This week we will finish our discussion of Worlds Together Worlds Apart. The foc

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This week we will finish our discussion of Worlds Together Worlds Apart. The focus this week will be Chapters 10 and 11.
Chapter 10, “Becoming the World” examines maritime trade, as well as the spread of Islam into Africa, Europe, the Middle East, India, and Southeast Asia. Also in this chapter, Christianity clashes with Islam in the early Crusades and new empires emerge in East Africa, and North and South America. The end of the chapter presents the invasions of Mongol tribes and sets the stage for Russia’s Golden Horde.
Using your book, discuss the lasting influence of one of these topics or another topic found in Chapter 10.
This discussion should be your first paragraph and is due in 150 words or more.
Chapter 11 is the last chapter we will study in Worlds Together Worlds Apart. In the late medieval period of European History, topics of death, calamity and decline were prominent. In fact, it was a time when Europeans believed that the end of the world was near. Two frames of thought were: “Eat, drink and be merry for the end is nigh” and “Repent, for the end is nigh.” You can imagine that these evoked two different types of behaviors! Artists portrayed this apocalyptic attitude because they too believed that the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse were on earth. The image above of Albrecht Dϋrer’s (1471–1528) “The Four Horsemen” is a prime example. Death, famine, war, and pestilence/disease are featured, each on horseback and all trampling over mankind. For context, a mini ice-age had caused crops to die in the fields from too much rain. With only two planting seasons, subsistence farmers could not feed their families: FAMINE. The Hundred Years Wars (1337-1453), really 116 years of sporadic wars, between England and France were waged primarily over dynastic sovereignty: WAR. The pandemic known as the Bubonic Plague (or Black Death) decimated cities from China to the British Isles and parts of North Africa. Nearly one-third of European populations succumbed to disease spread by rats, fleas, and airborne pneumonic germs: PESTILENCE/DISEASE. Altogether, the result was the final horseman: DEATH. The end of the chapter has a reversal from death to rebirth in the form of the Italian Renaissance.
In your discussion this week, address a Chapter 11 event that occurs which you believe was traumatic or dramatic of the late middle ages in Afro-Eurasia. Give details—names, places, dates, etc.
This is the second paragraph and is due in 150 words or more.
Book Access
Website: https://wwnorton.com/books/9780393532036
email: [email protected]
PW: Monkeys2022!

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