There are wonderful landscape and enjoyable experiences that only those who live in the area can know. Through such an experience, We want you to know the Route Romantique Sani'n and Be Smiling! [ Ссылка ]
When Iwami Ginzan was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2007, it was recognized for three main reasons: for the mine’s impact on the world economy in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, for the well-preserved archaeological evidence of silver production found throughout the area, and for the integrity of both the mine itself and the sites related to it, from mining settlements to transportation routes and ports.
The silver mined at Iwami Ginzan had a significant impact on the world economy from the mid-1500s onward. Silver initially flowed from Japan to China directly, but this trade was soon taken over by Europeans.
In the 1500s, when the Spanish and Portuguese empires expanded global trade, silver became perhaps the most in-demand commodity in the world. Iwami silver was handled mainly by the Portuguese, who bought it with Chinese silk. They sold some silver to Ming China while circulating the rest throughout their maritime empire. It is estimated that at least 10 percent of all the silver traded around the world in the late 1500s came from Iwami Ginzan.
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This Video is provided by Iwami Ginzan World Heritage Center
wami Ginzan World Heritage Center
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