Origins of the Silk Road

Date: 

Wednesday, October 24, 2018, 6:00pm

Location: 

Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

Silk Road

Rowan Flad, John E. Hudson Professor of Archaeology, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University

Approximately 4,000 years ago, the peoples of China and Eurasia gradually began to develop networks of interaction and exchange that radically transformed the cultures of both regions. These networks eventually gave rise to the Silk Road trade routes connecting the East and West. Rowan Flad will examine the archaeological evidence—from the Qijia Culture of Northwest China—that documents the agricultural, metallurgical, and technological innovations that resulted from the earliest trans-Eurasian exchanges, and how studies of the Silk Road origins are being reinvigorated by China’s One Belt, One Road initiative.

Lecture. Free and open to the public. Presented by Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology.
Free event parking available at 52 Oxford Street Garage