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  3. Relation

    religion William McNeill followed up in his inter-continental view of history by writing Plagues and Peoples (1976), a history of successive waves of plagues that

  4. Native Americans - Aztecs And Indians

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  5. The Monkeys Paw

    broad shoulders in the chair and spoke of wild scenes and dougty deeds; of wars and plagues and strange peoples. "Twenty-one years of it," said Mr. White, nodding

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Plagues And Peoples

Submitted by ga5709 on June 20, 2008

Category: History Other
Words: 849 | Pages: 4
Views: 100
Popularity Rank: 104,621
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The Black Death: Nature’s Way of Saying We Are Doing It Wrong

Throughout the known world, the human race has been inhabited by disease. For centuries, groups of people have struggled to adapt and create balances between themselves and diseases. Disease not only affects the populations of large areas, but creates wars, puts pressure on global resources, and causes many groups of people to lose sight of their beliefs in the hopes that there will be an answer somewhere else. Many scholars speculate that it was the Mongols who are responsible for the spread of plague to Eurasia. In the reading of sources and documents, one can certainly see why the Mongols are to blame. Because of the Mongols’ organizational structures, the Black Death spread throughout Eurasia, and reeked havoc on the economic, religious, and social life of Europe.
The Mongols were nomadic people from the steppe lands of Central Asia. Towards the end of the thirteenth century, the Mongols had conquered many city-states to make it the largest empire in the world. As the empire grew, communication from the East to the West became more and more inadequate, so they developed what is known as the Yam system, which used to be called the Silk Road Network.# With post stations every twenty-five miles, travelers, such as merchants and the Mongolian army, were able to make a two hundred mile journey, from one side of the nation to the other, in a day.# The Merchants, however, were not the only living things traveling along the Yam. W.H. McNeill, author of Plagues and Peoples, makes the argument that Europe has the Mongols to thank for the existence of the Black Death.# Many of the rats, or Steppe Marmots, that were inhabiting that part of the country, were carrying with them fleas that were infected with the bubonic plague. Those rats would wonder along the Yam spreading the plague to the merchants and armies, who would later spread it on to the rest of the world....

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