Update: If you are unfortunate enough to be in New York City you can swing by the American Museum of Natural History for their new
Silk Road Exhibition, which features several of the places listed below, including Xian and Turpan.
From the
Sultanahmed Koftesi I walked up Divan Yolu and turned right at
Constantine’s Column onto Vezirhani Street. This neighborhood, which includes the Grand Bazaar, is the repository of many old hans, or caravanerserais, which offered lodging and warehousing to foreign merchants and traders, some of whom plied the
Silk Road. Istanbul was of course the western terminus of at least two of the overland branches of the Silk Road.
Burak Sansal summarizes these:
The caravan routes transporting silk, china, paper, spices and precious stones from one continent to the other followed several itineraries in Asia before arriving in
Anatolia, which served as a bridge linking it to Europe via the
Thrace region. These caravan routes later acquired the name of silk roads and
Anatolia constituted the crossroad of these routes. The major cities lying on the Silk Road
Anatolia were, in the north:
Trabzon,
Gümüshane,
Erzurum,
Sivas,
Tokat,
Amasya,
Kastamonu,
Adapazari,
Izmit,
Istanbul and
Edirne; and in the south:
Mardin,
Diyarbakir,
Adiyaman,
Malatya,
Kahramanmaras,
Kayseri,
Nevsehir,
Konya,
Isparta,
Antalya and
Denizli. Another frequently used itinerary is known to be the one between
Erzurum,
Malatya,
Kayseri,
Kirsehir,
Ankara,
Bilecik,
Bursa,
Iznik,
Izmit and
Istanbul.
The Vezir Han, one of the more venerable of the caravanserais in the Grand Bazaar area, is located not far from the corner of Vezirhani Street and Divan Yolu. The entrance does not seem to be marked, but this might well be the portal leading to the inner courtyard. The han itself was built sometime in the fourteenth century, and thus may have caught the tail end of the trading boom that accompanying the
Pax Mongolica established by Chingis Khan and his successors, most of whom favored free trade. In his
Guidebook to the Silk Road, written just before the Black Plague of 1348–50, Balducci Pegolotti wrote that you could travel from Khanbalik (Beijing) to the Black Sea in 300 days. “The road you travel . . . to Cathay (China) is perfectly safe, whether by day or by night, according to what the merchants say who have used it,” he wrote.
Just down the street, a gateway on the left leads to the
Nuruosmaniye Mosque and the Grand Bazaar. The mosque is now undergoing renovation and was not open on the day I was there.
Nuruosmaniye Mosque, started in 1748 by Mahmut I and completed in 1755 by Osman III: the first large mosque to incorporate the Baroque style then popular in Europe.
The passageway past the Nuruosmaniye Mosque leads to the famous and indeed notorious Grand Bazaar, one of the world’s oldest and largest markets, founded in 1461, with more than 58 covered streets and over 1,200 shops. I will be returning here before I leave Istanbul, but for the moment I am hot on the trail of caravanserais.
One of the main entrances to the Grand Bazaar
Alongside the Grand Bazaar are ancient shopping arcades which may well date back to Silk Road times.
Old stone building near the Grand Bazaar
Just down the street is the Mahmud Pasha Mosque, one of the oldest private mosques in Istanbul. It was built in 1463 by Mahmud Pasha, the Grand Vizier of Sultan Mehmed II, who had conquered Constantinople in 1453, turning it into Istanbul. He eventually fell out with Mehmed and was executed in 1474. His tomb, directly behind the mosque, is said to be decorated with some of the oldest existing
Iznik Tiles in Istanbul, which must offer him some consolation. Unfortunately, on the day I was there the tomb was locked.
Mahmut Pasha Mosque
From the Mosque Mahmut Pasha Yokusu (Hill) the street drops down to the
Spice Market and the shore of the Golden Horn.
Street dropping down from Mahmut Pasha Yokusu
This street is lined with various hans, including the Kurkchu Han, said to be the oldest caravanserai in Istanbul. This han specialized in people involved in the fur trade. It is now fronted by nondescript sheds, but the gateway, although covered with thick paint and topped by a new sign, is said to be the original. Behind the gateway can be seen the ancient stone walls of the old caravanserai.
