The Silk Roads: The Rise of Global Faiths

The Silk Roads served as a vital corridor where intellectual and religious ideologies were exchanged alongside physical goods. As empires like the Kushans and Northern Wei expanded, they adopted and modified Buddhism to legitimise their authority, transforming a once-internal spiritual journey into a highly visible, public institution. This period saw intense competition between faiths such as Zoroastrianism and Christianity, which rulers often used as tools for political control and cultural supremacy. In Persia, the rise of the Sasanian dynasty led to the aggressive promotion of Zoroastrianism and the brutal suppression of rival beliefs. Meanwhile, the conversion of Emperor Constantine in the west turned Christianity into a Roman political instrument, inadvertently making Christians in the east targets of persecution as suspected Roman allies. Ultimately, these sources illustrate how faith and power became inextricably linked across the ancient world’s most important trade arteries.