Tomasetti
AP World P.6
12/03/17
AP World ID #12
1. Bubonic Plague (342-343)
The bubonic plague (black death), a destructive outbreak, spread throughout China. The plague spread by infecting rodents which would infect other hosts such as humans. The Mongol’s military campaigns, merchants, and travelers assisted in spreading the disease. It eventually spread to the Black Sea ports where Italian traders spread it to the Mediterranean basin. Through trade routes, the disease spread to Europe. The effects of the plague were horrifying - aggravated lymph nodes, recipients (60-70%) died after a couple days, and some small villages were wiped out. However, this plague did not affect Scandinavia due to the weather or India. Chinese, European, and Islamic areas suffered the most. The plague impacted the society and economy as well. Although an antibiotic was discovered in the 1940, the disease still exists in rodent groups in the world.
2. Columbian Exchange (371-372)
The Columbian Exchange was the global spread of plants, crops, population, disease, and animals that happened after the travels of Christopher Columbus and the other travelers. Spreadable …show more content…
Each expedition had a large group of vessels (317 ships) and armed forces (28,000). He took the ships to places such as, southeast Asia, Ceylon, Arabia, and Kenya. There he would give out Chinese goods such as silk in exchange for gifts such as zebras and giraffes from Africa. Zheng He was a diplomatic man, so he did not have hostile relations for the most part, but was not afraid to subdue pirates. In total, there were seven voyages, and they fortified China’s existence in the Indian Ocean basin. Through the voyages, Zheng He was able to show China’s ability to use their military, political, and economic power in the