0 Kommentare
0 Geteilt
3 Ansichten
Verzeichnis
Elevate your Sngine platform to new levels with plugins from YubNub Digital Media!
-
Bitte loggen Sie sich ein, um liken, teilen und zu kommentieren!
-
YUBNUB.NEWSNYCs Elite Private Schools Hosting DEI SymposiumWhile universities and corporations have been racing to dismantle DEI programs over the past year, New York Citys toniest private schools are heading to a woke diversity symposium this week,0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten -
YUBNUB.NEWSDog-Shocking Leftist Shuns Nazi Tattoo Progressive In Democrat Primary FightControversial left-wing streamer Hasan Piker, recently accused of antisemitic comments, has endorsed Maine Democrat Gov. Janet Mills in the Democratic Senate primary over far-left candidate Graham Platner.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten -
YUBNUB.NEWSTrump Says Lebanon Excluded From U.S.-Iran Ceasefire AgreementPresident states ongoing conflict involving Hezbollah remains separate from truce with Iran By yourNEWS Media Newsroom Donald Trump said Wednesday that Lebanon is not included in the ceasefire agreement0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten -
YUBNUB.NEWSRepeat Offender Who Murdered Iryna Zarutska Found Incompetent to Stand TrialDeCarlos Brown Jr., the homeless repeat offender who fatally stabbed Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a light rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina, last summer, has been found mentally incompetent0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten -
YUBNUB.NEWSIran War Ceasefire Begins to Break Down[View Article at Source]State of the Union: Irans speaker of parliament said the U.S. and Israel violated three clauses of the 10-point plan Trump had called a workable basis. The post Iran War0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten -
This $99.99 AI tool combines writing, images, and more in one appThis $99.99 AI tool combines writing, images, and more in one app TL;DR: 1min.AI is on sale for $99.99 (reg. $540), offering a lifetime subscription that combines multiple AI models and tools for writing, image generation, document processing, and more in one platform. Using AI efficiently often means using more than one tool, which is...0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 4 Ansichten
-
This $150 2-in-1 device can replace your laptop and tabletThis $150 2-in-1 device can replace your laptop and tablet TL;DR: Get an ASUS Chromebook — an affordable computer that’s part laptop, part tablet — for just $149.99 (reg. $369.99). $149.99...0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 4 Ansichten
-
WWW.THECOLLECTOR.COMHow the Mongol Invasions Impacted the Spread of the Black DeathThe Black Death, or Black Plague, was one of the deadliest pandemics in human history. By the 14th century, it permeated the narrow alleyways of Europe to the walled cities of China. This catastrophic pandemic was not the result of an isolated event, but the transformative impact of the Mongol conquests of Asia and Europe. The Mongols connected these continents in unprecedented ways, creating new opportunities for trade, cultural exchange, and the spread of disease. How did the Mongol invasions spread the plague across Asia and Europe?Who Were the Mongols?Map of the Mongol Empire in the 13th century, bordered in red. Source: Wikimedia CommonsThe 12th and 13th century world of the Mongols was one shaped by harsh environments and tribal conflict. However, by 1205, the disparate tribes of present-day Mongolia became unified under a young leader named Temujin. Under his leadership, the Mongols became one of the most effective armies in history. Temujin is better known to history as Genghis Khan, or Chinggis Khan, meaning universal leader. Chinggis was determined to unify not just the Mongols, but the entire world under single leadership. After uniting the fragmented Mongol tribes, Chinggis could now focus on outward expansion.The Arrival of the Black Death in EuropeThe Plague as Described by Boccaccio by Luigi Sabatelli, 19th century. Source: Wikimedia CommonsTwelve Genoese merchant ships sailing from Crimea docked at the southeastern harbor of Messina in early October 1347. Their arrival would mark the entry of the Black Death into Sicily. The inhabitants of Messina were immediately infected, and banished the Genoese ships from the port. These ships, marked as harbingers of death, would then sail north to Genoa, bringing the plague to mainland Europe.The remaining survivors in Messina fled to the countryside. However, through their will to survive, they unknowingly brought the plague with them. They arrived in Catania, whose residents initially welcomed those fleeing Messina with open arms. However, after many of their own were infected, they recognized the severity of the disease and refused to help the Messinians any further (Ziegler, p. 40). However, by that time it was already too late. The plague had taken root and would spread throughout the region like wildfire.Yersinia PestisSaint Sebastian Interceding for the Plague Stricken by Josse Lieferinxe, 15th century. Source: PICRYLFor a long time, scientists and scholars have been