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Radhanite
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==Historical significance== [[File:Menare.jpg|thumb|A caravan of [[dromedaries]] in [[Algeria]]. Much of the Radhanites' overland trade between Tangier and Mesopotamia was by camel.]] During the [[Early Middle Ages]], Muslim polities of the [[Middle East]] and [[North Africa]] and Christian kingdoms of [[Europe]] often banned each other's merchants from entering their ports.{{ref|ban}} [[Privateer]]s of both sides raided the shipping of their adversaries at will. The Radhanites functioned as neutral go-betweens, keeping open the lines of communication and trade between the lands of the old [[Roman Empire]] and the [[Far East]]. As a result of the revenue they brought, Jewish merchants enjoyed significant privileges under the early [[Carolingian dynasty]] in France and throughout the Muslim world, a fact that sometimes vexed local Church authorities. While most trade between Europe and East Asia had historically been conducted via Persian and [[Central Asia]]n intermediaries, the Radhanites were among the first to establish a trade network that stretched from Western Europe to Eastern Asia.{{ref|network}} They engaged in this trade regularly and over an extended period of time, centuries before [[Marco Polo]] and [[Ibn Battuta]] brought their tales of travel in the [[Orient]] to the Christians and the Muslims, respectively. Ibn Battuta is believed to have traveled with the Muslim traders who traveled to the Orient on routes similar to those used by the Radhanites. While traditionally many historians believed that the [[History of paper#Paper in China|art of Chinese papermaking]] had been transmitted to Europe via Arab merchants who got the secret from [[prisoner of war|prisoners of war]] taken at the [[Battle of Talas]], some believe that Jewish merchants such as the Radhanites were instrumental in bringing paper-making west.{{ref|paper}} [[Joseph of Spain]], possibly a Radhanite, is credited by some sources with introducing the so-called [[Arabic numerals]] from India to Europe.{{ref|Joseph}} Historically, Jewish communities used [[letters of credit]] to transport large quantities of money without the risk of theft from at least classical times.{{ref|Josephus}} This system was developed and put into force on an unprecedented scale by medieval Jewish merchants such as the Radhanites; if so, they may be counted among the precursors to the [[bank]]s that arose during the [[late Middle Ages]] and [[early modern period]].{{ref|credit}} Some scholars believe that the Radhanites may have played a role in the conversion of the [[Khazars]] to Judaism.{{ref|Khaz}} In addition, they may have helped establish Jewish communities at various points along their trade routes, and were probably involved in the early Jewish settlement of [[Eastern Europe]], Central Asia, China and India. [[File:Dhow.jpg|thumb|Much of the Radhanites' [[Indian Ocean]] trade was via coastal cargo ships such as this [[dhow]].]] [[Ibn al-Faqih]]'s early 10th century ''Book of the Countries'' mentions them, but much of Ibn al-Faqih's information was derived from Ibn Khordadbeh's work.{{ref|late}}
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