Ancient Routes

For all its seeming inaccessibility, Ladakh's position at the centre of a
network of trade routes traditionally kept it in constant touch withthe
outside world. From Chinese Central Asia,the mighty Karakoram range was
breached at the Karakoram pass, a giddy 18,350 feet (5,600m). The trail from
Yarkand crossed five other passes, of which the most feared was the glacier,
encumbered Saser-la, north of Nubra. Travellers from Tibet could take one of
two main routes. From the central part of the country, the Tsang-po valley,
they could pass the holy sites of Kailash-Mansarovar and reach Fartok, on a
tributary of the upper Indus, from where they followed the river down to
Leh.
Trade with the pashm producing areas of western Tibet
flowed by a more northerly route, taking in the village of Rudok, a few
miles into Tibet, and from there across the 18,300 feet (5,578m ) Chang-la
to the Indus, and so to Leh.
Baltistan, joined administratively
with Ladakh for 100 years, was linked to it either via the Indus up to its
confluence with the Suru-Shingo river, and on up to Kargil; or by the
Chorbat-la pass over the Ladakh range, the trail dropping down to the Indus
40 km below Khalatse, and following the river up to Leh.
The two
main approaches toLadakh from south of the Himalaya are roughly the same as
today's motor roads from Srinagar and Manali. The merchants and pilgrims who
made up the majority of travellers in the premodern era, travelled on foot
or horseback, taking

about
16 days to reach Srinagar; though a man in hurry, riding non-stop and with
changes of horse arranged ahead of time all along the route, could do it in
as little as three days.
The mails, carried in relays by runners
stationed every four miles or so, took four or five days. That was before
the wheel as a means of transport was introduced into Ladakh, which happened
only when the Srinagar- Leh motor-road was constructed as recently as the
early 1960s.