unable to agree on exactly what caused the Black Death. However, several studies on bones from 14th century plague graves in France and England in recent decades have confirmed the plague was caused by the bacteria yersinia pestis. The nature of yersinia pestis is a zoonosis, or disease caused by bacteria that can be spread from animals to humans. This bacteria can live with or without oxygen, making it extremely resilient and adaptable to different environmental conditions. Further, yersinia pestis need not always be attached to a host in order to survive; in one case, scientists found a strain that lived several months without a host (Ziegler, p. 27).Yersinia pestis can cause a range of symptoms depending on how the bacteria is contracted, which makes it difficult to understand. Out of the four types (bubonic, pneumatic, septicemic, and abortive), the most common were abortive and bubonic (Wiechmann, p. 65). Within two to seven days, an infected victim would begin having headaches, dizziness, and joint pain. Shortly after, lymph nodes and vessels would swell into sores that changed color with the progression of the infection. The sores, which could swell up to 10 centimeters in diameter, became indigo and then black as a result of internal bleeding of lymph nodes, hence the name Black Death.A cart of plague victims at Elliant drawn by a woman in rags by Jean-Pierre Moynet, after Louis Duveau, 1852. Source: Wikimedia CommonsYersinia pestis could be spread by droplet infection. If an infected person coughed, sneezed, or spoke in the direction of someone, the bacteria could take root in the lungs, becoming pneumatic. In the Decameron, a collection of stories set during the Black Plague, Renaissance author Giovanni Boccaccio illustrates the ferocity with which the plague spread: it spread daily, like fire when it comes in contact with large masses of combustibles. Nor was it caught only by conversing with, or coming near the sick, but even by touching their clothes, or anything that they had before touched (Boccaccio, p. 2).This disease, sent from God as a just punishment for our sins, often appeared instantly (Boccaccio, p. 1). Sometimes, within a few hours, victims were infected and endured a grisly death. Boccaccios accounts in the Decameron also reflect Medieval knowledge about this disease at the time. He writes that it appeared first in the Levant before spreading west into Europe. How did Boccaccio know this, and how was the deadly disease transmitted across the Mediterranean?Mongols and the Spread of Black DeathMoses with two people suffering from the Biblical plague of boils described in Exodus from the Toggenburg Bible, 1411. Source: PICRYLThe Mongols have been variously attributed for the spread of the Black Plague, most famously resorting to biological warfare by using catapults to fling the cadavers of plague victims over city walls during the Siege of Caffa (present-day Feodosia) in 1346. This statement is based on the account of the siege by Gabriele de Mussi, who was not present. The historian Robert Hymes suggests it is highly unlikely that healthy contracted soldiers would be ordered to retrieve and carry infected cadavers and strap them into catapults.Secondly, the cadavers, whose deaths were caused by infection, were likely no longer contagious. Once the body temperature of a victim begins to decrease, yersinia pestis often moves on in search of a new host. With biological warfare ruled out, there were still other ways the Mongols facilitated the spread of the Black Death across Eurasia, which will be explored below. Another myth about the spread of Black Death was that it originated in China. After the Mongols invaded China in the early 13th century and expanded westward, they carried the plague with them. However, it is more likely the plague was brought to China by the Mongols.The Tibetan Plateau, China, and RhubarbPhotograph of the Karakoram mountain range in the West Tibetan Plateau. Source: Wikimedia CommonsYersinia pestis has been around for at least 4,000 years (some scholars even go as far as 60,000 years), but the specific strain associated with the Black Death may have originated around 1142 and 1339, coinciding with the expansion of the Mongol empire (Hymes, p. 285). Hymes theorizes the strain, more specifically the genetic divergence of yersinia pestis that would become the Black Death, took place due to the Mongol invasion of the Western Xia state of the Tangut people in the 1200s (Hymes, p. 285).The Tibetan Plateau, or Qingzang Plateau, is perceived as the possible origin of yersinia pestis. The Western Xia state bordered this plateau, and it is likely the Mongol invasion of this region beginning in 1205 brought yersinia pestis to present-day China, not the other way around. This parasite was already present in the area, attaching itself to fleas which were present in rodents, who would have hitched a ride with the Mongols by burrowing in their saddle bags and other provisions (Hymes, 287).Chinese or Turkish rhubarb (Rheum palmatum) after M. A. Burnett, 1842. Source: Wikimedia CommonsChinese records also reveal an unprecedented amount of deaths from disease beginning in the 13th century. Notably, health