How the Mongols Changed Trade, War, and Globalization — Fexingo History
In 1346, a Mongol army under Janibeg Khan besieged the Crimean port of Caffa. When plague broke out among the besiegers, they catapulted infected corpses over the walls—one of the earliest recorded uses of biological warfare. This episode examines the siege through eyewitness accounts like those of Gabriele de' Mussi, the Black Death's journey along Mongol trade routes via the Dzungarian Gate, and the debate over whether Caffa truly triggered Europe's pandemic or was just one node in a network already primed by the Pax Mongolica. We discuss the role of the Yam relay system in accelerating disease spread, the ecological disruption caused by Mongol conquests, and recent genetic evidence linking the Caffa strain to later European outbreaks. The siege also highlights the broader consequence of Mongol unification: the same roads that carried silk and spices carried Yersinia pestis. #Caffa #JanibegKhan #BlackDeath #BiologicalWarfare #GabrieleDeMussi #YersiniaPestis #PaxMongolica #Yam #DzungarianGate #Crimea #Genoa #GoldenHorde #SiegeWarfare #MongolTrade #Plague #MedievalHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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