China and the Arab World : Past and Present / Fazzur Rehman Siddiqui
By: Siddiqui, Fazzur Rehman [author].
Publisher: New Delhi : Indian Council of World Affairs, 2022Description: 102p.ISBN: 9789383445707.Subject(s): China—Foreign relations -- Arab countries | Arab countries—Foreign relations -- China | China—Commerce -- Arab countries | Arab countries—Commerce -- China | China—Civilization -- Arab influencesDDC classification: 327.51053 Summary: The China-Arab relationship has endured for centuries. Past relationship was primarily anchored in economic spheres on the legendry Silk Road and once again is prospering in the economic sphere. The burgeoning economic relationship of the past had lost its track after the discovery of the Sea route when Europeans replaced the Arabs as a major trading partner. But the relationship founded through trade and travelling continued later also and a new phase of cultural and intellectual exchange in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century provided a new impetus to the bilateral relationship. The visit of a series of Chinese academic delegations and individual scholars to Egypt and other parts of the Arab World and the subsequent translation of various Chinese and Arabic texts into Arabic and Chinese languages brought both sides close to each other.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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NASSDOC Library | 327.51053 SID-C (Browse shelf) | Available | 54707 |
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327.510091823 SIN-C China and the Indo-Pacific : | 327.5101824 LIN-C Costliest Pearl | 327.5105 KAN-C China rising: peace, power and order in East Asia | 327.51053 SID-C China and the Arab World : | 327.51054 SIN-I India-China rivalry, asymmetric no longer : | 327.51054 SUR-E The elusive tipping point : | 327.51054223 CHI- China And South Asia: |
Includes bibliographical references
The China-Arab relationship has endured for centuries. Past relationship was primarily anchored in economic spheres on the legendry Silk Road and once again is prospering in the economic sphere. The burgeoning economic relationship of the past had lost its track after the discovery of the Sea route when Europeans replaced the Arabs as a major trading partner. But the relationship founded through trade and travelling continued later also and a new phase of cultural and intellectual exchange in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century provided a new impetus to the bilateral relationship. The visit of a series of Chinese academic delegations and individual scholars to Egypt and other parts of the Arab World and the subsequent translation of various Chinese and Arabic texts into Arabic and Chinese languages brought both sides close to each other.
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