Shaanxi-Gansu Tea Horse Road Shaanxi-
Gansu Tea Horse Road (陕甘茶马古道) is the main road for tea in mainland China to travel west and exchange for horses. It is one of the main routes of the
ancient Silk Road.
Tanggu Road Beginning in the
Han dynasty, the Tanggu Road (蹚古道) was formed by Shaanxi merchants and the ancient tea-horse market in the southwest frontier. Since the government of the
Ming and
Qing dynasties imposed government control on tea sales, tea sales were divided into regions, and the most prosperous tea and horse trading market was in
Kangding.
Yunnan-Tibet Tea Horse Road The Yunnan-Tibet Tea Horse Road (滇藏茶马古道) was formed in the late sixth century AD. It started from
Yiwu and
Pu'er in
Xishuangbanna, the main tea producing area of Yunnan, and entered Tibet through today's
Dali Bai Autonomous Prefecture,
Lijiang City and
Shangri-La, and went directly to
Lhasa. Some were also re-exported from
Tibet to India and Nepal, which was an important trade route between ancient China and South Asia.
Sichuan-Tibet Tea Horse Road The Ancient
Sichuan-
Tibet Tea-Horse Road (川藏茶马古道) is a part of the
Shaanxi-
Kangding-Tibet Tea-Horse Road. It starts from
Ya'an, the tea producing area of Yazhou in the east, passes through Dartsedo (now
Kangding), reaches Lhasa, Tibet in the west, and finally leads to
Bhutan,
Nepal and
India. More than a thousand kilometres, it is an indispensable bridge and link between ancient Tibet and the mainland. ==History==