Procession of camels with lone figure leading in shadow against orange sky

Past exhibition

26 September 2024 – 23 February 2025

Room 30

The Sainsbury Exhibitions Gallery

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Camel caravans crossing desert dunes, merchants trading silks and spices at bazaars – these are the images that come to mind when we think of the Silk Roads. But the reality goes far beyond this.

Rather than a single trade route from East to West, the Silk Roads were made up of overlapping networks linking communities across Asia, Africa and Europe, from East Asia to Britain, and from Scandinavia to Madagascar. This major exhibition unravelled how the journeys of people, objects and ideas that formed the Silk Roads shaped cultures and histories. 

The Silk Roads were in use for millennia, but this visually stunning show focused on a defining period in their history, from about AD 500 to 1000. This time witnessed significant leaps in connectivity and the rise of universal religions that linked communities across continents.

Working with 29 national and international partners to present objects from many regions and cultures alongside those from the British Museum collection, the exhibition offered a unique chance to see objects from the length and breadth of the Silk Roads. From Tang Chinese ceramics destined for ports in the Middle East to Indian garnets found in Suffolk, they revealed the astonishing reach of these networks. 

Highlight objects from Uzbekistan and Tajikistan that had never been seen in the UK before also underpinned the importance of Central Asia to this continent-spanning story. 

Visitors met figures whose stories are entwined with the Silk Roads, including Willibald, an ingenious balsam smuggler from England, and a legendary Chinese princess who shared the secrets of silk farming with her new kingdom. Crossing deserts, mountains, rivers and seas, the Silk Roads tell a story of connection between cultures and continents, centuries before the formation of the globalised world we know today. 

Reviews

Families

Silk Roads family trail

Families could follow their own journey along the Silk Roads and discover extraordinary objects, complete fun challenges and collect a special stamp at the end of their visits.

Copies of this free self-led trail were available from the ticket desk at the exhibition entrance or to download and print off before visits. 

The trail was suitable for families with children six years and above. 

Schools

Access

Exhibition supporters

Supported by

The Huo Family Foundation logo

The Huo Family Foundation's mission is to support education, communities and the pursuit of knowledge. Through its donations, the Foundation hopes to improve the prospects of individuals, and to support the work of organisations seeking to ensure a safe and successful future for all society.

Additional supporters 

James Bartos 
The Ruddock Foundation for the Arts

Logo for Uzbekistan Art and Culture Development Foundation

With further support from 

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Korea, Unicorn Publishing Group, International Foundation for Arts and Culture Japan, National Museum of Tajikistan, Rodolphe Olard and Susan Sinclair, and The Huang Yao Foundation.

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