Background: The Silk Road functioned not only as a trans-Asian trade network but also as a conduit for the exchange of knowledge, technologies, religions, and educational philosophies among Chinese, Indian, Persian, Arab, Greek, and Roman civilizations, thereby creating an early model of globalized learning. Aim: This paper explores how the legacy of the Silk Road continues to shape modern higher education through curriculum development, international student exchanges, and academic cooperation. Methods: A narrative review of literature spanning historical sources, UNESCO reports, and peer-reviewed literature of modern educational practices to identify the impact of Silk Road on higher education along the route, trace the diffusion of knowledge, and examine contemporary Silk-Road-inspired programs. Discussion: Findings reveal that medieval academies such as Baghdad’s House of Wisdom and Central-Asian Buddhist monasteries institutionalized cross-cultural scholarship; these precedents now inform modern Silk Road Institutes, joint-degree agreements, and study-abroad schemes. The same legacy, however, presents challenges of cultural commodification, asymmetrical power relations, and curricular overload that universities must negotiate when integrating global histories. Conclusion: Embedding Silk-Road studies through interdisciplinary, ethically reflexive pedagogies can enhance cross-cultural competencies, foster inclusive global citizenship, and guide higher-education policy toward more equitable international collaboration.
Murtaza et al. (Sat,) studied this question.