Kurkchu Han
Another khan on Mahmut Pasha Yokshu
Wandering about down this street lined with hans I could not help but wonder about the people who washed up here over the centuries and what they may have brought with them besides the material goods in which they were trading. In additional to being a trade route the Silk Road was of course also a conduit for ideas, philosophies, and religious beliefs. We have already seen how Nestorian Christianity moved eastward into China, establishing a
Beachhead in Xian, the eastern terminus of the Silk Road (notwithstanding the contention of our
Beloved Peony that in fact the eastern terminus was in Japan), in the eighth century if not earlier, and how a
Mosque in Xian had been built in 742, a mere 120 years after the Hegira (we are of course speaking here of the
622 AD Hegira and not the twentieth-century
Hippy Hegira).
The
Eastward Advance of Buddhism from
India into China is well-known; the dispersion of Buddhism westward less so. Did the traders and travelers who arrived here at these hans from the East bring with them the teachings of Buddha, either in written form, formal oral transmissions, or traveler’s tales? More specifically, did the
Shambhala Mythologem, as first expounded in the
Kalachakra Tantra and later elaborated on by many commentators, ever reach these ancient cobblestone streets?
As you know, according to legend the Kalachakra Tantra was first taught by the Buddha to
Sucandra, the First King of Shambhala. Also according to legend, pilgrims to Shambhala brought an abbreviated version of the Kalachakra Tantra back to India in the tenth century or so, and from there it was disseminated into Tibet and later into Mongolia. More literal minded, beady-eyed scholars have bypassed the legendary origins of the Kalachakra Tantra altogether and contend that it was written in the tenth or eleventh century. Exactly where remains a matter of great dispute. Some scholars in the past have suggested that it was written in the
Turpan Basin, on the north side of the Tarim Depression, still other in
Khotan, on the south side of the Tarim Depression. Both of these cities were of course famous stops on the Silk Road. Could the Kalachakra Tantra and attendant Shambhala Mythologem have been carried the whole way westward to the terminus of the Silk Road in Istanbul?
The Tarim Basin as Shambhala. Branches of the Silk Road ran along both the north and south sides of the basin. See
Enlargement of Map
Also, we know that the Kalachakra Tantra reached the court of Khubilai Khan, ruler of the Mongol Empire, in what is now Beijing in the late thirteen century. Khubilai Khan may have himself taken the
Kalachakra Initiation (this is a matter of contention). We know for sure a copy of the Kalachakra Tantra was made to commemorate his death in 1294. This copy still exists and I myself had digitized copies of it distributed in Mongolia. Thus the Kalachakra Tantra and attendant
Shambhala Mythologem could also have move westward on the Silk Road from Beijing.
Just how far did Buddhism itself extend its influence westward? In the 1250s Khülegü Khan (1217–1265), grandson of Chingis Khan and brother of Khubilai Khan, invaded what is now Iran and in 1256 destroyed the stronghold of the
Ismaili Sect at Alamut. In 1258
He Sacked Baghdad, overthrowing the 500 year-old Islamic Abbasid Dynasty, and in the process reopening the Silk Road. Khülegü was a Buddhist, at least in his later life, but his wife Doquz Khatun and his mother, the legendary
Sorghaghtani Beki, were Christians.
One of Khülegü’s successors, the Il-Khan Arghun, eventually made the city of Tabriz, in the northwest corner of what is now Iran, just west of the Caspian Sea, his capital, and here Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam were all said to flourish, at least at first. From here Buddhism might well have moved further westward. As is turned out, Tabriz may mark the the limits of Buddhist expansion to the west, at least until the late twentieth century and the Tibetan Diaspora. The
Mongol Il-Khans soon converted to Islam, and what is now Iran eventually became a predominately Islamic country. Buddhism virtually disappeared from Persia, thus cutting off the lands further to the west from the wellsprings of Buddhism in the East.
But while Buddhism as an organized religion may not have traveled the whole way west on the Silk Road traders and travelers may well have brought texts and tales with them, including accounts of the legendary realm of Shambhala. There is, as we shall soon see, a persistent connection between
Sufis, practitioners of a mystical brand of Islam, and Shambhala. Indeed, just before I came to Istanbul, a
pandita in Ulaan Baatar informed me that a considerable percentage of the current population of Shambhala are in fact Sufis. Could Sufis have learned about Shambhala from Silk Road travelers, or had Sufis themselves plied the old trade routes and brought back to Istanbul knowledge of the legendary Kingdom? Could they then have used their knowledge to locate a Portal here in Istanbul? Of course Istanbul was in the past a hotbed of Sufism. My next stop is the old
Mevlevi Tekke in Galatea, on the other side of the Golden Horn, once home to the
Whirling Dervishes, one of the most famous Sufi sects.