I am continuing with my notes on the
 Silk Road by Frances Wood.  
The fifth chapter deals with the transmission of faiths along the Silk  Road by the Sogdians.  Along with Zoroastrianism (a dualistic religion   worshiping Ahura Mazda, which was associated with the sun and fighting   against an evil deity), Manicheism was also propagated.  Mancicheism was   another dualistic religion which took in elements of Iranian, Semitic,   Buddhist and Christian traditions.  They survived in Medieval Europe  as  the Cathar movement, and adopted by the Uighurs of Mongolia.  It  also  survived for some time in China.  Mani believed people contained a   finite number of light particles which could be divided amongst   descendants and Mani believed that he was the successor of the other   great prophets including Jesus, Buddha and Zoroaster.
Chapter 6  describes how China was influenced by the West in the Tang  dynasty  (618-907).  Women's fashions became looser (thanks in part to a  fat  concubine called Yang Guifei) and the Chinese adopted the chair.   This  in turn influenced Chinese architecture.  Tables and chairs were  used  and everything became higher up including windows.  However, the   Chinese way of sitting in a chair continued to resemble the way people   sat on a mat, at least for some people.  Also, by this time, Japan had   isolated itself from Chinese influence and so continued with the   tight-bodiced high-waisted style and continued with the mat system.
Chapter 7 is about the growth of Buddhism in China as evidenced by the cave of a 1000 Buddhas unearthed in Dunhuang.
Gradually   Buddhism arrived in China via the silk road arriving in first half of   first century with foreigners.  Later, various monks in China went to   great lengths going back aalong the silk road from 260 AD to accumulate   the various sutras from India and translate them.e.g. Faxian in 399 and   Xuanzang by 648.  The account of one of these adventures is told later   in Monkey.
Paper was invented and improved, and the first book   recorded was made in 868AD by Wang Jie.  This was in the form of a long   printed scroll.  Gradually stitched binding and whirlwind binding was   introduced.
With the fall of the Tang Dynasty in 908AD following   the Buddhist persecutions of the 9th century  the great cave temples   were abandoned and sand began to drift in.  China oasis towns taken over   by local leaders and Islam.
Chapter 8 deals with the succession of independent states that ook over   the area after the decline of the Tang empire in 983.  The Tanguts and   Mongols were both Mongols and eventually, under Ghengis Khan , there  was  a huge empire stretching from the Caspian Sea to Peking in 1227.   This  was extended south to Tibet and northern India.  This expansion   continued until the 16th century.
Inroads made by the Muslims   encouraged the West to seek out treaties with the Mongols against Islam   in the thirteenth century.  However, when William of Rubbruck, sent out   in 1248, by the King of France reached Karakorum on the silk road he   found there were Nestorians there already, and had been favourably   received by the Chinese in 635AD.  Furthermore there were captured   Europeans there already.
In 1291 John of Montecorvino , a Franciscan friar, reached Peking and established a church.
Marco   Polo is supposed to have been in Peking at the same time and makes   little reference to him.  This author seems to regard the Polo's account   as inaccurate and doubtful, but they were supposed to have been   welcomed into Peking by Kublai Khan around 1262 and stayed for 17 years,   with Marco acting as roving ambassador.
In 1287 Nestorian   clerics, Markos and Rabban Sauma  arrived in Genoa having started in   Peking.  He then went on to Paris and Bordeaux and met Edward I.
Chapter  9 deals with travellers to Ming China (1368-1644) along the silk road.   By now the sea routes were found to be more popular.  However,   embassies from peripheral states were greeted with gifts, treats and  acrobatic displays.
Most famous city of the time was Samarkand  which was ruled by Timur (Tamburlaine according to Christopher Marlow)  because he was lame.  He dreamed of emulating Genghis Khan and built  himself an exotic town which was sumptuous with trees, garden, silks and  various foods.  Buildings too were magnificent.  The sumptuous  conception of Samarkand continued to dominate writers such as Keates,  Arnold and Oscar Wilde.
Chapter 10 is about the Great Game - the  jostling for dominance in the  area between Russian expansionism from  the north and British expansion  from India during the 18th and 19th  centuries.  China also battled for  control and dominance and at the end  of the eighteenth century  had  conquered great swathes of land called  the 'New Norders' Xinjiang and  Sinkiang.   However their grip on the  area was precarious.  As this  weakened local leaders seized power and  had uneasy relationships with  the two main European powers in the area.
Chapter 11 is mainly about Sven Hedin.  This Swedish explorer lived  until old age despite taking many risks in his exploration of the Silk  Road.  Like Nikolai Przhevalsky, a Russian who came earlier, one of  their aims was to get to Lhasa in Tibet.  However, the Tibetans did not  welcome foreigners.  Przhevalsky died 1888, Hedin in 1952.
Chapter 12 concerns the opportunities for hunting in the Silk Road  countryside, and the way these were taken up by Ellsworth Huntington, an  American geographer.  He believed that the climate had changed in the  region and this had affected the populations and also the character of  the people there.
Later Ralph Cobbold remarked animals such as the 
ovid poli  were becoming scarce.  As did R. C. F Schomberg in the 1930s who was  most concerned that landmarks be named after explorers rather than  members of the Nazi party.
Hunting produced trophies and also medicine.  Tiger entrails were wound around pregnant women to ease childbirth.
Chapter 13 gives a brief general introduction to the life and work of Aurel  Stein and his discoveries in the Dunhuang caves. The Daoist priest  looking after them was Wang Yuanlu.  He showed Stein the scrolls, and  having reassuring local officials all was well, paid 500 rupees, removed  as much as he could arrange to be carried to the British Museum.
Chapter  14 describes the  collectors that followed: Pelliot, a French genius who visited the  caves after Stein and carted more back to Europe, this time to Paris  and wouldn't let anyone else see them.  He showed some of the scrolls to  the Chinese in Peking and this resutled in the caves being shut down,  preventing further removal.
Then Germans Albert Grunwedel and  Albert von Le Coq collected more artefacts from the area.  Their  justification was that they were not treasured by the local community  who were in the habit of removing parts of the statues for fertlisiers.   Muslims destroyed figurative pictures, the higher officials were  Confucians and looked down on Buddhism as lower class religion, some of  the locals were scared of the sinister nature of the writings and put  them in a river.
Langdon Warner almost halted archeological  expeditions by foreigners e.g. by hauling statues of horses from Xi'an  to the university museum of Phildelphia before going on to Dunhuang.   There, in 1923-4, he found that 400 white Russian deserters, interned in  the caves in 1921 had scratched names, built fires, and generally  desecrated murals.  Also Mongol worhsippers leant and brushed against  murals - in process of olbiterating them.
He fixed the pigments  using glue given to him by a Peking chemist but encountered difficulties  in the cold.  Worked from day to night experiencing black remorse for  what he had done and black despair.  Even so, then negotiated with Wang  to remove more statues - an old and tarnished one instead of the ones  Wang had begged money to pay for restoration.
The contents of cave 17 are now dispersed between Peking, St Petersburg, Paris and London.
The last two chapters deal with explorers like the three women missionaries, Mildred Cable, Francesca French and Evangeline French who braved the unrest that occurred in the region throughout the twentieth century, and which continues today.  Despite the encouragement of tourism by the Soviet Union and China, it seems to still be a lawless place, and the rise of the Taliban whose followers despise and deface anything Buddhist, make it a challenging destination even today.
Altogether, a very interesting and well-written  introduction to a complicated part of the world.  There is just one thing that puzzles me:  I'm not sure if I've missed it, but there does not seem to be a single map.  I would have much appreciated one, in fact I would have appreciated several.