翻訳と辞書
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・ Trading day
・ Trading Diaspora
・ Trading Faces (novel)
・ Trading fund
・ Trading Futures
・ Trading habit
・ Trading halt
・ Trading Houses
・ Trading jacket
・ Trading Leather
・ Trading Matters
・ Trading Mom
・ Trading My Sorrows
・ Trading nation
・ Trading Partner Identification Number
Trading Path
・ Trading Pieces
・ Trading Places
・ Trading Places (disambiguation)
・ Trading Places (Family Guy)
・ Trading Places (song)
・ Trading Places International
・ Trading post
・ Trading Post's fort
・ Trading Post, Kansas
・ Trading room
・ Trading Secrets
・ Trading Secrets with the Moon
・ Trading Snakeoil for Wolftickets
・ Trading Spaces


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Trading Path : ウィキペディア英語版
Trading Path

The Trading Path (a.k.a. Occaneechi Path, The Path to the Catawba, the Catawba Road, Indian Trading Path, Warriors' Path, etc.) is not simply one wide path, as many named historic roads were or are. It was a corridor of roads and trails between the Chesapeake Bay region (mainly the Petersburg, Virginia area) and the Cherokee, Catawba, and other Native-American groups in the Piedmont region of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Indians had used and maintained much of the path for their expansive trading network for centuries prior to its use by Europeans and/or European-Americans. Indian and later European/European-American settlements occupied key points along the path. That section of the Trading Path through the Carolina piedmont was also known as the Upper Road, and a portion between North Carolina and Georgia was called the Lower Cherokee Traders Path.
Both Natives and newcomers mainly used the Trading Path for commercial cargo carriage. In early colonial times, Virginian traders used the path to travel to Native American towns in the Waxhaws. They led long pack caravans of horses carrying "loads of guns, gunpowder, knives, jewelry, blankets, and hatchets, among other goods", and travel southwest to Indian villages along the journey to the Waxhaws region, in the vicinity of present-day Mecklenburg County.〔( "Trading Path, Marker L-35" ), ''North Carolina Historical Markers Highway Program'', Department of Cultural Resources, accessed 3 Apr 2010〕 They exchanged European goods for furs and deerskins.
Because the path was well laid out through the complex geography of the piedmont area, connecting fords of many streams, it was roughly followed by the 19th-century railroad. Later, engineers who designed Interstate 85 followed much of this route again from Petersburg, Virginia, to roughly the Georgia state border. Many of the earliest towns along its route remain to this day. Many remnants of the Trading Path are still visible.
The Piedmont Urban Crescent essentially has developed along the Trading Path, and since the late 19th century has had steady growth. It is a spine of polycentric urban development in North Carolina. Cities of the Crescent are the centers of government, finance, education and research, and business in the state.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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