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THE IRANIAN-GEORGIAN BRANCH OF THE SILK ROAD IN I-IVTH CENTURIES |
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时间:2009-7-24 13:48:35 来源:不详
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p;Sea and then Caucasus- the ports on the seashore of the Black Sea and Constantinople.[39] During the beginning of the Middle Ages, some tribes, regions and sites, such as Moshchevaia Balka in Northern Caucasus had very important on account of commercial relations in these routes that connected the Caucasus with the Central Asia.[40] Some coins belonged to not only the Bosphorus Kingdom and the Roman Empire found in Dzungaria and on the north sides of Amu Daria, the territories of Uzbekistan and Tadjikistan, but also Graeco-Bactrian coins[41] found on the regions of the Black Sea and Caucasus [for example, near Tbilisi and, Kabala (the center of the ancient Caucasian Albania in Azarbaidjan)] are most examples for the transit trade between the Central Asia and the Black Sea. But it is very difficult to determine that by which roads these coins came there.[42] Again, sometimes, according to some agreements made between the Rome / Byzantine and the Parthians or Sasanians in Iran, were determined definite stations for the control of taxes. For examp上一页 [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] ... 下一页 >> |
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