Non-Muslim Minorities in the Modern Afghanistan’s Economy

R. Bonotto
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Abstract

The territory of what will become modern Afghanistan has for centuries been the center of a vast, economically interconnected geographical area. This area includes, besides Afghanistan, the northern regions of India, Persia and the Uzbek khanates of Central Asia. It represented a market for economic trade in which valuable products from India found buyers in the courts and bazaars of neighboring territories. Mainly, two components of the Afghan society made this system work: Pashtun nomads and non-Muslim minorities. The first ones carried out the logistical work that allowed the goods to reach the various bazaars of the region where they are sold. The second ones (non-Muslim minorities) on the other hand, had many functions: intermediaries, bankers and traders. In this paper I will present the socio-economic context of modern Afghanistan, in which non-Muslim minorities have played a key role in allowing the country to remain connected to the trans-regional trade network that was part of northern India. The aim of my paper is to present the history of non-Muslim minorities in Afghanistan through a description of their socio-economic position and to highlight their fundamental role in the economy of the Afghanistan kingdom. In particular, I will try to frame their role in the trans-national and more general context of global trade that affects not only the territories already mentioned but also the Ottoman Empire and the Mediterranean sea.
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现代阿富汗经济中的非穆斯林少数民族
几个世纪以来,这片将成为现代阿富汗的领土一直是一个巨大的、经济上相互联系的地理区域的中心。除阿富汗外,这一地区还包括印度北部地区、波斯和中亚的乌兹别克汗国。它代表了一个经济贸易市场,来自印度的贵重产品在邻近地区的法院和集市上找到了买家。主要是阿富汗社会的两个组成部分使这一制度得以运作:普什图游牧民族和非穆斯林少数民族。第一批人负责物流工作,使货物能够到达销售地区的各个集市。另一方面,第二个群体(非穆斯林少数民族)有许多职能:中间人、银行家和交易员。在本文中,我将介绍现代阿富汗的社会经济背景,其中非穆斯林少数民族在使该国保持与印度北部跨区域贸易网络的联系方面发挥了关键作用。我论文的目的是通过描述阿富汗非穆斯林少数民族的社会经济地位来呈现他们的历史,并强调他们在阿富汗王国经济中的基本作用。特别是,我将尝试在跨国和更广泛的全球贸易背景下构建他们的角色,这不仅影响到已经提到的领土,还影响到奥斯曼帝国和地中海。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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