Afro-Eurasian trade is the interlocking network of exchange routes (the Silk Roads, Indian Ocean trade, and Trans-Saharan trade) that connected Africa, Europe, and Asia c. 1200-1450, moving goods, religions, technologies, and disease across the hemisphere before the Americas were linked in.
Afro-Eurasian trade is the umbrella term for all the major exchange networks of Unit 2 working together. The Silk Roads carried luxury goods overland across Asia, the Indian Ocean network moved bulk goods by sea using monsoon winds, and Trans-Saharan caravans linked West Africa's gold and salt to the Mediterranean. Think of it as one giant circulatory system for the connected landmass of Africa, Europe, and Asia, with cities like Cairo, Samarkand, Calicut, and Malacca acting as the major arteries' junction points.
The AP exam cares less about the goods themselves and more about what hitched a ride with them. Per the CED, increased cross-cultural interaction diffused literary, artistic, and cultural traditions plus scientific and technological innovations. That means Buddhism spreading through East Asia, Hinduism and Buddhism reaching Southeast Asia, Islam moving along trade routes into East and West Africa, Chinese gunpowder reshaping warfare in the Middle East and Europe, and travelers like Ibn Battuta writing accounts that prove how connected the system was. The same routes also carried the Black Death, the dark side of connectivity.
This term lives in Unit 2 (Networks of Exchange, 1200-1450) and anchors Topic 2.5, Cultural Effects of Trade. It directly supports learning objective 2.5.A, which asks you to explain the intellectual and cultural effects of the various networks of exchange in Afro-Eurasia from c. 1200 to c. 1450. It hits the Cultural Developments and Interactions theme and Economic Systems, and it's the connective tissue of the whole unit. Topics 2.1 through 2.4 each cover one route; "Afro-Eurasian trade" is what you call them when you zoom out and treat them as one system. That zoomed-out view is exactly what comparison and continuity questions reward.
Keep studying AP® World Unit 2
Silk Roads, Indian Ocean Trade, and Trans-Saharan Trade (Unit 2)
These three networks ARE Afro-Eurasian trade. The exam loves asking you to compare them, but the bigger insight is that they overlapped at hub cities, so a religion or technology could enter one network and exit another. That's how Islam traveled from Arabia to both Mali and Malacca.
Black Death (Unit 2)
The same connectivity that spread paper-making and gunpowder also spread plague in the mid-1300s. The Mongol-secured routes that made trade safer made disease transmission faster. It's the classic 'consequences of connectivity' example for an SAQ.
Mongol Empire (Unit 2)
The Mongols are the reason Afro-Eurasian trade peaked in this era. The Pax Mongolica made overland routes safe enough for merchants and travelers to cross the whole hemisphere, which is why the 2024 SAQ paired Mongol expansion with developments in long-distance exchange.
Global Trade and the Columbian Exchange (Unit 4)
Afro-Eurasian trade is hemispheric, not global. After 1492, the Americas get plugged into the system and trade becomes truly global for the first time. Knowing where Afro-Eurasian trade ends and global trade begins is a free point on periodization questions.
Multiple-choice stems use Afro-Eurasian trade as the context for cause-and-effect questions. Expect prompts about gunpowder diffusing from China and transforming European and Middle Eastern warfare, Islam's cultural effects on East African coastal cities (Swahili culture), or a merchant finding familiar Islamic legal and prayer practices from Cairo to Malacca as evidence of cultural diffusion. On SAQs, this term shows up in 'identify a development that facilitated exchange' or 'explain a cultural effect of trade' tasks, like the 2024 SAQ on developments c. 1200-1300 connected to the Mongol Empire. The move the exam wants is specific-to-general. Don't just say 'trade spread culture'; name the route, the thing that spread (Islam, Buddhism, gunpowder, paper), and the effect on the receiving society.
Afro-Eurasian trade only connects the Eastern Hemisphere (Africa, Europe, Asia). Global trade requires the Americas, and that doesn't happen until European transoceanic voyages after 1492 in Unit 4. If a question is set in 1200-1450, the network is hemispheric, not global. Calling it 'global trade' in an essay about 1300 is a periodization error that can cost you contextualization or evidence points.
Afro-Eurasian trade is the combined system of the Silk Roads, Indian Ocean network, and Trans-Saharan routes connecting Africa, Europe, and Asia from c. 1200 to c. 1450.
The CED (LO 2.5.A) focuses on cultural and intellectual effects, meaning the spread of Buddhism in East and Southeast Asia, Hinduism in Southeast Asia, Islam in Africa and Asia, and technologies like gunpowder and paper.
The Mongol Empire's Pax Mongolica made this era the high point of overland Afro-Eurasian exchange, which is why Mongols and trade get paired on SAQs.
Connectivity cut both ways, since the same routes that diffused innovations also spread the Black Death in the 1300s.
Travel writers like Ibn Battuta are exam-ready evidence that the networks were intense enough for one person to cross most of the hemisphere.
Afro-Eurasian trade is hemispheric, not global; trade only becomes global after 1492 when the Americas join the network in Unit 4.
It's the network of exchange routes (Silk Roads, Indian Ocean trade, Trans-Saharan trade) connecting Africa, Europe, and Asia from c. 1200 to c. 1450. It anchors Unit 2 and Topic 2.5, where the focus is on the cultural and technological diffusion the trade caused.
No. Afro-Eurasian trade covers only the Eastern Hemisphere. Trade becomes 'global' only after 1492, when European voyages connect the Americas to the existing Afro-Eurasian system in Unit 4.
Religions (Islam into East and West Africa, Buddhism and Hinduism into Southeast Asia), technologies (Chinese gunpowder, paper, the compass), artistic and literary traditions, and disease, most famously the Black Death in the mid-1300s.
Mongol conquests in the 1200s created the Pax Mongolica, a period of secured routes across Asia that lowered the risk of long-distance trade. This boosted overland exchange to its peak and enabled travelers like Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta.
Islam spreading to East African coastal cities via Indian Ocean trade, producing Swahili culture with shared legal systems and business customs. Or gunpowder diffusing from China and transforming warfare in the Middle East and Europe by 1450. Name the route, the thing that spread, and the effect.
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