pamirs,
Kashgar, Yarkan, Hotan and their vivinities and what they produced.
The long sections of the Silk Road running across Xinjiang make
up a treasure house of relics known to the whole world with their
frontier passes, ancient cities and castles, strongholds and fortifications,
Buddhist caves and temples, courier stations, ancient tombs, war-signaling
stations, etc. Like strings of pearls that sparkle brilliantly
and colorfully along the ancient Road.
Xinjiang boasts 14 Buddhist cave temples and over 990 caves.
The major ones are the Kizil,Kumtura, Kizilgaha, Senmusaimu and
Bizaklik grottoes, five in all. There are 239 biggest numbered
caves and 46 smallest ones. The sculptures and murals in the caves,
welding Chinese culture with those from India and Persia, gave
birth to a unique style of art of their own. In addition to the
Buddhist pictures, there are ones which depict the productive
activities and everyday lives, in great vividness, of the local
residents of various nationalities.
The most fascinating of all the historic sites on the Silk Road
is the ancient city of Loulan. Located in the northwest part of
what is now known as Lop Nur, it used to be a key hub of traffic
of the Silk Road,with a past of commercial prosperity. Now, however,
there are only the ruins of the city buried in the desert. Mummies
of men and women have been unearthed from the ancient tombs here.
Countless cultural relics have been discovered about the ancient
cities and castles. The best preserved historic sites are the
ancient cities of Gaochang and Jiaohe, situated in the Turpan
Basin. In the ruins of the two ancient cities, the tourists can
still see distinctly the keeps of the once significant royal palaces
and Buddhist temples. Over a hundred dried-up bodies of men and
women have been excavated out of the ancient tombs in Astana near
the city ruiins. The funerary objects unearthed from the tombs
here include, all from the Sui and Tang Dynasties and the Dynasties
previous to them, large quantities of documentary papers, silk,
cotton and hemp fabrics of excellent workmanship, ancient money
of all sort and descriptions, colorful pottery human figures of
all characters in various poses, and many varieties of food that
have survived the wear and tear of nature. The mummy of an officer
of high rank from the Tang Dynasty still keeps the man's tall
and big stature, dignified appearance, and all the air expected
of an ancient warrior. The dried corpse of a young girl, with
her well-proportioned figure and dark hair, still suggests, more
or less,the youth and beauty of her lifetime. The colorful pottery
figurines and statuettes of great versatility in type and posture
include stalwart warriors, shapely maids of honor, pestling or
grinding women, and so on and so forth, all represented with verisimilitude
and liveliness. How many footprints have been left behind for
our tracing of the ancient ages!
Caravan bells have reverberated for two thousand years of human
history on the different sections of the Tianshan mountains.
Now, however, parallel to the ancient silk Road is a three-dimensional
network of communication composed of highways, railways, and air
routes. Highways wind up the Pamirs,"the roof of the world,"
and the sky-scraping Kunlun Mountains, and run across the Tarim
and Junggar Basins. The Dushanzi-Kuqar Highway starts from Dushanzi
in the north and ends in Kuqar, the ancient state of Qiuci, in
the south. Flying over the Tianshan Mountains like a rainbow,
it connects Northern Xinjiang and Southern Xinjiang closely. The
opening of the Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway in 1963 changed the railwayless
history of Xinjiang.
The connection of a second Eurasian bridge by the completion
and opening of the western section of the Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway(the
section between Urumqi and Alashankou Pass) on September 1, 1990,
was followed on the twelfth day of the same month by the joining
of its tracks with those of a railway of Kazakhstan, thus opening
the railway for the China-Kazakhstan passenger trains and extending
the terminus of the "Silkroad" to Europe and even to
places beyond it.
The Silk Road is becoming, with every passing day, a passageway
of the Chinese people in their economic and cultural interchange
and friendly contact with all the peoples of the world. The ancient
Silk Road is rejuvenated.