Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world

From as early as the ninth century onwards, Arabic literature praises the quality of a typical and highly desirable product of Tibet, musk. In Arabic and Persian as well as Tibetan and Hebrew texts musk is discussed in a variety of genres such as geographical, zoological, religious and medical liter...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Akasoy, A, Yoeli-Tlalim, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Brill 2007
Subjects:
_version_ 1826258258584666112
author Akasoy, A
Yoeli-Tlalim, R
author_facet Akasoy, A
Yoeli-Tlalim, R
author_sort Akasoy, A
collection OXFORD
description From as early as the ninth century onwards, Arabic literature praises the quality of a typical and highly desirable product of Tibet, musk. In Arabic and Persian as well as Tibetan and Hebrew texts musk is discussed in a variety of genres such as geographical, zoological, religious and medical literature as well as in travellers' and merchants' accounts. These sources reveal an active trade route, which existed between Tibet and the Islamic world from the eighth century onwards. After discussing this set of trade routes, the article focuses on a comparison between the medical uses of musk in Arabic and Tibetan medical sources. The great number of similarities between the uses of musk in these two medical traditions suggests that along with the substance, there were also exchanges of knowledge. Hence we propose that following the model the 'Silk Roads' and its cultural aspects, similar cultural interactions took place along the 'Musk Routes', which linked Tibet and the Islamic world.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T18:31:07Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:09af5569-af22-4664-99a3-41523e332a4c
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T18:31:07Z
publishDate 2007
publisher Brill
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:09af5569-af22-4664-99a3-41523e332a4c2022-03-26T09:19:39ZAlong the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic worldJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:09af5569-af22-4664-99a3-41523e332a4cHistoryHistory of medicineMedical sciencesAsiaEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetBrill2007Akasoy, AYoeli-Tlalim, RFrom as early as the ninth century onwards, Arabic literature praises the quality of a typical and highly desirable product of Tibet, musk. In Arabic and Persian as well as Tibetan and Hebrew texts musk is discussed in a variety of genres such as geographical, zoological, religious and medical literature as well as in travellers' and merchants' accounts. These sources reveal an active trade route, which existed between Tibet and the Islamic world from the eighth century onwards. After discussing this set of trade routes, the article focuses on a comparison between the medical uses of musk in Arabic and Tibetan medical sources. The great number of similarities between the uses of musk in these two medical traditions suggests that along with the substance, there were also exchanges of knowledge. Hence we propose that following the model the 'Silk Roads' and its cultural aspects, similar cultural interactions took place along the 'Musk Routes', which linked Tibet and the Islamic world.
spellingShingle History
History of medicine
Medical sciences
Asia
Akasoy, A
Yoeli-Tlalim, R
Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world
title Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world
title_full Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world
title_fullStr Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world
title_full_unstemmed Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world
title_short Along the musk routes: exchanges between Tibet and the Islamic world
title_sort along the musk routes exchanges between tibet and the islamic world
topic History
History of medicine
Medical sciences
Asia
work_keys_str_mv AT akasoya alongthemuskroutesexchangesbetweentibetandtheislamicworld
AT yoelitlalimr alongthemuskroutesexchangesbetweentibetandtheislamicworld