edicts from this time cite rhubarb as a cure. This is because health officials needed to sift through past historical records for cures due to the unprecedented nature of symptoms in China at the time. Rhubarb was previously used to treat a disease that produced boils, the same symptom of the plague experienced by victims in Europe. With the Mongols, the disease was brought east to China then west across Asia. By 1346, Europeans became aware of a disease that was wreaking havoc in the east.Rattus: Harbinger of Black Deathor not?Drawing of a Rodent from Lomellina, Italy. Source: Wikimedia CommonsThe spread of the Black Death is often attributed to rats in the public consciousness. Rats have been blamed for the spread of the plague due to infected fleas attached to their bodies, who would hide in the saddle bags of Mongols who traversed Eurasia. However, rats were not the only means of plague transmission. In fact, many plague accounts do not mention rats at all.Yersinia pestis could live up to a month without a host. Thus, the disease would infect all merchandise: objects, fur, even grain. Yersinia pestis could thus easily attach itself to cargo carried by merchants aboard ships or on land. Once merchants or travellers arrived at their final destination, the disease would spread outward. Since there were many ways the disease could be carried, the role of rats may have been exaggerated. Even the above account of the Genoese ship arriving in Messina is likely not the first, nor only, way the plague was introduced into Europe.Pax Mongolica, Yams, and RedistributionMediterranean Coastal Landscape with an Embarking Galley and Ships Lying in the Roads by Cornelis de Wael, 1613-1667. Source: Wikimedia CommonsThe speed with which the Black Death permeated Asia and Europe can be attributed to several factors initiated and intensified by the Mongols. By 1260, the Mongols Empire stretched as far west as the Crimean Peninsula on the Black Sea. The Mongols created yams, the equivalent of modern way stations, to facilitate communication and trade across Eurasia. Routinely stocked with food supplies, water, and horses, these stations shortened the travel time between present-day Russia and the Mongol capital in Karakorum from 80 days to just several weeks (Favereau, p. 60).Interwoven into the network of communication facilitated by the yams was the increased circulation of traded goods. Venetians, Genoese, and Sicilians were a fixture of the Mediterranean trade beginning around the 11th century. This trade expanded in the 13th century not in spite of, but due to the Mongols. The Mongols instituted a system of ortaqs, or merchants, who were given licenses and privileges for running businesses on behalf of the Mongol administration (Favereau, p. 52). Increasing numbers of European merchants appeared in areas like Crimea, especially the southeastern port of Caffa.The incentivization of trade was embedded into the philosophies of power and spirituality of the Mongols. The Mongols believed in the redistribution and circulation of goods for all echelons of society. Their goal: not to hoard wealth, but to spread it (Favereau, p. 55). The redistribution of material goods, taxes, and other forms of wealth were absolutely essential in maintaining social and political order, as well as widespread happiness for the Mongols (Favereau, p. 57).A Fatal TradeTriumph of Death by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, 1562-1563. Located at the Museo Del Prado, Spain. Source: PICRYLThrough yams and the ortaq system, objects, food, and provisions circulated throughout Eurasia in unprecedented ways. These commodities were highly sought after by Mongols and Europeans alike. Unfortunately for the Mongols and Europeans, they were also objects that allowed the spread of yersinia pestis. Additionally, the Mongol ortaq system facilitated large numbers of European merchants, especially Italians, who had a strong presence in places like Crimea.Furthermore, Mongol territorial expansion beginning in the Tibetan Plateau, where yersinia pestis was already present, carried the disease all over Asia. It was brought first to China, then spread west alongside the Mongol conquest. Lastly, the Mongol philosophy of redistribution unwittingly led to the widespread distribution of contaminated objects, and was likely a contributing factor to the intensity of Black Deaths spread. That the plague spread across Eurasia with such ferocity was not due to a single factor, but the combination of processes encouraged by the Pax Mongolica.Sources:Boccaccio, Giovanni. The Decameron. Translated by John Smith, Bloomsbury, 2015.Bloomsbury Media, https://media.bloomsbury.com/decamerontranslation.Favereau, Marie. The Mongol Peace and Global Medieval Eurasia. (this isnt a full citation, idk why its like this)Hymes, Robert. Epilogue: A Hypothesis on the East Asian Beginnings of the Yersinia pestis Polytomy. The Medieval Globe, vol. 1 no. 1, 2015, p. 285-308. Project MUSE, https://dx.doi.org/10.17302/tmg.1-1.11.Wiechmann, Ingrid, et al. History of the Plague. RCC Perspectives, no. 3, 2012, pp. 6374. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/26242596.Ziegler, P. The Black Death. 1969. Harper Tourchbooks, New York.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten -
