Land

The Seljuqs and the Khwarazm Shahs

The Seljuqs were in origin a Turkic tribe, expanding in the tenth century under the tribal leader Seljuq and moving into Transoxania, where they were converted to Islam.  After military conquests over the Ghaznavids, Seljuq’s successors began to establish a more solid basis of power, with one ruler, Toghrïl, declaring himself emir of Khurasan in 1040. In this way, the Seljuqs came to rule as sovereigns over large areas of land, ultimately creating a sultanate in Iran, Iraq and Mesopotamia over the course of the eleventh century.

The Samanid State

The Samanid state emerged in Transoxania in the ninth and tenth centuries as a regional successor to the Abbasid caliphate, based around the growing strength and independence of cities such as Nishapur, Merv, Bukhara, Samarkand, Hulbuk, and many more.

The Regions of Sind, Baluchistan, Multan and Kashmir: the Historical, Social and Economic Setting

The Middle Ages was a time of political turbulence in Pakistan, with a succession of political powers competing for the control of the regions of Sind, Baluchistan, Multan and Kashmir. The Abbasid caliphate of Baghdad governed the area from the eighth to the late tenth century, ensuring the dissemination of Islam, although Kashmir remained politically independent.

The Mongols and their State in the Twelfth to the Thirteenth Century

Situated on the northern passes between the Far East and western Asia, the Mongol empire was at the crossroads of global communication, linked by trading routes to both China and the Mediterranean.  The Mongol state developed in the late twelfth century and became one of the greatest powers in Central Asia after the extensive military conquests of Chinggis Khan (1155–1227).  One important consequence of the unification of political power in northern Asia was the protection of the Silk Routes and the facilitation of trade across the region.

The Kitan and the Kara Khitay

The Kitan were a tribe based in northern China who conserved their distinctive identity throughout the Middle Ages, despite absorption into several different states and empires.  They are documented from the fifth century, emerging to develop their own khanate between the tenth and twelfth centuries, before changing their name to the Kara Khitay.

The Karakhanids (Il-khanid)

The Karakhanids (or Ilkhanid) can first be traced in historical sources in the ninth century, as a powerful tribe in Transoxania. By the late tenth and early eleventh century, they had formed a politically united Karakhanid state, as evidenced by the coinage from this period, on which a series of Karakhanid rulers are described as sovereigns of Transoxania. A distinctive feature of this state was the division of political power into ‘appanages’, or areas of financial government within which estate revenues were assigned to the khan.

The Ghurids

The mountainous region of north western Afghanistan was known as Ghur in the Middle Ages. Due to its geographical layout and inaccessibility, political control of the area was often fragmented, relying on local lords and their personal fortresses to rule and protect individual towns. Nonetheless, the sultanate of the Ghurids emerged in the twelfth century, uniting the region and becoming, by the early thirteenth century, a powerful state that extended from Herat in Afghanistan to western Bengal, even reaching the borders of Tibet and Kashmir.  

Camili

The Camili Biosphere Reserve is surrounded by mountains on three sides, and meets the Georgian border on the fourth side to the north. There are three main valleys with the Biosphere Reserve.

The main ecosystem types in the Camili Biosphere Reserve are boreal coniferous forest and temperate deciduous forest including tree species such as black alder (Alns glutinosa), oriental spruce (Picea orientalis), Caucasus lime tree (Tilia rubra ssp. caucasicus), hazelnut (Corylus avellana) and Sessile oak (Quercus petraea).

Great Volzhsko-Kamsky

Great Volzhsko-Kamsky Biosphere Reserve consists of four units - Raifa Forest, Sarali Land between Rivers, Spassky Insular Archipelago and Sviyazhsky Wetland Area. Each unit has core area, buffer zone and transition area. All units are located in close vicinity to rivers Volga and Kama.

This platform has been developed and maintained with the support of:

Contact

UNESCO Headquarters

7 Place de Fontenoy

75007 Paris, France

Social and Human Sciences Sector

Research, Policy and Foresight Section

Silk Roads Programme

silkroads@unesco.org

Follow us