ALLTHATSINTERESTING.COMArchaeologists Unearthed A 2,500-Year-Old Mass Grave Filled With As Many As 89 Infants And Children Near JerusalemThe Lautenschlger Azekah ExpeditionThe upper half of one of the dozens of childrens skeletons found in the cistern in Azekah.During archaeological excavations in Israels ancient city of Azekah, archaeologists came across an ancient cistern that had been used for centuries by various civilizations. Inside, they made an unexpected and gruesome discovery. The cistern was found to contain dozens of small skeletons, the bodies of infants and young children who had died 2,500 years ago.Archaeologists dont believe that the children were the victims of a plague, war, or natural disaster. Rather, it seems that they died of natural causes, most before the age of two, and were laid to rest here in this repurposed cistern.The Mass Grave Of Children And Infants Discovered In AzekahThe Lautenschlger Azekah ExpeditionAn archaeologist in the lower layer of the cistern.According to a recent study in Palestine Exploration Quarterly, the cistern in Azekah was first excavated between 2012 and 2013. The cistern was ancient; it had originally been used by the ancient Canaanites (perhaps as early as 3500 B.C.E.) to store water. But as archaeologists examined the sites various archaeological layers spanning hundreds of years, they made a chilling discovery when they came across a jumble of dozens of small human bones.Ultimately, archaeologists determined that between 68 and 89 individuals had been buried in the cistern during the early Persian period in the 5th century B.C.E. Of these, almost all were young children. The majority of them were under the age of five, and most of these were under the age of two. Many of the children in the cistern had seemingly been buried with small grave gifts which included beads, metal jewelry, and ceramics.The Lautenschlger Azekah ExpeditionA collection of beads, possible funerary offerings, which were found in the cistern alongside the human remains.Curiously, it seems that the cistern was used as a burial site over a long period of time, at least a few decades. It does not seem that the children buried there had died from natural disasters, war, or disease. Researchers also ruled out the possibility that the site was used for ritual sacrifice, as the bones show no evidence of violence, and no ritual or unique offerings were found. Rather, the children in the cistern seemingly died of natural causes and were buried in this space, which had been specifically designated for children and infants.[The] cistern was used during the early Persian period mainly for burying infants and young children who had not yet been weaned from breastfeeding, the researchers said.They continued: The findings indicate that before this crucial stage in life, a human seems not to have yet achieved an independent existence, earning the honor of a separate burial. In our opinion, this was an accepted way during this period to bury young children and infants who were still breastfeeding, many of whom did not survive this early stage of their lives.This discovery ultimately provides a look into how ancient societies understood personhood, as well as how they buried and mourned their young. And it offers new insights into Azekah itself, a site with a rather eventful history.The Story Of Azekah During AntiquityThe Lautenschlger Azekah ExpeditionAn aerial view of Azekah. The square at the bottom left of the frame marks where the cistern burials were discovered.Perhaps best known for being adjacent to the site of the mythic battle between David and Goliath, Azekah was first settled in the Early Bronze Age some 4,000 years ago. During the Bronze and Iron Ages, Azekah was one of the most important sites in the Judean foothills, and its cistern was used to store water.Archaeological evidence suggests that the cistern went out of use around the 6th century B.C.E., when Azekah was destroyed during the Babylonian conquest of Judah. Azekah then fell under Persian rule, and it was during this time in the 5th century B.C.E. that its cistern was repurposed as a mass grave for infants and young children.Since archaeological excavations began here nearly 15 years ago, this cistern is far from the only exciting find. In 2025, for instance, a three-year-old uncovered a 3,800-year-old Canaanite amulet. The stone artifact depicts scarabs beetles sacred to ancient Egyptians adding to the long list of evidence that attests to the close cultural ties between Canaan and Egypt during the Bronze Age.Now, this cistern has added yet another piece to the puzzle that is Azekahs storied past.After reading about the 2,500-year-old mass grave of infants and children that was found in Israel, discover the story of Golgotha, the Biblical site where Jesus Christ was crucified. Then, go inside the curious question of where Jesus was buried.The post Archaeologists Unearthed A 2,500-Year-Old Mass Grave Filled With As Many As 89 Infants And Children Near Jerusalem appeared first on All That's Interesting.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten